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Guide. is vital - but it s not your business!

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Email is vital

- but it’s not your business!

Businesses around the world send around 100

billion emails every day – and the volume shows

no sign of abating any time soon.

Indeed, according to research from McKinsey

Global Institute, workers now spend 28% of their

time, reading, writing or responding to email,

and a further 19% tracking down the information

relevant to those responses.

Whichever way you slice it, email now sustains

most of the everyday processes in your

organisation – and that’s perfectly legitimate. But

managing the provision and maintenance of that

email is not your core business – it’s a distraction

from profitable activity!

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T

o put this in context, consider this: you don’t run your own telephone exchange or generate your own electricity. So why does it make any kind of sense to try and manage your own email?

Short answer: it doesn’t, and for many reasons. The first of these is financial:

• Both capital expenditure (capex) and operational expenditure (opex) take a massive hit from in-house email management. This is because it involves on-premise hardware, multiple skilled staff, software licensing costs, and the ongoing economic burden of hardware, software, firewall and anti-virus updates and upgrades.

Want the hard numbers? One recent whitepaper, summarised here, suggests that some managed email solutions can save SMBs up to

94% on their monthly email management costs. That’s not a figure to be ignored.

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Productivity also all too often falls victim to the limitations of in-house email management:

• According to a report from Harvard Business Review, some 74% of business emails are spam. The implications of this metric for workforce productivity are alarming, but perhaps even more surprisingly, the same report says that 42% of the emails that make it into users’ inboxes are in fact essential.

So, managing email to protect business productivity is doubly

complicated. It’s not just about screening out the spam - it’s also about intelligently filtering what remains.

A mere 10% improvement in time spent dealing with email would potentially free up an extra fortnight of productivity, per year, per employee!

But spend time deploying and managing a solution of that power and complexity in-house and the chances are you’ll rapidly eat through any productivity gains that it might initially generate.

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Inevitably, security looms large in this debate. We don’t need to tell you that the IT threat landscape evolves at breakneck speed – we all read the news. But did you know...

• Cybercriminals still consider email to be one of the most effective points of entry into organisations, and SMBs like you (not just large enterprises) are heavily targeted.

In fact, findings from Trend Micro and Osterman Research have shown a 5-year increase in the number of organisations that have reported security violations through email, and many of these were SMBs.

Tragically, some of them subsequently had to file for bankruptcy as a consequence of the financial losses occasioned by the cyberattacks that they suffered.

But can you really expect your modest IT department to manage the deployment and maintenance of anti-virus, anti-spam, outbound content filtering, data leakage protection, encryption, and protection against every other golden opportunity for malicious exploitation that every single email offers?

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Yikes! But the risks stop there, right?

Sadly, no. There’s also the small matter of business continuity to consider. Many SMBs do what they believe is the responsible thing, and try to create backups and contingencies around their in-house email solution. But the expense of doing this properly is simply way too high for most SMBs to bear. The costly pain points are many and varied – here is just a brief selection:

• Most in-house email solutions have only a single connection to the Internet – if this goes down, your email goes down with it

• Most in-house email solutions do not have significant power backups to handle extended power outages

• If email server hardware fails, most in-house solutions have few, if any, replacement parts available

• When it comes to retrieving email data, most in-house solutions perform only simple backups and these are usually kept in the same location as the servers! These backups are also rarely tested

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Indeed, as one industry source has commented, a truly resilient email continuity system “requires operating two completely separate data centers.”

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So what are the benefits of managed email – and where’s the proof?

Not all providers offer the same range of services, of course, but this table serves to paint a generic picture of what your business stands to gain from managed vs. in-hous email:

Financial investment

IT resources

In-house implementation Typical managed solution

Large financial investment, often totalling many thousands of pounds, for hardware, software licences, IT resources and more. Maintenance costs unpredictable

Requires at least one dedicated senior IT specialist. Managing a typical email system for a 100 person company takes 85% of a senior technician’s time. The bigger the company, the more (expensive) senior technicians it needs to manage its email

Initial costs are minimal - no hardware or software required, no need for additional IT

personnel. Ongoing fees tend to be low, predictable and easy to budget for, even in periods of rapid organisational growth

No dedicated IT resources required. User maintenance can be performed by non-technical personnel. All system management is performed by the service provider

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Deployment

Reliability/Maintenance

Security

Productivity tools

In-house implementation Typical managed solution

Average 30 days to deploy an in-house solution

Lack of redundancy and bandwidth, poor administration, delay in

upgrades – any of these can cause security and performance issues. Result: business delays and loss of productivity

Combating viruses, and updating servers, is a costly and largely manual process that is prone to delay and error. This spells increased vulnerability

Pay for new software. Spend time installing it.

Can be up and running in minutes

Updates performed in real time. Service provider systems are fully redundant and backed up routinely

Security and mobility services are automatic and real-time, with advanced features available at low incremental cost

Anti-spam, and intelligent email filtering and archiving, are often available on-demand, making it cheap and easy to achieve significant productivity gains

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Nonetheless, SMBs still need to ask some critical questions before taking the decision to “go managed.” For example, how many customers does the provider currently support, and how has this changed over the past year? What email volume do they support? How much storage is included per account, and how much does extra storage cost per gigabyte? What security services are offered as part of a basic managed account?

What mobile platforms are supported (BlackBerry? Apple iPhone? Good Technology?)

As far as proof goes, there is none better than looking around you to see what your peers are doing. Osterman Research, cited in this whitepaper summary, has said that the proportion of email users served by managed (Cloud) delivery has almost doubled from 2012 to 2014. There are now over 170 million worldwide users of just one of the many email-based managed solutions (Microsoft Exchange) alone.

Email is sending SMBs a message. Don’t file it in the trash.

For more information on managed IT

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t: +44 (0) 20 7558 8538

e: info@node-it.com

t: 01582 209052

e: sales@flint-it.com

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