Microsoft chops price of its hosted software
Microsoft said Monday that it's cutting by a third the subscription prices for the hosted versions of Exchange, Sharepoint, and Office Communications Server.
The software maker plans to cut the monthly per-user cost of licensing all three products from $15 to $10, while the cost of licensing individual products is also dropping by as much as 50 percent. The move comes as Microsoft faces continued pressure from rivals, including Google.
Capossela
(Credit: Microsoft)Last week, the city of Los Angeles voted to go ahead with a deal to shift many employees to Google Apps from Microsoft Office.
In an interview, Microsoft Vice President Chris Capossela said the move has less to do with competitive pressure than that "it's the price that customers are really excited to buy our suite at."
,p> "We're pretty excited about the price and not so much focused on free services or the price Google or others might charge," Capossela said.In addition to the price drop, Microsoft is also touting several new customers and announced its plan to bring the year-old Microsoft Online services to more than a dozen new countries.
The company is announcing its commercial launch in Singapore, as well as trials in Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Czech Republic, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Israel, Malaysia, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Poland, Romania, and Taiwan. Microsoft also expects to have commercial availability in India later this year.
Among the new customers are McDonalds, Aon, Lions Gate Entertainment, and Rexel Group. They join existing customers, such as Blockbuster, Coca-Cola and Autodesk as those paying Microsoft to run hosted versions of its products. Microsoft formally launched Microsoft Online at a San Francisco event a year ago.
Next week, Microsoft will also formally launch Exchange 2010 at its TechEd Berlin developer event. Microsoft said last month that it had finalized the product. Traditionally, Microsoft has developed products first as a server and only later, if at all, customized them to run in hosted form.
Exchange 2010, though, was designed first as an online service and then crafted into a product that businesses can run on their own servers.
During her years at CNET News, Ina Fried has changed beats several times, changed genders once, and covered both of the Pirates of Silicon Valley. These days, most of her attention is focused on Microsoft. E-mail Ina. 





The funny part is, Microsoft has competitors for their own product as well, in packages where folks can do hosted Exchange + SharePoint for a per-user price of as low as $4.95.
Now - which price is better for the same product if you're dealing with 100 users with basic needs - $1k/mo. or $495/mo. ?
Google Wave does the same as MS Sharepoint.
Gmail does the same as Exchange Server.
Google Docs does the same as Live Office.
Soon I am guessing that Google will have a virtual machine option to compete with VirtualPC and run hosted ChromeOS in a virtual machine, online for free, while Microsoft charges money for hosted versions of MS Windows.
"Gmail does the same as Exchange Server." Are you crazy??? Do you smoke crack??? I would have believed you if you said Hotmail. GMail is to Exchange as Notpad is to Word.
Google has NOTHING that even smells like Office Communications Server; NOTHING, NADA, ZILCH.
The closest thing they come close to is Sharepoint and that is reallllllllyyyyy stretching it.
$10 a month for those services is a steal. Take a moment to compare the product offerings before you start your FUD attack.
Incidentally, when you get down to it SharePoint is nothing more than a glorified (and expensive) CMS with some document controls tacked on. Sourceforge is full of server apps costing $0.00 that can do the same things and more, minus the proprietary MS Office filters (which are not really necessary, truth be told).
"$10 a month for those services is a steal."
Google around a bit - there are third parties that can do the same thing for half the price, with the same exact server apps (Exchange and SharePoint)
But just for grins, go find a Google equivalent of these things:
- Global address books
- Integrated security, security groups, remote management.
- customizable SPAM filtering
- CSS compliant web authoring
- support for .Net web parts
- ActiveSync support
- web presence
- IP phone integration
Happy hunting. Dress warm though because you will be out for awhile.
Look here:
http://www.google.com/apps/intl/en/business/index.html
Google themselves don't claim that vanilla Gmail does the same as Exchange Server. Google themselves charge $50 / per user -- and they have a *business* version of the apps you listed -- because the consumer versions don't even come close to MS's productivity apps.
You can't even bother to do a simple search before spewing nonsense??? (And same goes for Orion Blaster).
Look here:
http://www.google.com/apps/intl/en/business/index.html
Google themselves don't claim that vanilla Gmail does the same as Exchange Server. Google themselves charge $50 / per user -- and they have a *business* version of the apps you listed -- because the consumer versions don't even come close to MS's productivity apps.
You can't even bother to do a simple search before spewing nonsense??? (And same goes for Orion Blaster).
nice try though!
I cannot believe it's this easy...
I work for a very large Fortune 500 company and it would sicken you how much the great, great majority of office users do not know about the software. MS Office is overkill for them. They only know what they need to do their basic job and no more. Google Apps is way more than they need. Really.
Oh wait, that's right, I've heard of them. Just slipped my mind for a moment.
Before hating something try to test drive it firts, open a book or look at the demo. And to Linux dude, Linux is just like a Gmail, its missing features, support, updated drives.
- by Robin Majumdar November 3, 2009 4:30 PM PST
- Just as a side note, the reduced price $10 per month deal for the Business Productivity Online Standard Suite requires a minimum purchase of 5 "seats" (i.e. 5 licenses)...
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(28 Comments)That said, for getting access to Exchange Online, SharePoint Online, Office Live Meeting, and Office Communications Online it's a pretty compelling value proposition.