A heated discussion is raging in the comments to a Clint Boulton eWeek article about Serena Software’s decision to switch from Microsoft Exchange to Google Apps. What
is at issue is the true cost of running Exchange. Serena says that
junking Exchange in favor of Google Apps will slash its costs from $1
million a year down to $250,000. Many of the commenters are wondering
how an 800-employee company manages to blow an eight-figure sum on
running its email servers, and the debate throws an intriguing light on
how people evaluate the relative costs of on-premise software against
in-the-cloud alternatives. Here’s one of the commenter’s calculations:
“800 CALs at retail pricing is $67 x 800 = $53,600.
Exchange Enterprise Edition is $3,999. Let’s assume they have two
servers: $7,998. Let’s also throw in the Software Assurance CAL of $35
x 800 = $28K. Two beefy servers at $10K each = $20K. Two full time
Exchange administrators at $100K/year = $200K. Total = $309,598/year.”
Serena’s VP of corporate communications responded, explaining that
ancillary costs such as spam filtering, security, archiving and
disaster recovery (DR) accounted for much of the total cost:
“Here is how we factored our costs, basic Exchange costs
(CALs, SAs and the like) paired with Postini is around $500k. That’s
not our full costs though … where the costs really start adding up is
in storage and disaster recovery (particularly when you consider we
have DR plans for 18 countries). So when you take unified messaging,
storage, DR and admin costs which come to $500k and add the original
$500k we were looking at $1 million USD per year as a total.”
That hasn’t cooled the debate, with several Exchange hosters
weighing in to say they can provide an equivalent raft of services for
a much lower all-in cost. But the discussion does underline how easy it
is to underestimate the cost of an on-premise
application if you don’t factor in all the associated extras — not just
the theoretical costs of the software, hardware and day-to-day
operations but also the often-overlooked costs of managing patches and
upgrades to each of those ancillary tools as well as the core package
itself (not to mention the management time expended on explaining over
and over again to users why they can’t have Gmail-like 6GB mailboxes).
In fact Mimecast, a company
based near me in London, has a thriving SaaS business providing all
those ancillary services around Exchange, leaving its customers to run
just the bare Exchange servers on-premise.
Has Serena over-stated its Exchange costs? I suspect not, given the
kind of headaches I know Exchange causes many companies of its size.
With operations spread across the globe, it makes perfect sense to
leverage Google’s global infrastructure rather than struggling to
maintain its own internal email empire.
But Serena does have a vested interest in talking up the cloud story, given its own strategic commitment to become a SaaS vendor.
I was especially interested to note from the eWeek story that Serena
has “no current plan to jettison SharePoint,” which staffers use for
collaboration. That rather contradicts last year’s story that Serena runs its intranet on Facebook (I was skeptical
at the time). So I suspect the transition to Gmail may not be as abrupt
as the eWeek story suggests, and Serena will continue to spend on
Exchange for a while yet until it can get all its users to switch over.
All this argument over details, however, obscures the core message
of this story, which is that running Google Apps as your corporate
email system is demonstrably and significantly cheaper than Microsoft
Exchange. Anyone who seeks to argue otherwise is significantly
understating the true costs of running Exchange on-premise.