Gartner has predicted that web-based email will comprise at least 10 percent of the license seats in enterprises through 2014.
However it also believes that it will hit 55 percent by 2020, as it reaches mass adoption.
Web-based, or cloud email, is hosted by providers such as Google, Microsoft, VMware’s Zimbra unit and several startups, and provisioned to users over the web. Many people question the security of this approach.
However, the cloud saves IT administrators the time and hassle of setting up and configuring on-premises email systems such as Microsoft Exchange Server and the Outlook user software, as well as IBM Lotus Domino Server and Notes user client.
Gartner analyst Tom Austin said the cloud will come to represent the dominant provisioning model business communication and collaboration technologies in 10 years.
Why will it take that long, when Gmail has 40 million users in Google Apps, and Microsoft Exchange Online will no doubt utilise the company’s massive enterprise reach to gain traction?
Austin blamed “asset inertia,” in which businesses are loath to switch from their long-term on-premises email contracts; the focus on strategic, rather than cost-cutting plays to gain competitive advantages, and Webmail systems whose promise is greater than their practice.
Moreover, most businesses that say they use cloud email also retain small on-premises systems to house and protect sensitive data generated by C-level executives.
Austin said businesses hold back from going all in with the cloud because of the perception that early adopters pay a premium in terms of acquisition cost.
Noting that cloud-based systems are forward-priced, Austin said businesses should secure cloud contracts now, but force vendors to commit to reducing prices as the cloud email becomes a commodity instead of a novelty.
Google charges $50 (£32) a user per year for its Google Apps, which includes Gmail, Google Docs and several other apps. Microsoft Exchange Online is part of Office 365, which includes tiered pricing starting at $6 (£3.25) per user, per month.
Austin’s colleague Matt Cain proclaimed Gmail a credible enterprise email alternative to Microsoft Exchange. Austin and Cain will present their findings at the Gartner Symposium/ITXpo in Orlando, Fla., next month.
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Lotus Notes and Domino provide email but they are not just email. Anyone (organisation) who uses Notes just for email want a good slapping. Get in there and develop some apps. Deliver them via the Client or the Browser, just don't expect to move them to the cloud anytime soon as they are not just mail. Moving from Lotus mail to the cloud really would be "Throwing the baby out with the bath water"