by
Ron Herardian|
©1998 Global System Services (GSS)
IS GROUPWARE THE NEXT STEP?
Many Lotus customers believe that Notes is the ineluctable next step
for cc:Mail customers. While Notes is an excellent migration path away
from cc:Mail, it is important to understand that it is also one of several
migration paths away from LAN-based e-mail and from a file server based
information systems infrastructure. E-mail is of course lighter and
less costly than groupware and it provides some benefits that overlap
those of groupware.
Nevertheless, it is not entirely clear that Notes is the future for
cc:Mail customers -- not because the cc:Mail product line necessarily
has a brilliant future but because the Notes is not without competitors
in the messaging arena as an upgrade to existing file-server-based e-mail
systems. For reasons that will be made clear momentarily, the window
is wide open for Microsoft and Internet-based companies to win cc:Mail
migration business in spite of Notes' privileged position in the Lotus
product family. This is because (a) Notes is more resource intensive
than mail; and (b) Notes is based on a different and less compatible
architecture than all file-server-based e-mail and shared file database
systems. There is also a time lag in the evolution of installed hardware
infrastructures leaving the way open to `middle-ground', messaging-based
client/server solutions, as well as Internet-based systems.
IS YOUR E-MAIL SYSTEM OBSOLETE?
Groupware, of course, has a lot to offer, but those who claim that
e-mail is obsolete are simply misinformed regarding messaging. Lotus
cc:Mail, for example, is the most popular LAN-based e-mail system in
the world with 10 million users as of 1996. Yet 'migrationists' describe
it as an "Edsel." This position discounts the new generation
of file-server-based e-mail technology on the verge of release from
cc:Mail (May, 1996). More to the point is the integration of cc:Mail
with Internet and World Wide Web technologies through native TCP/IP
protocols and the cc:Web server products.
What groupware advocates seem to be saying is that "groupware
will replace LAN-based e-mail, therefore Notes will replace cc:Mail."
Nevertheless, migration to client/server groupware can mean migrating
an existing file server-based information systems infrastructure to
client/server systems or duplicating server investments to support client/server
systems along side traditional file server-based systems.
On the software side, migration can mean phasing out an existing file
server based messaging infrastructure. These are costly implications
that do not make business sense for a lot of messaging customers. The
problem with migration has been the cost of bridging the gap between
client/server and file server server components on the hardware side;
and between client/server and file sharing messaging infrastructures
on the software side. In the case of Notes, there has been an additional
factor which will become less significant moving forward. Specifically,
that the Notes client consumes several times more workstation resources
than any file server-based e-mail product -- of course, there is much
more functionality in Notes.
In the past, Lotus has tried to work around some of these issues by
porting the Notes server to file server operating systems (other than
OS/2), such as NetWare and NT. However, while this is an excellent strategy
which has generally worked well for Lotus, it has not been enough to
stimulate mass migrations from LAN-based e-mail to Notes. The reason
is that the server overhead of Notes remains substantial. Notes needs
dedicated servers, even when running on a file server OS like NetWare,
and this puts customers back in the position of either replacing file
servers with Notes servers or rolling out Notes servers side-by-side
with existing file servers, thus duplicating hardware investments where
the customer has file-server-based e-mail, and in some cases competing,
although limited, groupware functionality such as calendaring and scheduling,
or forms. This is especially for customers that have a UNIX-based infrastructure
where Internet-based products are the natural next step.
The case of NT server is double-edged for Notes. On the one hand, Lotus
must support NT and NT is an excellent server platform for both file
sharing and client/server systems. On the other hand, Exchange presents
file server based messaging customers with a similar set of problems,
although it might be more economical for customers using NT as a server
platform. At the same time, NT is the flagship server offering from
the same company that is focusing on messaging and groupware with Exchange.
MESSAGING ALIVE AND WELL
Groupware has a lot to offer and Notes is the leader. Notes has an
excellent e-mail component but in spite of this, for the reasons stated
above, the messaging market isn't about to disappear. Looking for a
moment to the history of groupware, it's important to remember that
Notes got its start in the mid 1980's and that by 1990 there were other
groupware products on the market. They never went anywhere. What happened
during the past 5 years was the e-mail boom, and e-mail is still going
strong. In spite of the fact that groupware is now ready for prime time,
e-mail has become a key business system enhancing communication and
collaboration enough that the added benefits of groupware are less compelling
to mainstream messaging customers than they might have been a few years
earlier. Nevertheless, groupware is evolving rapidly and offers ever
greater features and benefits.
BM and Lotus are aware of this and that's why there's a new generation
of cc:Mail in 1996. Microsoft is aware of this and that's why they've
targeted Exchange at the messaging market. Netscape and other Internet-based
companies are also aware of this and this is why they are introducing
new Internet-based e-mail products. Internet and on-line service providers,
including CompuServe and Microsoft Network, are also aware of this and
this is why they are offering and continuing to introduce a variety
of commercial e-mail and e-mail gateway services.
In some respects, the messaging marketplace is more active and viable
than ever. There is also a market for groupware and there is clearly
some overlap, but what does this mean? Customers still need e-mail,
whether or not they're ready to invest in groupware. Since groupware
is more cost-effective for some types of businesses than others and
because a customer's installed base of hardware and file servers will
vary, it's safe to say that groupware, while offering tremendous benefits
to some customers, isn't the right answer for every customer.
Sometimes groupware is overkill for a customer's needs; sometimes groupware
is too expensive because the customer has to build an all-new client/server
infrastructure in a traditional file server environment. Given today's
installed base of workstation, network and file server hardware -- although
client/server technologies are clearly mainstream -- not every e-mail
customer is ready for groupware.
Also, there's no indication that traditional file server technologies
are on their way out. In fact, client/serer technology is nothing new
-- it predates file server-based LANs by many years. An interesting
trend in the emergence of hybrid file server and client/server systems,
namely UNIX with NFS, NT, and server products running under Novell's
UnixWare or NetWare operating systems. Groupware-based applications
offer superior ways of managing documents and distributing information,
but not every customer can see a financial return in migrating user
data from existing file servers and LAN-based applications to client/server
systems, especially in the short term.
MORE THAN E-MAIL
cc:Mail customers are just as likely to upgrade to Microsoft Exchange
-- especially if they have NT file servers -- or to Open Systems products
-- especially if they use World Wide Web and SMTP on their intranet
-- as they are to migrate to Notes. Notes was first in groupware and
that's an advantage, but to stay ahead its requirements have remained
demanding compared to the installed base of systems; and Notes remains
relatively expensive, especially when a customer has an existing software
investment in LAN-based e-mail.
Customers looking for more than mail have a growing range of alternatives
-- not just Notes. By the time the majority of cc:Mail customers have
the hardware infrastructure to support Notes there will be more and
better alternatives -- including Internet and Open Systems groupware
products. Also, Notes' support for Internet standards, while strategically
brilliant, is only halfway; and the fact that Lotus made this move tells
us they perceive Internet as a threat to Notes' groupware hegemony.
In another year of two of hardware depreciation, technology advances,
falling prices; and as client/server technologies continue to grow in
the LAN environment, cc:Mail customers will undoubtedly find Notes more
attractive. However, a variety of promising middle-ground solutions
exist already and will surely continue to multiply and improve in the
future.
Global System Services Corporation (GSS) is the leading
provider of consulting and professional services for large-scale and
distributed infrastructure systems such as email and messaging, directory
services, groupware, and wireless solutions. GSS customers include Fortune
500 companies, large services providers and telecom companies, government
agencies, major messaging product vendors, and innovative technology
startups.
GSS provides a complementary suite of services including
strategic technology consultation and competitive vendor and product
analysis, product and system architecture and design, system development
deployment, customization, and testing, technical support, email migration,
and other IT services. GSS has been directly responsible for some of
the largest global systems and solutions and counts as customers many
of the largest companies in the world.
From its offices in the Silicon Valley California, GSS delivers services and solutions
to customers worldwide through a network of mobile consultants and qualified
GSS Affiliates. With industry certified professionals on staff, GSS
is a Qualified
Lotus Business Partner, a Certified
Microsoft Solution Provider (MCSP), a Principal Partner in the Sun Partner Advantage program and a member of the Sun Software Partner Council, as well as a member of key industry organizations.