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Hosted Exchange

Why use Microsoft Exchange?

Most small and mid-sized businesses are using email as a primary communication channel with customers, colleagues and suppliers. But many of these companies stop there, missing out on productivity-boosting features like shared calendars, contact information and files.

By upgrading to the world’s most popular business messaging software, Microsoft Exchange Server 2010, you can significantly raise your team’s efficiency for a small monthly fee.

Basically, Exchange is a computer server that stores your company’s email, calendars, address books and files centrally, so they are available 24x7 and can be shared among your team, if you wish.   It is the messaging system of choice for most Fortune 500 corporations.

ADVANCED FEATURES

People running Exchange as their email server typically use Microsoft Outlook 2007 as their email ‘client’. Among many advanced features, this lets them:

  • Securely access email remotely – via the Web or a mobile device like a BlackBerry or Treo
  • View colleagues’ up-to-date calendars and schedule meetings
  • Assign and manage company tasks on central ‘to do’ lists
  • Manage contact information of employees and customers and access it anytime
  • Share documents across the team so everyone’s working from the most current version

Exchange is a quantum leap from basic POP3 or IMAP4 email and makes your team much more productive through constant access to email, calendars and contacts, as well as important files and information.

Basic POP and IMAP email systems, which are currently used for accessing email, are more suited to home and personal user, rather than business, and were never designed to include the broader, richer collaborative tools that Exchange has made possible.

Now that Hosted Exchange is available for no upfront cost, with low monthly fees, smaller and mid-sized companies are increasingly realizing the instant competitive advantage that Exchange can give them.


Outlook/Exchange 2010 vs Basic Email

To help you understand the productivity-boosting options that Exchange offers, here is a comparison of Outlook/Exchange 2010 versus basic email options:

Exchange Server 2010

POP 3 /
IMAP4

Group scheduling

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Red_x

Send out meeting requests, then track and update them

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Red_x

Shared calendars and side-by-side calendar views

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Red_x

Access to personal and shared address books from remote locations

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Red_x

Outlook single sign-on for email and network access

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Red_x

Outlook connections over the Internet are secure

bullet_04

Some solutions

Server-side spam filtering

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Some solutions

Put multicolored flags next to emails as a reminder to follow up

bullet_04

Partial

Ability to add voting buttons to a messages

bullet_04

Red_x

Automatic out-of-office reply

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Red_x

Ability to recall sent messages

bullet_04

Red_x

Support for multiple-computer access

bullet_04

Partial

Access to email via Web browsers and mobile browsers, Outlook Mobile in Windows Mobile-based Pocket PCs, Pocket PC Phone Edition and Smartphones

bullet_04

Non-Microsoft products are typically required

Outlook Cached Exchange Mode for working with intermittent Web connection (eg dial-up)

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Some solutions offer caching

Offline email, calendar, contacts, and public folder support

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Partial

Access to public folders for sharing documents and information

bullet_04

Individual email folder access in IMAP

Basic email support for SMTP, POP3, and IMAP4

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Red_x

Easy management of Outlook and Exchange Server profiles across multiple machines to lower support costs

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Red_x

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Last Updated on Friday, 23 April 2010 18:51
 
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