Microsoft Drops Prices Of Cloud Apps
InformationWeek
Microsoft has lowered the subscription prices for its cloud computing  applications, and has announced new customer wins  and broader geographic availability for the apps.  For Exchange Online alone, its email software-as-a-service, the price drops  from $10 to $5. Microsoft also has increased its standard e-mail storage  per user from 5 Gbytes to 25 Gbytes -- the same amount that Google (NSDQ: GOOG) provides for Google  Apps subscriptions.  Microsoft BPOS has been generally available for just several months, and  competes with Google Apps, Zoho Mail, Yahoo Zimbra, and the newest entrant, IBM  Lotus  Notes Hosted Messaging. Although Microsoft has disclosed the names of  several large companies that are implementing BPOS or Exchange Online --  including its largest, GlaxoSmithKline,  with 110,000 seats -- it has released 11 more names, including Aon Corp.,  Aviva PLC, McDonald's Corp., and Tyco Flow Control. Aon, which is transitioning  all 36,000 employees to Exchange Online, is the largest customer win disclosed  this week.  Microsoft also announced that BPOS and Exchange Online are now available in  Singapore, and will be available in India later this year. The SaaS apps already  are available in more than 15 countries, and Microsoft has trials underway in  more than a dozen additional countries.  European customers will be served their SaaS apps from a new data center in  Dublin and another in Amsterdam. Asian customers will be served from Microsoft's  Singapore data  center and a newly built one in Hong Kong. U.S. and Latin American customers  will be served from from data centers in Texas, Virginia, Washington, and a  newly built one in Chicago.  These announcements come one week after the city council of Los  Angeles voted to replace an aging Novell (NSDQ: NOVL) GroupWise email system with Google Apps, beating out Microsoft  Exchange Online.  Rob Markezich, corporate VP of Microsoft Online, says the price drop is not  in response to what happened in Los Angeles. "We've achieved a level of scale we  didn't have a year ago, and have made a number of software investments that  allow us to drive down costs and have more efficiencies," he said.  Still, are Microsoft's cost cuts enough? Google Apps, by comparison, which  includes apps for documents, spreadsheets and presentations, in addition to  email, costs only $50 per user per year. Markezich's response is that Microsoft  offers a scaled-down version of Exchange Online, designed for employees who  aren't frequent PC users, for $24 a year, and a scaled-down version of BPOS for  $36 a year. What's more, "we're not seeing any inclination that Zoho or Google  or Zimbra or any other of those offering fake Office capabilities can replace  [Microsoft Office]," he said.  Microsoft's online, subscription-based versions of Office apps are in  development and aren't due out until the first half of 2010.  CIOs choosing BPOS or Exchange Online over Google Apps and others typically  cite three key factors: seamless integration with on-premises instances of  Exchange or SharePoint; familiarity with the Microsoft platform; and an easy  exit strategy if they decide they don't like cloud computing.  "I don't think it's any secret that it's a big change to take your company to  Google; it's a different environment," said Tony DeGregorio, VP and Global CIO  at Tyco Control Flow, a manufacturer that will have 12,000 employees on  Microsoft Exchange Online by December.  Tyco is replacing a combination of on-premises Exchange and Notes platforms  that it's adopted due to various acquisitions in recent years. And with Google  Gmail, "an exit strategy for that type of environment lends itself to  challenge," DeGregorio said. "With Microsoft, I'm in an Exchange environment. If  I want to leave (Exchange Online) I can pick that up and move it to my own  Exchange environment. It's not a proprietary type of environment."   
  
