vote up -5 vote down star

I don't have an IT or CS background so excuse me if this question annoys some of you but: "Why do companies need 'affordable email solutions'?

Can't businesses simply get by using free email services like outlook, Mail, or even Gmail? Isn't the security provided by these mailers sufficient for most businesses' needs? Someone please do enlighten me because here-and-there I hear talk of 'business solutions' or 'enterprise solutions' and I must be missing something because from my perspective it seems like it would be more efficient to use a free service in place of some expensive 'solution'.

Here is an example (http://www.google.com/apps/intl/en/business/index.html): " Whether your business is moving everything to the cloud, just wants an affordable email solution* or struggles to give employees access to critical information, Google Apps will help you stretch resources and work smarter."*

Once again: Why do companies need 'affordable email solutions'?

flag

9  
Nothing like your CEO having to use Jim5446@gmail.com. That's professional :) – Cody C Jun 24 at 1:19
Can Gmail give you a set of person@companyname.com email addresses for free? And let your company's system administrator have control over them? (Serious question. Maybe they can, but not that I know of.) – MatrixFrog Jun 24 at 1:19
2  
@MAtrixFrog, yes they can, Google Apps, at least for our small company it works wonderful!. – tekBlues Jun 24 at 1:20
2  
Actually you can set up GMail for your own domain. However see my answer for reasons why this is not a good idea for large corporations. If you want any kind of assurance that your mail will be there when you want it, you should be willing to pay. – Kibbee Jun 24 at 1:21
1  
When you use the free hosting plans you're also at the mercy of their policies. For instance, with gmail you can't send a ZIP file attachment that includes an .exe in it. You're also at the mercy of their spam filters. – Gerald Jun 24 at 1:57
show 3 more comments

closed as not programming related by Jonathan Sampson, Daniel A. White, bdonlan, Shog9, Thilo Jun 24 at 1:33

7 Answers

vote up 13 vote down check

First of all, outlook and Mail are not mail solution. They are desktop mail clients. There's still backend servers that they need to connect to. GMail has both a client and a server built in, but isn't really a corporate email solution. GMail doesn't come with an SLA (service level agreement), and you get no support if some of your email goes missing. With a proper corporate email system, you can be sure that your email is backed up, and that you have an email server, and a backup server, that is always available, so that you don't have to go a minute without email. In some businesses, email really is this important.

link|flag
Thanks for this answer. – RexOnRoids Jun 24 at 1:23
1  
The privacy thing comes into play too. – Spencer Ruport Jun 24 at 1:33
www.google.com/a/ - google for the enterprise – Shard Jun 24 at 1:36
vote up 2 vote down

Email is just a fad. You really don't need anything more than sticky notes and a fast runner.

link|flag
Funny, but not really helpful. Still, I'm in a good mood today so no downvote for you :-) – paxdiablo Jun 24 at 1:48
vote up 2 vote down

Not sure if I get your question correctly, but a few very important points are independence, privacy, security, liability and politics. A few examples: I personally don't mind some web companies experimenting and using gmail. However I would disagree that governments or health care departments moving their stuff into the cloud. And in my mind their is no question whatsoever that any bigger Russian, Chinese or Iranian company would/should ever choose gmail for very obvious reasons.. So all I'm saying is... it depends..

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

There are good reasons and there is INERTIA.

Free alternatives like Google Apps have been around only for a few months, and slow learning, cautious management types will take same years to get used to it. They need to read about it in Wall Street Journal or The Economist and then they will start using it.

BTW, Google Apps is not free for bigger companies (I think you must pay over 50 accounts...)

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

No free service that I'm aware of can compete (even closely) to a purchased, well setup corporate email solution.

link|flag
1  
What do you mean by 'compete'? My website hosting plan includes 'email solutions' that have horribly awkward interfaces and are difficult-to-use. So I just use my Gmail -- it's easy and it works smoothly, all the time. – RexOnRoids Jun 24 at 1:28
3  
Then I guess your website hosting plan wouldn't be considered "well setup", @RexOnRoids. Corporate solutions are generally much better than a couple of Perl scripts thrown together by the nephew of your ISP's owner :-) – paxdiablo Jun 24 at 1:47
vote up 2 vote down

Privacy. Reliability. Message retention policies. Backups. All of which may be driven by legal requirements (SOX/HIPAA/etc.).

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Many in management would rather pay an "affordable" price than use a "free service," simply due to naivety. If they pay for it, they feel better using it.

Others in management have better reasons for paying - they want ownership and control of their mail at all times.

link|flag
What's the reason for down-voting my answer? – Jonathan Sampson Jun 24 at 1:28
I'm not sure, but I think it sounds reasonable enough. +1 to offset :) – alex Jun 24 at 1:30
Thanks Alex. It's annoying - twice today I've been down-voted on questions that don't have objective answers. Oh well. – Jonathan Sampson Jun 24 at 1:32
I liked the unique-perspective in this answer. +1 vote – RexOnRoids Jun 24 at 1:34
It's an opinion, subjective, and highly biased. It doesn't really have anything informative. it can be summarized as: "Stupid management". Not an answer. – Kurt Jun 24 at 2:01
show 1 more comment

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.