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Archive for March, 2012

Face-Off: Google Apps vs. Office 365

Monday, March 19th, 2012

From Google to Microsoft
Redmond Windows Insider columnist Greg Shields recently moved his company to Office 365 — and off Google. “Office 365 has been a refreshing change over Google Apps,” Shields says. “It’s admittedly still a bit rough around the edges. Merely finding some of its key features is sometimes a challenge. But we’ve so far benefited from the migration. Having moved from Google Apps for Business to Office 365, we love the familiar Exchange interface and really enjoy the full-fidelity features of Outlook and Lync — which we didn’t have before.”

 

Not all is so joyful, even for a highly technical customer like Shields, a Microsoft MVP. “SharePoint struck us as a challenge, albeit one that we knew we were getting into,” he explains. “The challenge isn’t that SharePoint doesn’t have features; rather, it almost has too many. Figuring out the ones we need and how to best make use of them has required an unexpected effort.”

 

While some complain about the varying personalities of the different Google applications, a similar knock can be made against Office 365. “If there’s one issue that stands out, it’s the somewhat dissociated nature of Office 365′s different capabilities,” Shields says. “Different functionalities are found at very different URLs, which are sometimes difficult to remember. I look forward to the day when Microsoft better unifies each functionality into an interface that feels more like a cohesive whole. Until then: user training.”

 

Rishi Khanna is an expert in both Office 365 and Google Apps, and is now on the side of Redmond. “We weren’t sure at first if Microsoft was going to create a competing product for the cloud since they were a little behind in jumping on it. We used Google Apps for almost two years before we moved to BPOS [Business Productivity Online Suite] in 2009 and most recently upgraded ourselves to Office 365,” says Khanna, who’s with IT services provider ISHIR in Dallas. “The most important reason we moved away from Google was the outages that we experienced. We felt the Google Web interface wasn’t conducive to a business environment. Having come from using Microsoft Exchange for 10 years and being very comfortable with Outlook, it was a no-brainer,” Khanna adds.

 

Despite the bad Google gamble, Khanna thinks the cloud still comes up aces. “For small to midsize businesses, the main reason to move to the cloud is the convenience and limited or no support required to maintain an enterprise-level solution. Microsoft does a great job of delivering a package of tools that companies can use for e-mail, word processing, Web meetings, calendars, document management and other unified services,” he says. “The Google product, even though it came to market in 2006, has been bare bones in most of its features for the longest time. It still is not where we want it to be.”

 

File Fidelity
If you’re interested in compatibility with files generated by Microsoft software, then Microsoft software is a better bet, readers report. Take Word. While not perfect, files and templates taken from traditional versions of Word into Office 365 are fairly trouble-free. The only real rub is the Web version of Word doesn’t support the more sophisticated formatting features. If you opt for Office Professional Plus, you have access to both the local and cloud-based offering.

 

On the flip side, Google users have had mixed experiences with file fidelity. Johnson, of RHS Soccer Boosters, has had generally good luck. “I’ve seen no significant issues with supported documents that can’t be opened. I do use certain other applications, like Publisher, that can’t be rendered or edited in Google Docs,” Johnson says. “I go back and forth between Excel all the time. I’ve never seen issues with Word documents. Also, I’ve never tested the compatibility of the presentation app,” he adds.

 

Whatever the level of compatibility, it’s handy to have apps in the cloud and on your own hard drive. “I use Microsoft Office at home as well as work, but having the capability of opening the Google files in Office or not is handy. It’s great for dealing with non-homogeneous systems that the various parents may be running,” Johnson says.

 

Variable Performance
Like any cloud service, performance is based on a complex set of factors — the services provider infrastructure, its outgoing network links, speed of the Internet path, your broadband or WAN connection, and speed of your client device. Given all that, it’s little wonder that performance can vary widely. Reader Doug McDowell has nothing but good things to say about the speed of Office 365. “It’s great, much better than on-premises Exchange and SharePoint hosted in a datacenter,” he says.

 

Read more at http://redmondmag.com/Articles/2012/03/01/Face-Off.aspx?m=1&Page=2

Microsoft slashes Office 365 prices by 20% (20 percent)

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

This is a great news for everyone who is using Microsoft Office 365, the price of the Microsoft cloud services are dropping! Microsoft has slashes the prices for the Enterprise Suite of Microsoft Office 365.

 

The E1 plan which was $10 per user per month is now $8 per user; the E3 plan which was $24 per user and now is $20 per user.  

 

Microsoft attributed this price reduction to the cost efficiencies of having more customers on Microsoft Office 365 resulting in lower costs to run the cloud system and thus they are passing the savings onto the business customers.  The reduced prices take effect immediately for new and renewing customers. This is great news and it shows that Cloud computing works and that adding capacity and customers results in cost drops while increasing services offered, as Microsoft has been continuing to improve and add new features to the Office 365 stack.

 

You can read more about the announcement at Microsoft Office 365 Blog.

 

Microsoft  is also talking about the A2 plan being free for students and teachers and faculty in the Education space!

 

ISHIR is the go to partner with Microsoft to promote and evangelize the adoption of Microsoft Cloud Computing services (Office 365 and Microsoft Azure).  ISHIR provides Cloud Assessment and Readiness services to help you chart your path to the cloud.

Do you have your business on Pinterest?

Saturday, March 3rd, 2012

Pinterest is the hot new social media buzz these days. The social media, marketing, advertising, and IT crowds are all buzzing about Pinterest‘s ability to capture audiences, drive site traffic, and convert to business. The site launched via invite-only in 2010 and managed to stay mostly under the radar until a few months ago, but now the word is out. Pinterest is making the news. It is almost driving Google Plus to shame.

 

So what exactly is Pinterest?

 

It is basically a visual bookmarking site, where users create virtual ‘boards’ where they can ‘pin’ images which link back to web content. Named 2012′s hottest website by Pete Cashmore, CEO and founder of Mashable, Pinterest has grown so much that it ties Twitter and Google for third place in online referral traffic at 3.6% (poor MySpace is still clenching for dear life at 0.01%). That’s no surprise when you consider that visitors increased 4,000% from June-December of last year, with 7 million in December alone. These numbers are why companies are drooling.

 

Here are the facts on Pinterest:

 

 

So the big question remains, what are you waiting for? Shouldn’t your company be on Pinterest already?

 

ISHIR will be first to admit that every social media network is not right for every company. You have to find what works best for your product or service or your brand.

 

Learn more about leveraging Pinterest for your business by contacting our Digital Marketing expert team at ISHIR Digital.

From Freelance to Digital Agency: Start Small, Stay Small, yet Grow Business. Meet ISHIR at SXSW 2012 in Austin Texas

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

Internet has always attracted mavericks and entrepreneurs, and a rocky uncertain economice times make the freelance life more desirable due to lack of job opportunities (or at least more inevitable) than ever.

 

So what happens when your freelance business starts to grow?
How big can you get without getting bad?
How can freelancers and small teams compete with traditional agencies or larger digital interactive agency?

 

Hip freelancers and cool digital agency startups have used ISHIR Digital as their outsourced digital production team.  We can help you grow your agency business and share our success stories. 

 

You can meet us at SXSW 2012 in Austin, Texas. Drop us a note at rkhanna at ishir.com, tweet us at @ishir or visit us at www.ishir.com