Kari Woolf, GroupWise Product Marketing Manager, discusses the cost
of migration and provides you and your organization some great data
so that your organization can make the wise choice
- Upgrade to GroupWise 2012!
In 1971, the first ever email was sent. Just forty-one years later,
email is the industry standard for corporate communication, with
the average corporate user sending and receiving 112 emails per
day. With this communication tool so critical to any business's
bottom line, the list of valid reasons to disrupt it are few and
far between. Enterprises considering migrating from Novell GroupWise to Microsoft Exchange
should consider what it means in terms of costs and business
disruption. It's not just about the hardware and licensing, IT
needs to consider the IT opportunity cost as well as overall user
productivity.
Why tie up an IT department with a new email solution when there
are many more business-critical projects they can focus on? After
all, it can cost a 5,000-seat organization more than $40,000 to
migrate - and that's just for the IT labor to rebuild the email
environment, replace third-party applications, test performance and
re-configure a mobile email client. You'll also need to train your
staff on the new email product-and all related systems. And let's
talk about what migration really costs from a licensing
perspective. You won't just pay for licenses per user; you'll also
pay for resource licenses (conference rooms, projectors, etc.),
third-party migration tool licenses and per-user Client Access
Licenses (CALs) for both Exchange Server and Windows Server. Add in
the costs to re-license or convert your add-on products such as
anti-virus/anti-spam,
backup, mobility and team collaboration tools, and you can easily
more than double your licensing costs. What does it all mean? A
potential $2 million licensing spend for a 5,000-user
migration.
Hold on to your wallets - we haven't even discussed the unavoidable
hardware costs yet. Did you know that two Exchange servers are
generally needed for every GroupWise server? Here are a few other
hidden costs:
-
Exponential increase in storage resources to accommodate Exchange's
multi-copy message store
-
Exchange only runs on 64-bit hardware, so you can trash any 32-bit
systems
-
Already have 64-bit hardware? Too bad, email retention regulations
won't let you repurpose them for Exchange
-
Redundant hardware so that Exchange and GroupWise can run
simultaneously during the migration process
And once you've committed to all of these hardware, licensing,
training and labor costs, be prepared to lose at least $250,000 in
user productivity during the migration - even if it's just a total
of two hours.
What about the end-user?
Maybe you've considered all of this and are still not
convinced. Try thinking about it from a personal experience
perspective. Updates to simple things like Facebook can cause an
uproar when users have to learn new functions and features. Imagine
the frustration enterprise employees will feel as they have to
learn to navigate an entire new email system-something they rely on
to stay productive every minute of the day. And not everything is a
simple matter of user retraining. GroupWise users are accustomed to
capabilities like granular message tracking, recurring appointment
flexibility, simple folder shares and advanced calendaring
features. These tools drive organizational productivity every day,
and they simply aren't as robust (or, in some cases, even
available) in Exchange.
Further impacting the user experience, unlike GroupWise, Exchange
creates copies of messages for each and every recipient. Not only
does this affect the IT staff that needs to store, manage back up
and archive all those duplicate copies, but the end-user is
impacted with constant storage messages. No one wants their day
interrupted because they've exceeded maximum storage and need to
delete messages before they can resume actual productivity.
Migration costs can vary from organization to organization, but a
better idea is enhancing GroupWise at a fraction of that cost and
putting migration funds to better use on more strategic IT
projects. Check out what's new with GroupWise 2012 and how it will meet
your enterprise mobile and social needs, and be sure to look at
what's on the horizon too. For more information on
migration costs,download our white paper on the costs
and disruptions of migrating from GroupWise to Exchange.
Kari Woolf
GroupWise Product Marketing Manager
Disclaimer: As with everything else at Cool
Solutions, this content is definitely not supported by Novell (so
don't even think of calling Support if you try something and it
blows up).
It was contributed by a community member and is published "as
is." It seems to have worked for at least one person, and might
work for you. But please be sure to test, test, test
before you do anything drastic with it.