Microsoft Targets Google Apps, Cuts Exchange Online Price

Microsoft has cut in half its per user per month list price for Exchange Online services and cut by 33 percent the price of its Business Productivity Online Services suite of online productivity applications.

By John Fontana
Tue, November 03, 2009

Network World — Microsoft has cut in half its per user per month list price for Exchange Online services and cut by 33 percent the price of its Business Productivity Online Services suite of online productivity applications.

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The drop from US$10 per user per month to $5 for Exchange Online is significant because it brings Microsoft much closer to the price Google charges for its Google Apps Premier Edition (GAPE) suite that is anchored by Gmail. In addition, Microsoft said allowable mailbox sizes would go from 5GB to 25GB, a move that ups Microsoft's stake in the so-called "bottomless" inbox war with other online providers.

"For many companies, GAPE vs. Exchange Online is a valid comparison -- and Microsoft just got a lot closer to Google's pricing," said Guy Creese, an analyst with the Burton Group. Microsoft's per year cost per user for Exchange Online is now $60. Google charges $50 per user per year for GAPE, which also includes other productivity applications.

Creese says the cost reduction in notable for corporate users who typically focus on GAPE as an email replacement.

"The hidden story here is that most large GAPE installations are Gmail-focused. SMBs are using Google Apps as a replacement for Microsoft Office, but large enterprises aren't. So while enterprises buying GAPE may be paying for e-mail, a word processor, a spreadsheet, and a presentation package, what they're really using is the e-mail portion."

Microsoft also cut the list price on its entire Business Productivity Online Services (BPOS) suite, saying it would drop from $15 per user per month to $10. Users have to buy a minimum of 5 seats.

BPOS includes Exchange Online with Hosted Filtering, SharePoint Online, Office Communications Online and Microsoft Office Live Meeting. There are also slimmed down online versions of Exchange and SharePoint for "deskless" workers, or those who use the services infrequently.

"I think the price decrease is a combination of Microsoft tuning its infrastructure and continued competition in the space," said Creese. "If the competition weren't there, given Microsoft's financial fine tuning over the past year, I'm sure the company would be pocketing the increased profit."

Major vendors such as IBM, Cisco, Novell, and Google are hot to build online service businesses around e-mail and other collaboration software. Last week, the Los Angeles City Council approved a $7.25 million five-year deal to adopt Gmail and other Google Apps. Last year, Cisco spent $215 million to buy PostPath, which supplies e-mail and calendaring. A year ago, IBM launched Lotus Notes Hosted Messaging.

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