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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Join the cloud and earn up to $1500 in rewards!

Do you need an incentive to bring your business into the cloud?  InfinIT Consulting has a great offer for you if you sign up now!  

When you sign up for one of the qualifying Microsoft Business Productivity Online Services below, you can get a reward of up to 50% of your first annual subscription (or $1500) for up to 25 seats.  This is a great opportunity for small businesses to save money.  You can even use your reward check to purchase software, hardware, and other IT services!  You'll also be eligible to upgrade to Office 365 when it becomes available. 

Qualifying services include:

  • Microsoft Business Productivity Online Standard Suite
  • Microsoft SharePoint Online Standard
  • Microsoft Exchange Online Standard
  • Microsoft Office Communications Online Standard
  • Microsoft Business Productivity Online Deskless Worker
  • Microsoft SharePoint Online Deskless Worker
  • Microsoft Exchange Online Deskless Worker
  • Learn more about the products here.

Don't wait too long because this offer ends April 1, 2011!

Give us a call at 866.364.2007 or email us at sales@infinitconsulting.com if you have any questions. We’d be happy to give you a demo of the power of Microsoft Online Services.

Ready to sign up? Head on over to our sign-up page to get started.

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Microsoft Case Study: Staffing Firm Integrates Acquisitions 70 Percent Faster by Using Online Email Service

Published by: Microsoft Case Studies

Download: Microsoft Case Study: DeployHR

DeployHRStaffing Firm Integrates Acquisitions 70 Percent Faster by Using Online Email Service

DeployHR, a fast-growing staffing firm, wanted to quickly integrate acquired companies so the new additions could become profitable parts of the company sooner. To provide new employees with email services immediately and eliminate the expense of managing an on-premises email infrastructure, DeployHR subscribed to Microsoft Business Productivity Online Standard Suite, part of Microsoft Online Services. The company’s 25 corporate employees gained instant, web-based access not only to the latest Microsoft email messaging program, but also to conferencing, instant messaging, and collaboration team sites. By using online messaging and collaboration services, DeployHR has accelerated acquisition integration by 70 percent, reduced email management time by 60 percent, and made messaging costs predictable and affordable. Employees are more productive, and email is significantly more reliable.


Situation
DeployHR is a contract staffing firm that provides staffing services for the manufacturing, shipping, supply-chain, and technical markets in the eastern and midwestern United States. From the moment DeployHR was formed in 2009, it has grown by acquisition. In its first two years, DeployHR acquired several small staffing companies in four states, going from zero employees to approximately 1,000. Only 25 employees have corporate responsibilities; the rest are contract hires—ranging from forklift operators to engineers—that DeployHR places with customers.

With each acquisition, DeployHR took on a new, disparate IT infrastructure. The company focused on integrating critical line-of-business (LOB) applications, such as resumé databases and payroll systems, into DeployHR corporate systems. But due to a lack of time and resources, it left other applications alone. One of these was email messaging. Most of the small companies acquired had simple Post Office Protocol (POP) email systems, but some used Lotus Notes and other applications. “These systems had a range of virus and spam protection,” says Marcos Barrera, Director of IT for DeployHR. “Managing this mixed messaging infrastructure was a nightmare, and it was only going to get worse as we grew.”

Not only was it difficult for Barrera to manage the various email systems, but it was difficult for the company’s 25 corporate employees to communicate with one another. Employees had a diversity of email addresses and no central address list or calendar system. “It was difficult and time consuming to reach a colleague in another part of the company,” Barrera says. “The mix of email addresses resulted in lost mail messages and many calls to the corporate office asking for help in reaching people.” Email service was also unreliable without a consistent and up-to-date antivirus capability protecting all email accounts. Clearing out spam (that is, unsolicited commercial email) consumed valuable time every day, and some email systems stopped responding for days at a time.

DeployHR also desired a way to improve the productivity within groups of employees that had been melded together through acquisitions. “Our success comes from quickly integrating acquisitions, making our new people productive immediately, and providing new value to our customers with enhanced capabilities,” Barrera says. “However, we did not have an efficient way to share corporate forms, processes, and policies with each new group of employees because we had no central portal. We ended up sending forms around as email attachments, and this took time and resulted in process inconsistencies.”

Solution
Barrera knew that he needed to standardize DeployHR on a single email messaging program, but with the rise of “cloud” computing services—running applications such as email over the Internet in third-party data centers—the question for Barrera was: cloud or on-premises? Incidentally, Barrera also provides IT support for a sister company, which also grows by acquisition but has an established, on-premises email infrastructure. For this firm, Barrera spent about 20 hours per new employee connecting them to the new company—leaving him little time to integrate the more important LOB applications.

Barrera’s experience with the difficulty in extending the sister company’s on-premises email system and its high maintenance cost helped him make his choice for DeployHR. “We briefly considered creating on-premises email services for DeployHR, but we pretty quickly abandoned that idea and decided that cloud computing would give us much greater business agility and much lower costs.” Subscription-based cloud email services would also give DeployHR a predictable per-employee cost of messaging so that it could better project the cost of each acquisition.

Which Cloud?
InfinIT Consulting, a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner that provides IT consulting services to DeployHR, introduced Barrera to Microsoft Business Productivity Online Standard Suite. The suite includes Microsoft Exchange Online, Microsoft SharePoint Online, Microsoft Office Communications Online, and Microsoft Office Live Meeting, all hosted at Microsoft data centers and delivered online. 

In addition to Microsoft Business Productivity Online Standard Suite, part of Microsoft Online Services, Barrera evaluated other cloud offerings, too, namely, Google Apps and Intermedia. “The thought of hosting Microsoft Exchange Server with someone besides Microsoft didn’t make sense to me, so I quickly discarded Intermedia,” Barrera says. “I signed up for a test account with Google Apps and didn’t have much luck with calendar synchronization. Also, all of our users used Microsoft Office productivity programs, and giving them a completely different interface for their email client would be a big ‘disconnect’ for them. The Microsoft service provided better integration with their day-to-day operations.”

Powerful Online Communications Programs
In May 2010, DeployHR worked with InfinIT Consulting to set up Business Productivity Online Standard Suite, and Barrera quickly migrated the 25 corporate employees to the new system. DeployHR contract employees use the email services and addresses of the customer companies to which they are assigned.

All DeployHR corporate employees now use Exchange Online as their common email program, which is accessible from any browser. “Our employees love Exchange Online,” Barrera says. “Most come from basic POP email systems and have never had features such as a global contact list, global calendaring, meeting scheduling, and built-in virus protection.”

DeployHR licensed Microsoft Forefront Online Protection for Exchange, which provides layered technologies that help protect inbound and outbound email from spam, viruses, phishing scams, and email policy violations. “Forefront Online Protection for Exchange was a big reason that Microsoft Online Services appealed to us,” Barrera says. “It removes most email dangers before they ever hit our inboxes and gives me administrative insight into our email environment.”

DeployHR is evaluating the Microsoft Exchange Hosted Archive service, which provides email and instant message archiving. “With so many contract workers at so many customer locations, it’s important for us to have a record of all email communications,” Barrera says. “It’s better protection for us, our employees, and our customers.”

DeployHR plans to use SharePoint Online as a convenient online meeting place for project teams and to share notifications with all employees. It is moving corporate processes and documents to a SharePoint Online site and also creating a SharePoint Online site for specific teams. “Because there’s so much variety in the types of staffing we fulfill, from manufacturing workers to engineers, it would be impossible to have one standard set of forms and processes,” Barrera says. “With SharePoint Online, we can provide access to the standardized forms used by all employees, but also give each team the freedom to post its own documents and processes in one place for easy online access.”

Next, DeployHR plans to use Office Live Meeting—PC-based web conferencing—for training. Instead of traveling to different offices, Barrera and other managers can deliver training over the Internet.

Benefits
By subscribing to Microsoft Online Services, DeployHR has increased its business agility, reduced costs, raised employee productivity, and improved email availability.

Acquisitions Integrated 70 Percent Faster
By offering employees subscription-based online email services, DeployHR can integrate acquisitions 70 percent faster, which supports the company’s rapid growth goals. “Microsoft Online Services has allowed us to be fluid in our aggressive growth strategy,” Barrera says. “There’s no way we could maintain this pace of growth without a cloud-based messaging service.”

Sixty Percent Less Email Management Time
Since migrating to Microsoft Online Services, Barrera has dramatically reduced the time he spends setting up and managing messaging services, which frees him to work on other initiatives and better support users. “The on-premises messaging infrastructure for our sister company took many years and many people to develop,” Barrera says. “I am basically building a company with the same market revenue with just one IT person. I spend 60 percent less time managing messaging for DeployHR than for the sister company. I have more time for training users and for integrating each new acquisition’s data into our LOB systems, which is significantly more important to our business.”

Barrera says that he most certainly would have had to hire at least one more full-time IT staff member to help manage messaging for DeployHR had the company not moved to Microsoft Online Services. “It now takes me two hours at DeployHR to connect a new employee to our systems, as compared to 20 hours as at our sister company,” he says. Barrera simply sends each new employee an email message that contains their user credentials for Business Productivity Online Standard Suite and a web link. When they log on, Microsoft Online Services automatically configures their email account.

Predictable Operating Costs
DeployHR management also values the predictable costs the company gets with Microsoft Online Services. “Before, we had to look at how a new acquisition would affect our IT infrastructure in terms of storage and other on-premises infrastructure,” Barrera says. “Now, I don’t have to worry about those costs. We’re spending [U.S.]$30 per user per month on Microsoft Online Services rather than $55 per user per month for an on-premises infrastructure. Plus, these costs are operating expenses rather than capital expenses. It’s a ‘no-brainer.’”

Increased Employee Productivity
Features such as global calendaring and address lists help DeployHR employees work together more efficiently, as do SharePoint Online sites. “With so many offices spread out across the country, these enhanced communications and collaboration services help create a common culture and knit employees together,” Barrera says.

Employees can now send email messages with confidence that they will arrive, set up meetings without making multiple phone calls, and send colleagues web links for important documents rather than sending large email attachments. All these conveniences save time throughout the day and accelerate the overall pace of business at DeployHR and the company’s ability to fill customer staffing requisitions.

Higher Reliability
Another productivity boost comes from higher email reliability. “Many of these companies that we’ve acquired are established firms whose names have been on spam lists for years,” Barrera says. “It’s been a huge problem for them, but it completely went away with Microsoft Online Services.” Microsoft Exchange Online, together with Forefront Online Protection for Exchange, provides multilayer spam and virus protection, email encryption, and other message protection features.

Having its email infrastructure running in a Microsoft data center with 99.9 percent scheduled uptime and financially backed service-level agreements also gives DeployHR management peace of mind. “We would never be able to afford to create an on-premises, high-availability infrastructure equivalent to what we have with Microsoft Online Services,” Barrera says.

“Having a cloud-based infrastructure also helps in the Midwest with thunderstorms,” he adds. “Now, when a storm knocks out power in one of our offices, employees can work from home, with easy access to email and needed documents.”

Based on the resounding success of Microsoft Online Services at DeployHR, its sister company is also charting a path to Microsoft Online Services. “That will be 100 additional employees for whom I do not have to spend time managing email,” Barrera says. “It’s going to be a great move for them—and for me.”

Microsoft Online Services
Microsoft Online Services are business-class communication and collaboration solutions delivered as a subscription service and hosted by Microsoft. With these offerings, customers can cost-effectively access the most up-to-date technologies and immediately benefit from streamlined communications, simplified management, and business-class reliability and security features. For IT staffers, Microsoft Online Services are backed by strong service-level agreements and help reduce the burden of performing routine IT management, freeing up time to focus on core business initiatives.

For more information, visit: 
www.microsoft.com/online

For more information about InfinIT Consulting products and services, call (866) 364-2007 or visit the website at:

www.infinITconsulting.com

For more information about DeployHR services, call (925) 426-6900 or visit the website at: 
www.deployhr.com

To find out more information and answers to FAQs on Microsoft Business Productive Online Suite, you can visit our blog at: www.allcloudallthetime.com

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Email, the Lowest-Hanging Fruit of the Cloud

Published by: TechNet Magazine

Written by: Mitch Irsfeld

Email is a great application for “testing the air” in the Cloud. Moreover, a coexistence strategy enables you move some domains off-premise to start realizing the cost benefits of email in the cloud.

Email is emerging as the low-hanging fruit for cloud computing in the enterprise. It’s a workload that lends itself quite naturally to the service model and, shows great potential for a fast return on investment. Email’s also the logical walk-before-you-run approach to acclimating your user base to cloud-based servers.  The coexistence approach of maintaining both on-premise mailboxes and online mailboxes has the added advantage of enabling you to compare on-premise and cloud functionality, performance, and cost side-by-side.

Mimecast’s recent Cloud Barometer Survey 2010 showed that more than half of enterprises have already adopted some form of cloud computing and 66 percent said they are now thinking of moving to the cloud. And guess what the most popular service is? That’s right, email.

This edition of TechNet ON will help you build your email coexistence strategy with pointers to several Microsoft and non-MS resources. Exciting upgrades are on the near horizon for Microsoft’s Exchange Online and across the entire Business Productivity Online Suite, but customers are already realizing significant cost reductions, whether they move their email servers completely to the cloud or take the hybrid approach moving only some email domains.

Which costs evaporate in the cloud?

Let’s look at the first assertion: the ROI of email in the cloud. The obvious way to save money when moving email to the cloud comes from reducing or eliminating the hardware, administration and support costs of manning your own servers. Yet it also reduces the burden of routine tasks such as installation, provisioning, ongoing maintenance, patches, updates, and upgrades. In addition to hardware and support staffing costs--the two largest chunks of on-premise email budgets–your software costs, including security and anti-malware overhead, move to a variable cost model that can be expanded or contracted based on the task.

The transformation due to the convenience of cloud computing is still underappreciated. I think Jeff Staser of the Staser Consulting Group said it best in this short video when he quipped that thinking along traditional lines of owning servers is like “owning a car at every airport so that you have one when you need it. We’d rather rent that car when we’re travelling.”

In the article Tier Your Workforce to Save Money with Cloud-Based Corporate Email, Forrester Research says that companies with fewer than 15,000 mailboxes will find it cheaper to host all their mailboxes in the cloud compared to on internal servers. But larger companies should realize that different types of email users have different costs associated with their mailboxes, and that they can selectively migrate certain classes of users to realize substantial savings. Forrester reports that a typical large firm moving 20,000 occasional users to Microsoft Exchange Online can save more than $63 per person annually, a first-year savings of $1.26 million. That’s low-hanging fruit, if ever there was such a thing in information technology.

For more on measuring savings when moving to cloud computing, check out CIO Magazine’s 8 Ways to Measure Cloud ROI.

Which brings us to the second assertion, that email is logical workload for beginning a coexistence strategy with cloud computing. In addition to segmenting your workforce, as Forrester suggests (for instance, by information workers, mobile executives, and occasional users) you can also segment by your existing domains based on organizational structure, region, or other factors.

Cloud Coexistence

It’s fairly straightforward to envision splitting your domains—even in small-to-medium-sized organizations—along the functional factors above, but that also maps to logical ways to organize and manage the coexistence of on-premise and cloud-based mailboxes.

But it doesn’t have to be an either/or proposition. Organizations can take advantage of online services within their own networks before embracing the public cloud. As Steve Ballmer predicted earlier this year at an IDC conference in Brazil, the whole software and hardware architecture for what we think of today as the server is what we'll think of tomorrow as the cloud. “If we operate the cloud, we talk about it as the public cloud, but these same technologies will be available over time to our customers with a special support relationship with us, for example with our Windows Azure and SQL Azure technologies, so that you can run your own private cloud, if you will, in addition, and benefit from these same technologies.”

Remember that there are several gotchas in the idea of considering only at per-user service fees for hosted email servers. You’ll need to make sure that services like archiving, filtering, security and compliance can be delivered with equal or better results. The various applications that work with your email system (integrated voice, instant messaging, live meeting, conferencing, etc.) will have to be integrated and tested.

Exchange Server 2010 was designed to support hybrid deployments of on-premise and cloud mailboxes and Exchange Server 2010 SP1 includes functionality that supports coexistence with Exchange Online, however, Exchange Online is still being updated to support the Exchange 2010 SP1 functionality.

Exchange 2010 also uses an identity service called Microsoft Federation Gateway which runs in the cloud to provide the trust infrastructure needed for secure sharing of calendar, contacts and free/busy information.

Exchange Online

Once you decide to move mailboxes to the cloud, setting them up is fairly easy with Exchange Online. Our content cowboy-at-large, Keith Combs, recently subscribed to Exchange Online and walks through the simple process of setting up domains and users in his Exchange Online Overview posting. There you will find two short Exchange Online screencasts: Part 1: Account Logon and Domain Setup, and Part 2: Adding and Testing Users.

As Keith points out, there isn’t really a downside to giving Exchange Online whirl. You can get the 30-day trial free. You don’t have to commit any of your production domains to this process for testing, and, if you decide to buy, the subscription is month-to-month, so it’s easy to make changes.

As noted in TechNet Magazine’s Exchange 2010: A Closer Look, you will ultimately be able to manage Exchange Online from the Exchange Management Console and Exchange Management Shell, once Microsoft updates Exchange Online to Exchange 2010. This will allow you to manage an on-premises solution or a hosted service from the same console. For now, the Microsoft Online Services Administration Center gives you an online management portal to manage services and users. You can import multiple user accounts, use e-mail migration tools, create distribution lists, create SharePoint site collections, and submit service requests to Microsoft Online Services Technical Support from the dashboard.

The Microsoft Business Productivity Online Standard Suite is a handy bundle of several popular messaging and collaboration solutions, including Exchange Online, also provides e-mail coexistence and migration tools. If you have Active Directory services and Microsoft Exchange Server, the Microsoft Online Services Directory Synchronization Tool can synchronize user accounts, contacts, and groups from your local environment to Microsoft Online Services. You can also use this tool to make your Microsoft Exchange Global Address List (GAL) available to users in Exchange Online.

Need to convert internal email archives to the cloud? Use the Microsoft Online Services Migration Tools to forward copies of your Exchange Server mail to your Exchange Online mailboxes. You can also use the Migration Tools to copy content from your Exchange Server, POP3, or IMAP4 e-mail server mailboxes to your Exchange Online mailboxes.

Coming soon in Online Services

With the launch of Exchange, SharePoint and Office 2010 earlier this year, the Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) team has been working hard to update BPOS and get closer to parity with those on-premise server products. In the coming months, expect previews of the new capabilities in Exchange Online, including:

  • Voice mail with Unified Messaging
  • Integrated archiving
  • Retention policies and legal hold
  • Transport rules
  • Multi-mailbox search
  • Conversation View
  • MailTips
  • Enhanced Web-based administration
  • Role-Based Access Control
  • Remote PowerShell
  • Free/busy between cloud and on-premises
  • Cross-premises management
  • Native migration tools

Stay abreast of the previews on the Microsoft Online Services Team Blog.

We know that enterprises continue to have concerns around migrating to the cloud, and a critical workload like email is certainly no exception, especially when it comes to security. But we also know that many of you are already testing the wind in the clouds.