DocuCrunch.com » Experts: Don’t trust Web-based e-mail

Experts: Don’t trust Web-based e-mail

November 19, 2009 by Sam Narisi
Posted in: In this week's e-newsletter, Latest News & Views, Solutions

In this economy, Web-based e-mail isn’t just popular with consumers — some small businesses are taking advantage of those resources as well.

Web mail is often free, or offered at low-costs with features tailored to small businesses. But e-mail may be too important to entrust to a free or cheap Web-bases system, warns Roger Matus, CEO of e-mail archiving firm Inboxer.

Potential pitfalls include the risk of downtime. For example, Google’s Gmail made headlines after a few recent outages lasted several hours.

Also, most of these services give users little recourse if messages are lost — which can hurt the bottom line if, for example, messages to and from potential customers or clients don’t get through. Gmail’s service agreement says Google is not responsible for “any damages or loss of profit or harm to business reputation that results from use of the service.”

Our conclusion: Gmail (and others like it) are fine for home use, but if e-mail is critical to your business, you may want to spend the money for a more strictly managed system.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , ,

Leave a Reply


advertisement





Here is a sample of the newest office productivity machines that have earned the Better Buys for Business Editor's Choice Award.

Sharp's Frontier series

Letter/legal copier-multifunctionals with high-end software features

Panasonic KV-S7075C

- one of the fastest flatbed scanners in the industry

Lexmark C734/C736

- Feature-laden color printers, for small-to-midsize workgroups.




The Archives


  • February 2010 (7)
  • January 2010 (40)
  • December 2009 (39)
  • November 2009 (34)
  • October 2009 (30)
  • September 2009 (33)
  • August 2009 (29)
  • July 2009 (30)
  • June 2009 (31)
  • May 2009 (26)
  • April 2009 (20)
  • March 2009 (9)


  • Whitepapers



    advertisement