Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016
-
They must do something with O365, maybe resell it. I thought they used to do more than email security.
O365 is quickly becoming a serious product from what I see on the backend. I haven't actually used it in a couple years but it's come a long way.
-
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
O365 is quickly becoming a serious product from what I see on the backend. I haven't actually used it in a couple years but it's come a long way.
It's the only serious hosted Exchange product. But a resold version of it is crippled and should be avoided, it's dangerous to get it resold. All the cost of Microsoft, none of the protections.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
O365 is quickly becoming a serious product from what I see on the backend. I haven't actually used it in a couple years but it's come a long way.
It's the only serious hosted Exchange product. But a resold version of it is crippled and should be avoided, it's dangerous to get it resold. All the cost of Microsoft, none of the protections.
Yup.
Why go and buy O365 from a reseller or MSP. Microsoft will sell it to you directly. You're MSP / You can work directly with MS to get things going.
-
I have had 2 MSP's call me since I started. I have actually been looking into whether I should try to venture out on my own.
The problem right now is that I see know value in them, but maybe the target is a company that is bigger with no IT staff?
-
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
I have had 2 MSP's call me since I started. I have actually been looking into whether I should try to venture out on my own.
The problem right now is that I see know value in them, but maybe the target is a company that is bigger with no IT staff?
Or the staff they have is for basic issues and you require server support, voip etc. Honestly I'd jump at the opportunity to have NTG or @JaredBusch backing me up. It's a win-win situation where they profit, you gain a ton of knowledge and the company supported is supported very well.
-
In the channels I have been watching it seems like they go for $100 to $150/user per month plus more per server. I guess this company could save money by replacing my here but then they can't walk in my office and "fling poo". Ha!
It seems like it would take a very long time to find customers. They also talk about cold calling as a primary sales tool.
-
@wirestyle22 said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
I have had 2 MSP's call me since I started. I have actually been looking into whether I should try to venture out on my own.
The problem right now is that I see know value in them, but maybe the target is a company that is bigger with no IT staff?
Or the staff they have is for basic issues and you require server support, voip etc. Honestly I'd jump at the opportunity to have NTG or @JaredBusch backing me up. It's a win-win situation where they profit, you gain a ton of knowledge and the company supported is supported very well.
Is that what they do, work for an MSP?
-
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@wirestyle22 said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
I have had 2 MSP's call me since I started. I have actually been looking into whether I should try to venture out on my own.
The problem right now is that I see know value in them, but maybe the target is a company that is bigger with no IT staff?
Or the staff they have is for basic issues and you require server support, voip etc. Honestly I'd jump at the opportunity to have NTG or @JaredBusch backing me up. It's a win-win situation where they profit, you gain a ton of knowledge and the company supported is supported very well.
Is that what they do, work for an MSP?
@Minion-Queen owns NTG which is an MSP (I think). @JaredBusch is pretty much the #2 as far as I understand it for Bundy & Associates which is also an MSP (I think).
I'm just talking about how companies like these can be utilized. I wish I had them backing me up, i'd be a lot happier.
-
@wirestyle22 interesting. I had followed the profiles here but assumed it was more consulting work. And is @scottalanmiller really in Romania? I have family in Croatia.
-
@wirestyle22 said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@wirestyle22 said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
I have had 2 MSP's call me since I started. I have actually been looking into whether I should try to venture out on my own.
The problem right now is that I see know value in them, but maybe the target is a company that is bigger with no IT staff?
Or the staff they have is for basic issues and you require server support, voip etc. Honestly I'd jump at the opportunity to have NTG or @JaredBusch backing me up. It's a win-win situation where they profit, you gain a ton of knowledge and the company supported is supported very well.
Is that what they do, work for an MSP?
@Minion-Queen owns NTG which is an MSP. @JaredBusch is pretty much the #2 as far as I undertand it for Bundy & Associates which is also an MSP (I think)
Both are technically ITSPs, not MSPs. Similar, but they focus on consulting and are more flexible and technical than normal MSPs. MSP suggests a "fixed plan" type service.
NTG has lots of people here including myself, @Minion-Queen who is CEO, @art_of_shred who runs ops, @gjacobse @Mike-Davis @Mike-Ralston @Dominica etc.
-
@scottalanmiller when you say ITSP I am thinking Hosted PBX?
-
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@wirestyle22 interesting. I had followed the profiles here but assumed it was more consulting work. And is @scottalanmiller really in Romania? I have family in Croatia.
Not at the moment, in Sicily right now. But Romania is the closest thing that we have to a home. Targu Mures region in central Transylvania. Sadly, looking like I don't get to return as soon as I had hoped. We love Romania.
What part of Croatia? I was there a little last summer. Wonderful country.
-
@scottalanmiller and yeah I am not sure the pricing model makes sense. Or perhaps they are so focused on getting a customer where it does make sense that its a better business in the end? But getting customers would be extremely difficult.
-
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@scottalanmiller when you say ITSP I am thinking Hosted PBX?
IT Service Provider.
But totally by coincidence and unlike normal ITSPs, both Bundy and NTG both happen to do Hosted PBX services. You'll notice the Hosted PBX banner ads that come up from time to time.
-
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@scottalanmiller and yeah I am not sure the pricing model makes sense. Or perhaps they are so focused on getting a customer where it does make sense that its a better business in the end? But getting customers would be extremely difficult.
It's like SAN, probably. It's EASILY worth losing 90% of potential customers to sell one a SAN that didn't need it. The profit margins are literally that good.
-
@scottalanmiller They are in Split (pronounced Spleet). Beautiful place right on the bay/inlet. The started an org called Centro Retro in Santander, Spain in the nineties and it eventually carried them to Split. Their daughter is married to a guy from Romania.
-
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@scottalanmiller They are in Split (pronounced Spleet). Beautiful place right on the bay/inlet. The started an org called Centro Retro in Santander, Spain in the nineties and it eventually carried them to Split. Their daughter is married to a guy from Romania.
I know Split, but have not been there yet. It's high on our road trip list, we've been wanting to see the Roman ruins there.
-
We've lived in Spain in the past, too.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@scottalanmiller when you say ITSP I am thinking Hosted PBX?
IT Service Provider.
But totally by coincidence and unlike normal ITSPs, both Bundy and NTG both happen to do Hosted PBX services. You'll notice the Hosted PBX banner ads that come up from time to time.
What are the limits on users/call volumes with your $250/plan?
-
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@scottalanmiller said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@magroover said in Moving from Exchange Online Plan 1 to In House Exchange 2016:
@scottalanmiller when you say ITSP I am thinking Hosted PBX?
IT Service Provider.
But totally by coincidence and unlike normal ITSPs, both Bundy and NTG both happen to do Hosted PBX services. You'll notice the Hosted PBX banner ads that come up from time to time.
What are the limits on users/call volumes with your $250/plan?
No hard limits, it's based on utilitization. So, for example, if you use g.711u you can make TONS of calls. Maybe a few hundred. If you use g.729 that number will drop like crazy because it uses a little more RAM and loads of CPU to handle the transcoding between codecs (because the PSTN links are always g.711u at the end of the day.) If you have thirty people hanging out on the web console all day just clicking things, that will reduce calls. If you shut the web console off, that will increase calls. Things like that. The first limit you will hit is CPU. And trust me, that is a LOT of calls. We've never hit it, and we use this internally and have had customers on it for a long time. It would be the call volume of a very larger company.
And the next tier up, which we never recommend in the real world simply because no one really needs that, is not that much more money, I don't even know what it is but only like $300, I think, would handle SO much more, like way more than double. WAY more. So even if for some reason you went crazy with calls, it's not a big growth cost.