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    Solved Email server options

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    email exchange exchange online zimbra zoho
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    • zachary715Z
      zachary715 @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller said in Email server options:

      @zachary715 said in Email server options:

      We're of similar size and although I've never had to run an on-prem Exchange server, I'm glad I don't. I'd rather spend my time worrying about other issues. The Exchange Online plan is hard to beat in my opinion.

      We run in house email on Zimbra for smaller than that and without the costs and overhead of Exchange, running in house is really not bad. We manage O365 for customers and while O365 is slightly less work on a per user basis, it's not much. O365 is just cumbersome enough to be close to the effort of the system maintenance of something like Zimbra. But when you consider the monthly cost savings, it's been great for us.

      In our situation, I'm the only guy here and it would take me some amount of time to learn Zimbra/Mailcow and then deploy it. Then if in 2 years I left, I'm leaving that to someone else to learn. Just doesn't seem smart for us. I would like however to deploy it in a lab just to play with and learn.

      scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • zachary715Z
        zachary715 @JaredBusch
        last edited by

        @JaredBusch said in Email server options:

        @zachary715 said in Email server options:

        Also, will they require hardware upgrades if they choose any on-premises option that will add to the project costs?

        No. Their current on site hardware can handle it. That hardware will likely see an upgrade in 2020 or 2021.

        Even being a year or two down the road, that's extra hardware you know you wouldn't otherwise need if hosted therefore a portion of the hardware upgrade costs should be allocated today in my opinion.

        @JaredBusch said in Email server options:

        @zachary715 said in Email server options:

        you have no intention of maintaining this system outside of backups etc, therefore they have someone already who is skilled enough to do so?

        No, we are their outsourced IT department, we will handle it. But when planning, I never plan for us to continue to do so. I obviously hope they continue to have us do so, but I never plan on it.

        I think here it's in the best interest of the company then to have some form of hosted solution that's easier to have someone else step into and manage in a scenario where your relationship ended. If I were a key decision maker at the company, no matter how much I liked you and we'd been in business together, that's a risk factor I'd have to consider.

        Just curious, if Zoho + spam/malware filtering seemed to check all the boxes at $3/user/mo, would you immediately go Zoho vs EOP1 simply based on cost? Is cost the ultimate factor?

        JaredBuschJ scottalanmillerS 6 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • JaredBuschJ
          JaredBusch @zachary715
          last edited by

          @zachary715 said in Email server options:

          I think here it's in the best interest of the company then to have some form of hosted solution that's easier to have someone else step into and manage in a scenario where your relationship ended. If I were a key decision maker at the company, no matter how much I liked you and we'd been in business together, that's a risk factor I'd have to consider.

          That is the point of having the 4 options above...

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • JaredBuschJ
            JaredBusch @zachary715
            last edited by

            @zachary715 said in Email server options:

            Just curious, if Zoho + spam/malware filtering seemed to check all the boxes at $3/user/mo, would you immediately go Zoho vs EOP1 simply based on cost? Is cost the ultimate factor?

            Except it doens't check all the boxes. It is Workspaces, not just email. That is an entire collection of shit the client does not want or need.

            Also $3/user is more than $1/user + 200 GB Storage (150/year / 120 users = 1.25) = $2.25/user

            zachary715Z 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • JaredBuschJ
              JaredBusch @zachary715
              last edited by

              @zachary715 said in Email server options:

              Zoho + spam/malware filtering

              ZoHo includes spam filtering.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • zachary715Z
                zachary715 @JaredBusch
                last edited by

                @JaredBusch said in Email server options:

                @zachary715 said in Email server options:

                Just curious, if Zoho + spam/malware filtering seemed to check all the boxes at $3/user/mo, would you immediately go Zoho vs EOP1 simply based on cost? Is cost the ultimate factor?

                Except it doens't check all the boxes. It is Workspaces, not just email. That is an entire collection of shit the client does not want or need.

                Also $3/user is more than $1/user + 200 GB Storage (150/year / 120 users = 1.25) = $2.25/user

                Ok I didn't know Zoho included spam filtering. I thought you were asking for that earlier but you were actually referring to the Open Source options. My bad.

                I wasn't referencing the Worskpaces option, I was assuming $1 Zoho plus $1-2 spam/malware filtering per user.

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • JaredBuschJ
                  JaredBusch
                  last edited by JaredBusch

                  I managed to find the PDF of the original Exchange 2010 order form Jan 3, 2012.
                  $6,344 for Exchange 2010, 70 CALs, & 2 licenses of Server 2008 R2 (one for something else).

                  Adjusting the 2010 order to 120 users (was purchased over time as they grew) it is definitely more expensive now.
                  These numbers also happen to be from the same VAR.

                  Item Quantity 2010 Unit Cost 2010 Total 2019 Unit Cost 2019 Total Difference
                  Exchange Server Standard 1 $655.00 $655.00 $732.00 $732.00 $77.00
                  Exchange User CAL 120 $62.00 $7,440.00 $91.15 $10,938.00 $3,498.00
                  Windows Server Standard 1 $672.00 $672.00 $913.57 $913.57 $241.57
                  Windows Server User CAL 120 $35.00 $4,200.00 $39.41 $4,729.20 $529.20
                  $12,967.00 $17,312.77 $4,345.77
                  zachary715Z scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • zachary715Z
                    zachary715 @JaredBusch
                    last edited by

                    @JaredBusch said in Email server options:

                    I managed to find the PDF of the original Exchange 2010 order form Jan 3, 2012.
                    $6,344 for Exchange 2010, 70 CALs, & 2 licenses of Server 2008 R2 (one for something else).

                    Adjusting the 2010 order to 120 users (was purchased over time as they grew) it is definitely more expensive now.
                    These numbers also happen to be from the same VAR.

                    That's interesting. The difference in virtualization rights could have some factor in Server OS costs. Exchange pretty much matches inflation. Exchange User CALs definitely higher.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • ObsolesceO
                      Obsolesce
                      last edited by

                      Seems like 120 users X $6 per month equals way more over two years than upgrading them on prem Exchange... At least initial costs. Maybe if you factor in labor, cost of Windows and MS management, time etx, perhaps cloud is better?

                      IRJI zachary715Z JaredBuschJ 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • IRJI
                        IRJ @Obsolesce
                        last edited by

                        @Obsolesce said in Email server options:

                        Maybe if you factor in labor, cost of Windows and MS management, time etx, perhaps cloud is better?

                        Those are the very reasons for cloud solutions....lol

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • zachary715Z
                          zachary715 @Obsolesce
                          last edited by

                          @Obsolesce said in Email server options:

                          Seems like 120 users X $6 per month equals way more over two years than upgrading them on prem Exchange... At least initial costs. Maybe if you factor in labor, cost of Windows and MS management, time etx, perhaps cloud is better?

                          Not sure where $6/mo is coming from. He's comparing Zoho @ $1/mo plus extra storage (roughly $2.25/mo) to EOP1 @ $4/mo. And then comparing that to on-prem.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @JaredBusch
                            last edited by

                            @JaredBusch said in Email server options:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Email server options:

                            We run in house email on Zimbra

                            How is spam filtering handled?

                            In our case, we use Zimbra's built in components. Not the best, but not bad. It's free, so that's a big factor for us. Was like a 15 minute one time setup and now it just works (so far.)

                            If we wanted, our outbound mail handler (MailGun) will do inbound spam filtering for us for cheap. But we've not gone down that path (yet.)

                            JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @zachary715
                              last edited by

                              @zachary715 said in Email server options:

                              In our situation, I'm the only guy here and it would take me some amount of time to learn Zimbra/Mailcow and then deploy it. Then if in 2 years I left, I'm leaving that to someone else to learn. Just doesn't seem smart for us.

                              Best to hire someone who already knows it. We have customers that come to us for that stuff, and it's cheap. Thousands of companies already know how to maintain it and will do so for next to nothing for you. If you run the numbers, it might not be the best choice for you (it's not most of the time), but it is often way, way closer to being a good idea than you'd guess.

                              Zimbra support is not expensive, in many cases, we could simply use a "per user" price gauge and guarantee that it costs less than O365, for example. If you have ten users, that doesn't work. But if you have 100, I will guarantee Zimbra support, at a fraction of the cost of Hosted Exchange right now 🙂

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @zachary715
                                last edited by

                                @zachary715 said in Email server options:

                                I think here it's in the best interest of the company then to have some form of hosted solution that's easier to have someone else step into and manage in a scenario where your relationship ended.

                                Yes, that is always true. BUT you'd hope that anyone that would be asked to step in would be qualified to do so, so choosing something like Zimbra would be of no consequence. If it makes sense to do with Bundy there, it would make sense to do without them there. IT support is not a scarce resource when done well. Getting good support (and good support always means affordable compared to alternatives as well) is not hard at all if the company wants it.

                                So going hosted doesn't actually protect them. That, in no way, means I'm saying that hosted is wrong here. I'm just saying that "being supportable by another IT firm" is of no concern at all. Any skilled MSP or ITSP can do that with their eyes closed, at a reasonable cost. And if the company decides not to hire good (or any) IT to support things after he leaves, there is no accounting for that. That they have to maintain the IT department or resources goes without saying, and included in that is the ability to support anything reasonable or reasonably standard.

                                F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller @zachary715
                                  last edited by

                                  @zachary715 said in Email server options:

                                  Even being a year or two down the road, that's extra hardware you know you wouldn't otherwise need if hosted therefore a portion of the hardware upgrade costs should be allocated today in my opinion.

                                  I would generally agree with this. Unless, and this is more common than you think, the company will not buy less hardware even if you wouldn't add in the workload. I have lots of companies that have a minimum purchasing threshhold for servers and it is so high, that all of their workloads, plus tons more, always have plenty of resources. So something like email would remain free for them essentially forever, because the resources that it needs diminish rapidly over time.

                                  So I agree, but make sure you evaluate reasonable projected excess resources as part of the equation.

                                  zachary715Z 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @zachary715
                                    last edited by

                                    @zachary715 said in Email server options:

                                    Ok I didn't know Zoho included spam filtering. I thought you were asking for that earlier but you were actually referring to the Open Source options. My bad.

                                    All business class hosted email does. Even Zimbra and MailCow do. Only things that don't are hobby systems like GoDaddy, and even that probably does.

                                    Definitely all of the open source does, even the open source hobby systems.

                                    zachary715Z JaredBuschJ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • zachary715Z
                                      zachary715 @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      @scottalanmiller said in Email server options:

                                      @zachary715 said in Email server options:

                                      Even being a year or two down the road, that's extra hardware you know you wouldn't otherwise need if hosted therefore a portion of the hardware upgrade costs should be allocated today in my opinion.

                                      I would generally agree with this. Unless, and this is more common than you think, the company will not buy less hardware even if you wouldn't add in the workload. I have lots of companies that have a minimum purchasing threshhold for servers and it is so high, that all of their workloads, plus tons more, always have plenty of resources. So something like email would remain free for them essentially forever, because the resources that it needs diminish rapidly over time.

                                      So I agree, but make sure you evaluate reasonable projected excess resources as part of the equation.

                                      So why do they have minimum purchasing thresholds if they're exceedingly greater than what they need? What's driving that?

                                      DustinB3403D scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • DustinB3403D
                                        DustinB3403 @zachary715
                                        last edited by DustinB3403

                                        @zachary715 said in Email server options:

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Email server options:

                                        @zachary715 said in Email server options:

                                        Even being a year or two down the road, that's extra hardware you know you wouldn't otherwise need if hosted therefore a portion of the hardware upgrade costs should be allocated today in my opinion.

                                        I would generally agree with this. Unless, and this is more common than you think, the company will not buy less hardware even if you wouldn't add in the workload. I have lots of companies that have a minimum purchasing threshhold for servers and it is so high, that all of their workloads, plus tons more, always have plenty of resources. So something like email would remain free for them essentially forever, because the resources that it needs diminish rapidly over time.

                                        So I agree, but make sure you evaluate reasonable projected excess resources as part of the equation.

                                        So why do they have minimum purchasing thresholds if they're exceedingly greater than what they need? What's driving that?

                                        Budget controls to ensure there is a pool of money to take from should they need it. (for whatever they may need money that is otherwise unbudgeted)

                                        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • zachary715Z
                                          zachary715 @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Email server options:

                                          @zachary715 said in Email server options:

                                          Ok I didn't know Zoho included spam filtering. I thought you were asking for that earlier but you were actually referring to the Open Source options. My bad.

                                          All business class hosted email does. Even Zimbra and MailCow do. Only things that don't are hobby systems like GoDaddy, and even that probably does.

                                          Definitely all of the open source does, even the open source hobby systems.

                                          I'm showing my ignorance here. I was basing that assumption off of what was said previously in the thread which I took to mean it wasn't included. Thanks

                                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller @JaredBusch
                                            last edited by

                                            @JaredBusch said in Email server options:

                                            I managed to find the PDF of the original Exchange 2010 order form Jan 3, 2012.
                                            $6,344 for Exchange 2010, 70 CALs, & 2 licenses of Server 2008 R2 (one for something else).

                                            Adjusting the 2010 order to 120 users (was purchased over time as they grew) it is definitely more expensive now.
                                            These numbers also happen to be from the same VAR.

                                            Item Quantity 2010 Unit Cost 2010 Total 2019 Unit Cost 2019 Total Difference
                                            Exchange Server Standard 1 $655.00 $655.00 $732.00 $732.00 $77.00
                                            Exchange User CAL 120 $62.00 $7,440.00 $91.15 $10,938.00 $3,498.00
                                            Windows Server Standard 1 $672.00 $672.00 $913.57 $913.57 $241.57
                                            Windows Server User CAL 120 $35.00 $4,200.00 $39.41 $4,729.20 $529.20
                                            $12,967.00 $17,312.77 $4,345.77

                                            That licensing cost ALONE, not including hardware, management, etc. is more than it would cost to outsource Zimbra management to someone! In fact, you could outsource it, mark it up, and still save them money 😉

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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