2/27/07 1000: I decided to send Google another request today in case my first one wasn’t clear enough: This
is my second attempt to contact you. I am the CIO of an organization
with 11,000 users. Can someone contact me about the feasibility of
migrating from our existing Exchange 5.5 platform.
2/27/07 1030: I received this email from Google after my second contact: We
did receive your inquiry… thank you for your interest. Blair Reuling s
your point of contact given the size of your organization. Blair is in
he field and often traveling, and might be delayed in responding.
Please eel free to contact Blair at…
2/28/2007: I phoned the Google enterpise dude 6 or 7 times today and
could not reach him in his office or on his mobile phone. I left him a
voicemail with a request to contact me so I can give him a bunch of
cash. No contact yet. He has n are code in the Chicago suburbs. Maybe
we will become best friends and go to White Sox games together - I have
opening day tickets. Come on Google, answer my calls.
3/6/2007: Today I had my second conversation with Google -
this was a WebEx (yes, Google uses WebEx). I will create a new post
when I have something to report. But, I can confirm that they answered
the phone and they have kept my interest enough for a 3rd meeting. Of
course the thing about meeting with Google is that you know they are
going to Google your name. When they did, this little post popped up.
But, they seemed to take it in stride by accepting my baseball offer
below. Hi Blair.
Original post
This month, for the first time since 1996, I started believing that
there may be alternatives to Microsoft Exchange. Recently, Google
announced their enterprise offering: Google Apps Premiere Edition for Enterprises.
Since we are the verge of beginning a project to rebuild or email
system, I quickly jumped into the Google web site completed a web form
telling them that I am the CIO for a $1B+ organization with 11,000
users and I wanted to buy their service. Of course there are no phone
numbers posted, which indicates to me that Google has not created an
infrastructure for supporting enterprises. They are treating their
enterprise customers like their freeloading search and gmail users -
here is the offering, don’t call us - ever. That is a good strategy for
Aunt Agnes who cant figure out ho to open an attachment from her
knitting club, it doesn’t work when you hope to close multi-million
dollar deals.
While I waited for a response I started checking out the information
Google had posted online. In general, I wanted to know if this would be
an enterprise class service.
I got mixed feelings from reading the promotional material. On the
one hand they have developed APIs for directory integration, user
provisioning and onsite backup (good, good and good). But the
information was not very deep and there was not of service to support
an enterprise offering. Migrating to an email system would be a massive
undertaking and there would have to be a ton of resources to assist us
with the planning and testing.
While I applaud Google for including a service level agreement, it
really isn’t enterprise class. 99.9% uptime for email is not acceptable
in today’s world.
Even the pricing isn’t geared toward the true enterprise user
either. $50 per user per year is great for a small company. But it
really doesn’t scale to a large organization. At 11,000 users we would
be forking over $550,000 a year. I am not sure how much we spend on
messaging now, but I suspect it is less than half a million annually.
Google’s service does give our users access to documents and
spreadsheets, but most users that need Office already have it. This
would be the case in most enterprises.
It is 4 days after begging Google to take my half million dollars,
and I still have not heard from anyone. Apparently they are processing
a backlog of CIOs willing to risk their job on such a venture. I am
thinking this is more evidence that there is not a lot of enterprise
support and their offering may be more suited to small businesses.
Still, I am very intrigued. I really feel that I have been
overcharged by Microsoft for years because they could. So, I am primed
for a change. Also, a managed service has a lot of appeal.
In the mean time I have downloaded the latest version of OpenOffice
on my home PC. The improvement over the earlier versions that I have
tried is remarkable. I can’t imagine why anyone would buy Office for
their home when this works exactly the same. Folks, it is a free
download (via bittorrent).
Maybe Microsoft’s iron grip is loosening. Maybe Google can get a grip.
I will keep you updated.