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Deploying Exchange in Schools: Key Considerations

Key Considerations For Exchange Email Deployments In Academic Environments

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This document provides details and consideration needed in making informed decisions on deployment choices for Exchange in academic environments. This document is intended for information technology (IT) professionals who are engaged in decision making of next generation academic email systems.

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Page 1: Key Considerations For Exchange Email Deployments In Academic Environments

Deploying Exchange in Schools: Key Considerations

Page 2: Key Considerations For Exchange Email Deployments In Academic Environments

This document provides details and consideration needed in making informed decisions on deployment choices for Exchange in academic environments. This document is intended for information technology (IT) professionals who are engaged in decision making of next generation academic email systems.

This document is provided for informational purposes only and Microsoft makes no warranties, either express or implied, in this document. Information in this document, including URL and other Internet Web site references, is subject to change without notice. The entire risk of the use or the results from the use of this document remains with the user. Unless otherwise noted, the example companies, organizations, products, domain names, e-mail addresses, logos, people, places, and events depicted herein are fictitious, and no association with any real company, organization, product, domain name, e-mail address, logo, person, place, or event is intended or should be inferred. Complying with all applicable copyright laws is the responsibility of the user. Without limiting the rights under copyright, no part of this document may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), or for any purpose, without the express written permission of Microsoft Corporation. Microsoft may have patents, patent applications, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual property rights covering subject matter in this document. Except as expressly provided in any written license agreement from Microsoft, the furnishing of this document does not give you any license to these patents, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual property. © 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Active Directory, Microsoft, MS-DOS, Visual Basic, Visual Studio, Windows, Windows NT, Windows Server, and Windows Vista are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.

Page 3: Key Considerations For Exchange Email Deployments In Academic Environments

Introduction

The challenging economic climate has had an impact on every learning institution across the world. With the pressure to reduce costs, leveraging resources in the most efficient manner while still providing a progressive learning environment is becoming increasingly difficult to do. User expectations for increased storage, integrated collaboration, real-time messaging capabilities, and leading edge technology that is stable, secure, and available ‘anytime, anywhere’ is being asked for and sometimes demanded of IT teams all across the world. So it makes sense that the demands for hosted services that are managed and maintained in a secure fashion by a trusted partner have greatly increased over the last 12-18 months. Due to some of the limitations of cloud environments (when compared to on-premises email environments), not all institutions are choosing to pursue a hosted option, and some are choosing to manage some users on premise and other users in the cloud.

Microsoft provides academic customers with a number of choices for providing their users with a robust integrated Exchange messaging service. In this paper we focus on three key options for academic institutions (NOTE: these options are not mutually exclusive):

Exchange On-premises provides our customers with maximum flexibility of deployment. This entails Windows servers with Exchange hosted in the customer’s datacenter. The working solution is solely the responsibility of the customer’s IT staff. This means that everything from backups, maintenance windows, archiving, and other augmenting services can be implemented and configured as needed by the school.

Exchange Online is part of the Business Productivity Online Suite better known as BPOS. This is a Microsoft Hosted email offering in the cloud. Customers that choose to use this service pay a subscription (per user per month) cost, but the servers, datacenter, email hygiene, security, etc. are all handled by Microsoft. Although this hosted service does not provide as much flexibility and control as the on-premises offering, it does provide a robust hosted Exchange environment where users are still able to take advantage of the capabilities they have come to know and love (Outlook 2007 client support, ActiveSync support, etc).

Outlook Live is a messaging option for Academic customers only, and it is offered as part of the Live@edu program. Outlook Live is built on the next generation of Exchange Server, Exchange Server 2010 which is scheduled to release more broadly towards the end of calendar year 2009. The service is very attractive to a lot of our customers because it offers some functionality that is not yet available to Exchange 2007 deployed on-premises or Exchange Online users, and because the hosted service is offered at no cost to Academic Institutions. This offering was originally available only for students and alumni, but has since been expanded to allow Higher Education and K-12 institutions to also put staff and faculty (teachers), students, and alumni on the service.

With three great offerings for your institution, Microsoft understands the importance of providing you with choice and the as a valued advisor providing our customers with information to make informed

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decisions. This guide evaluates the deployment considerations of the Microsoft Exchange Online, Outlook Live, and on-premises Microsoft Exchange Server solution offerings in over 30 different areas of feature/functionality to technical decision makers, including client options, changes to message flow, operational impacts, and security. We hope the information provided in this document will help you to make the decision that best supports the needs of your users and your institution.

This document contains six areas for consideration designed to guide the reader through the decision-making process to determine which Exchange messaging model makes the most sense:

Step 1: Client Experience

Office Outlook Web Access BlackBerry Devices

Outlook Anywhere Macintosh Clients

MAPI Single Sign-On

IMAP and POP Unified Messaging

Mobile Devices Using Exchange ActiveSync

Mailbox Sizes

Step 2: Impacts to Message Flow

SMTP Relay Services Connectors to Other Systems

SMTP Smart Hosting Transport Rules

Line-of-Business Application Public Folders

Start Step 1: Client Experience

Step 2: Impacts to Message Flow

Step 3: Data Management and

Security Implications

Step 4: Ramifications on Business Operations

Step 5: Provisioning and Planning

Concerns

Step 6: Other Considerations

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Integration

Message Hygiene

Step 3: Data Management and Security Implications

Network Security Archiving and Journaling

Network Connectivity Signing and Encrypting Messages

Data Isolation Information Rights Management

Auditing

Step 4: Ramifications on Business Operations

Service Continuity Adoption Rate for New Releases

Disaster Recovery Testing Scheduled Maintenance

Service Level Agreements

Step 5: Provisioning and Planning Concerns

Active Directory Integration IdM

Step 6: Other Considerations

The sixth step will assist the reader in evaluating the results of the first five steps.These first five steps are not sequential and can be performed in any order, but all should be completed in order to obtain the fullest picture of the suitability and importance of the various technologies.

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Step 1: Client Experience

These steps can be reviewed in any order but one of the keys to any successful IT project is to look at what the end user experience is. Typical questions that are asked when reviewing your current and future client experience needs are:

What type of clients do we have at the school? Is there need for internal and external communications? Which clients are important to our users: OWA, Outlook Anywhere with Outlook, MAPI with

Outlook, IMAP/POP with 3rd party clients, Mobile Users with Exchange Active Sync and / or with Blackberry Support, Macintosh client support?

What are the needs around Single Sign-on for the application? Is email part of a bigger Unified Communications project at your academic institution? Accessibility needs?

Web Support

When reviewing your customer requirements, it’s important to consider the type of client and web experience that is necessary for your users. Microsoft Outlook Web Access (OWA) is the Internet-based version of Outlook that enables users to access their Exchange mailboxes without the need to install rich client software. The experience will differ based on which service model you consider, as Microsoft is currently are using Exchange 2007 to support on-premises and Exchange Online deployments and Outlook Live is utilizing the next version with Exchange 2010. If you have a large percentage of customers that will be web-based then it’s important to note that Exchange 2007 has the best experience (a premium experience) on Internet Explorer and a Light version for Firefox and Safari. Cross browser / platform support has been highly enhanced in Exchange 2010, and provides a premium Outlook Web Access experience with most Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Safari browsers.

Outlook Anywhere

Outlook users are provided connectivity to Exchange via MAPI, Outlook Anywhere, or in Exchange 2010 via MAPI with Web Services. The only MAPI connectivity provided in our offerings is via Exchange 2007 on premises. The hosted options provide either Outlook Anywhere (RPC/HTTPS) for Exchange Online, and/or MAPI over web services for Exchange 2010. From an end-user perspective all three options provide excellent connectivity to our premium clients. What’s more important to note here is what clients that are supported across the three email options: Outlook 2002, Outlook 2003, or Outlook 2007. This is important to understand, as it may prompt the need for new installation of clients at your customer site. Exchange Online now supports Outlook 2003 and 2007 with some limits to Outlook 2003 support such as lack of free/busy. Outlook Live utilizes Exchange 2010 servers that only support Outlook 2003 via IMAP (no full connectivity support). The on-premises Exchange 2007 servers can be accessed by Outlook 2002, 2003, and 2007.

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POP & IMAP Support

Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) and Post Office Protocol (POP) may be needed or required for your users, based on school supported software. POP and IMAP are supported across all of our services today.

Mobility

Client experience must also include consideration of mobile device support, Macintosh client support, and Single Sign-On (SSO). All three exchange services provide a powerful mobile device experience for devices that support the Exchange ActiveSync protocol including, but not limited to Windows Mobile, PALM, Nokia, Apple, Helio, RemoSync, DataViz, Samsung, Symbian, and Sony Ericsson mobile devices. For the full list of supported devices please review our mobile website. All three services support ActiveSync, and can provide full mobile device support to the devices listed above. Blackberry devices are supported with Exchange via a Blackberry Enterprise Server (BES) or Blackberry Internet Service (BIS). BIS provides a minimum of email connectivity for on-premises or hosted services and is supported across all three Exchange services. Blackberry Enterprise Server (BES) is available with Exchange On-premises environments, and with our hosted Exchange Online environment (additional licensing and / or pricing requirements may apply).

Mac Support

Macintosh clients are supported in both our on-premises and hosted service offerings via Exchange Web Service. EWS for Entourage is a new offering that is launching in 2009 to provide increased features and better connectivity to Exchange vs. our current WebDAV support. More information can be found about Entourage with EWS support here .

SSO

Enabling Single sign-on (SSO) allows a user to log on from their device once to access all resources without signing in again. SSO on premise is the responsibility of Active Directory which can be integrated with existing systems for SSO or reduced SSO. For hosted services the options have two different approaches with Windows Live ID for Outlook Live and a SSO Client for the PC with Exchange Online. Outlook Live leverages the Windows Live Email Portal Integration SDK to allow authenticated Blackborad, Luminis, portal, etc users to access the Live@edu email and collaboration sites without being challenged for their credentials. You can find out more information (including code samples) here. Exchange Online requires a Sign In application which users must sign in to before accessing Exchange Online, in order not to be prompted for their password each time they access the service.

As with any extended solution the needs to make a seamless transition from on-premises resources to hosted services is key and Microsoft provides a number of options to assist our customers.

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Client Exchange Online

Outlook Live Exchange (on-premises)

Notes

Outlook Web Access

Exchange 2007 client (IE Best Experience)

Exchange 2010 client (IE, Firefox, Safari)

Exchange 2007 client (IE Best Experience)

Outlook Anywhere

Supported Supported Supported

MAPI Not Supported Not Supported Supported

Blackberry Mobile

BIS and BES is supported. BES at an additional cost

BIS Only BIS and BES is supported. BES at an additional cost

Entourage Entourage with Exchange Web Services (EWS)

Entourage with Exchange Web Services (EWS)

WebDAV and Entourage with Exchange Web Services (EWS)

SSO Client Supported via a Sign In Tool

Web SSO Supported

Unified Messaging

Not Supported Not Supported Supported

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Step 2: Impacts to Message Flow

SMTP Relay Services Connectors to Other Systems

SMTP Smart Hosting Transport Rules

Line-of-Business Application Integration

Public Folders

Message Hygiene

SMTP Relay Services, SMTP Smart Hosting, Connectors to Other Systems

When reviewing the connectivity of hosted services to foreign systems the following options are currently not available either with Outlook Live or Exchange online: SMTP Relay, Smart Hosting, or connectors to other systems. It will be important for you to determine if these features are required or ‘nice to have’ for your institution.

Because all three services are built on the power of Exchange, best of breed options are available in other areas that impact Mail Flow. This includes Transport Rules, Line-of-Business (LOB) Integration, and Message Hygiene.

Line-of-Business (LOB) Integration

Line-of-Business (LOB) applications may include CRM, ERM, or variety of other academic applications. If these applications are in use at your school, they may require integration with the email system. Hosted services provide connectivity with applications via Exchange Web Services (EWS). EWS is an application programming interface that can be used by Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) based applications to access Exchange data store items such as inboxes, calendars, and tasks. With on-premises mail these communications can be integrated as well as extended to include other Exchange protocols such as MAPI, IMAP, and POP.

Message Hygiene

Message hygiene refers to the removal of viruses and unsolicited commercial e-mail from the mail flow before reaching the end user. Anti-virus and anti-spam protections are an integrated part of both the Outlook Live and Exchange Online service. Outlook Live utilizes Hotmail SPAM and Forefront Anti-virus protection for its service. Exchange Online uses our Exchange Hosted Filtering service for SPAM and Virus protection. Both of these capabilities are provided as part of the base offering, at no additional cost. Outlook Live’s message hygiene doesn’t support administrative control but customers have routed mail through their own hygiene filters. Although anti-virus and anti-spam protection is not provided out of the box with Exchange On-premises environments, you can use Microsoft Forefront Online Security for Exchange (FOSE) with you on-premises environment. FOSE provides SPAM and virus protection, disaster recovery, and real-time message trace and reporting. You can also use additional 3rd party options to achieve a similar level of protection for your on-premises environment.

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Transport Rules

With transport rules, administrators and compliance officers can establish and enforce regulatory or corporate policies on internal or outbound e-mail flow or content. For example, rules can be created that would append a disclaimer to any message being sent externally. Rules can also be created to prohibit communication between members of distinct distribution lists or to include the compliance officer on the BCC line any time a specific phrase appears in the subject or content of a message. Exchange on-premises allows the most flexibility and customization of these rules, since they are owned by the customer. Currently, Exchange Online does not provide the ability for customers to extend their experience with transport rules. Outlook Live provides support for a limited set of Transport Rules, customers are limited to the use of three key rules, which include a Bad word filter, setting up a “closed campus” to restrict who your users can send or receive email from, and an Anti-Bullying policy that restricts mail flow between individuals. Additional information about Outlook Live supervision polices, can be found here.

One additional point to note, public folders are supported in Exchange On-premises, but are not supported in either Exchange Online or Outlook Live.

Exchange Online Outlook Live Exchange (on-premises)

Transport Rules Not Supported Supported (Limited)

Supported

Message Relay Supported Partial, Support Shared Address Space scenario.

Supported

Smart Hosting Not Supported Not Supported Supported

Antispam/Antivirus Supported Supported Supported

LOB Integration Supported via EWS Supported via EWS Supported

Public Folder Not Supported Not Supported Supported

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Step 3: Data Management and Security Implications

The need for information security in today's highly networked school environment is more important than ever. Information is arguably one of a school’s most valuable assets, so its protection from accidental exposure or predators from both within and outside the organization is a top IT priority.

Network Security

Network security is the safeguarding of electronic information owned by an organization as it is transported across the network, keeping it safe from loss including corruption and ensuring that access is restricted to authorized people and systems. The Exchange Online and Outlook Live environments have detailed security compliance audits which assess the infrastructure in in message hygiene, penetration testing, physical security, as well as intrusion detection. On-premises installations can implement all the security features of our online services but responsibilities as well as testing and maintaining are customer responsibilities. With hosted services these measures are performed on the behalf of the customer.

Data Isolation

Data isolation is the ability to restrict access to data to only those people with the appropriate authorization to read, edit, or delete the data. This is a key topic for most of our customers, when considering whether to keep your information in-house or to host it in the cloud. Security and data isolation is of paramount importance to the Microsoft team. You find out more, by reading the “Microsoft Online Security Features” white paper, which can be found here.

It is also important to note that even though we use a multi-tenant model for both Outlook Live and Exchange Online Standard, no school can access the data of another school.

Archiving and Journaling

Archiving is the ability to keep e-mail for a specific duration of time, and journaling is the ability to automatically create copies of all e-mails sent or received. The Exchange Hosted Archive (EHA) service is available to academic customers at an additional cost, and can be used with the Exchange Online Service and Exchange on-premises environments other 3rd party archiving services can also be used with both environments. Additional information about the Exchange Hosted Archive service can be found here. Journaling is also offered with both Exchange on-premises and Exchange Online offerings, and is provided at no additional cost. Although the Outlook live service supports local archiving to a PST file using an Outlook 2007 client, the service does not provide server-based archiving support (through Exchange Hosted Archive or any other service).

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Step 4: Ramifications on Business Operations

Before making any decision on on-premises or hosted services it’s important to examine the ramifications on business operations at your school. .

Service Continuity

Message service continuity is the ability for a school to continue to send and receive email in the event of a failure or component of the infrastructure. Our Exchange online services provide the following resiliency features:

Data protection. Multiple copies of customer data are stored within the data center and also remotely at a separate geographic location.

Data center redundancy. Microsoft data centers feature the ability to transfer operations to alternative, geographically separate data centers if this becomes necessary. The failover process is managed by Microsoft and requires no intervention from customers when service is resumed.

On-premises resiliency is the responsibility of the school implementation. Exchange provides multiple High Availability and Site Resiliency measures to protect the service and the data. Operation and configuration is the sole responsibility of school staff or partner integration.

Outlook Live provides no service availability or datacenter redundancy. The service does keep three concurrent copies of the data across three different servers, for fail-over protection.

Service Level Agreement (SLA)

A service level agreement (SLA) is a written agreement documenting the target percentage of time a servicemust be available and assigning penalties if it is not. Of the three offerings on-premises, Outlook Live, andExchange Online only Exchange Online offers a 99.9 percent financially backed, guaranteed SLA. On-premisescan have stated SLA’s to provide departments and schools with projected uptime, but this is something thatyour administrators will control. Outlook Live, by nature of a free service, doesn’t provide any financiallybacked SLA guarantee, but there is a target SLA of 99.99%. If outages are incurred customers are informedand the service is restored in a timely fashion.

New Releases

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Both of our hosted services provide customers with the latest and greatest software. Exchange Online is currently running on Exchange 2007 and will move to Exchange 2010 shortly after Exchange 2010 launches. Customers will have a window of 12 months to move to the next product release in the hosted environment. Outlook Live is running on Exchange 2010 pre-release code and providing academic customers with some great new Exchange 2010 features today.

In an on-premises environment, the IT staff has full flexibility on how and when they decide to upgrade to the new environment. The downside of this is that the migration is a customer incurred cost in this scenario.

Exchange Online Outlook Live Exchange (on-premises)

Service Continuity

Data and Datacenter resiliency

Not offered based on Exchange deployment (CCR, SCR)

Service Level Agreement

99.9% No based on Exchange operations

New Release Rolled into production, 12 month opt in

Periodic updates, running next generation Exchange

Requires upgrade locally and migration.

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Client Exchange Online Outlook Live Exchange (on-premises)Network Security Fully supported Fully supported Managed by your On-

premises AdministratorsArchiving Supported Not Supported Supported, Managed by

your On-premises Administrators

Journaling Supported Not Supported SupportedData Isolation Supported Supported Managed by your On-

premises Administrators

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Step 5: Provisioning and Planning concerns

Provisioning, On-boarding, and Directory synchronization are all important aspects when evaluating a messaging solution for your institution. A few questions that are usually raised are: how are they implemented, how can I effectively provide change management, and how is it supported? These are great questions and areas that you should review with your Microsoft team. Our hosted services utilize two different authentication mechanisms today. Outlook Live utilizes Windows Live ID to authenticate and Exchange Online uses Active Directory for authentication. Exchange on-premises utilizes a campus supported Active Directory.

Provisioning

On-premises Exchange mailboxes can be set for immediate provisioning by using a meta-directory solution such as ILM (Identity Lifecycle Manager) to provision mailboxes after business rules have been met, such as an addition to the human resources database and payroll or after manager approval. Other 3rd party or campus created scripts can be introduced to provision the system but care must be used to also review de-provisioning of the accounts upon separation from the Institution. More info on ILM can be found here.

Authentication for Exchange Online requires the use of the SSO client which maintains credentials to automatically login users to Exchange and other BPOS services. Outlook Live utilizes a Windows Live ID to provide authentication and access to its services. Microsoft has worked with customers to develop web Single Sign-on (SSO) options for customers such as the SCT Luminus solution described above. Within the next year, Microsoft will be introducing new and improved methods for accessing cloud services using our next generation of identity management with Geneva. Geneva is a claims-based service that provides federation options for customers to integrate with cloud services in a more seamless option for end-users. The solution will require identities to be authenticated locally the users would be provided tokens to access services in Microsoft’s datacenters using the Microsoft Federation Gateway.

The other aspect of provisioning is to provision cloud services with contacts, distribution lists, and email addresses to provide a seamless integration with campus-based services. In Outlook Live this is now provided via GalSync 2010. GalSync 2010 pulls user, contact, partial group and dynamic distribution group data from your on-premises Active Directory and replicates and synchronizes it with your Outlook Live Domain. This is a one-way synchronization with Active Directory to your Outlook Live domain. More information on this can be found here.

Exchange Online provisioning is accomplished using the Directory Synchronization Tool. The Directory Synchronization tool is a one-way sync from your local Active Directory environment to Microsoft Online Services.

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Exchange Online Outlook Live Exchange (on-premises)

Directory Sync Directory Sync Tool

GalSync 2010 Not required

Authentication SSO Client Live ID Active Directory

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Step 6: Other Considerations

The topics that have been highlighted above, are some of the key considerations that we recommend customers consider when evaluating a new email system. Some of these may be mandatory functional requirements, while others may be nice to have. As noted above, it is important to understand the requirements for your users and institution, and how they may differ by the segment of users you are working with. In addition to the functional and feature differences highlighted above, you may find it valuable to consider some additional overall areas when evaluating the services.

One of the most common areas that are overlooked when evaluating a new system is the overall operational cost for managing and maintaining the messaging environment. Although these expenses typically include the cost for headcount to manage the messaging environment, that only captures a fraction of the infrastructure optimization model. Other expenses that should be considered are necessary hardware and software that may be needed to be in place to manage the potential messaging environment, help desk costs to support not only the end users but to also support the environment, etc.

Microsoft utilizes the Business Productivity Infrastructure Optimization (BPIO) model to help transform your campus IT from a basic asset that is delivering a service to the school to a dynamic IT environment that is helping achieve the strategic business goals of your organization.

By utilizing hosted service, schools can reduce cost and focus IT on the business of schools while providing a world-class service to their customers. In many ways, utilizing services such as Outlook Live can extend your IT by providing 24x7 technical and web support for administrators and help-desk staff. It is important to note though, that while Outlook Live provides phone and web based support for administrators and help-desk staff, end-user support is only provided via the web.

Another area that is important in consideration for an email platform is to understand how it fits into your overall integration plans. Exchange on-premises is the only option today that provides integration to LOB applications and integration / extension with Unified Communications. Other important questions can include – does my institution need to integrate Private Branch Exchange (PBX) with Exchange and Office Communication server to deliver voicemail, call control, and / or routing? What is the timeframe to deliver these services and integration? Although our online services environment does not support these options today, there are plans in place to provide unified communications integration to the cloud services including voicemail options for Exchange Online customers.

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Summary

It is important not only to choose the option that’s right for your school today, but the option that will also support your overall academic vision over the next 2 – 5 years and beyond. Across the industry we continue to see increased pressure to provide more value to users while working with a shrinking budget and limited resources. Because of this, the demand for solutions that support the software plus services approach has skyrocketed, particularly for what some customers consider commodity but critical services like messaging and collaboration.

While cost is a significant factor in making a decision on the best environment to implement at your school, we can’t stress enough that it should not be the only factor. Although this key considerations guide is not meant to provide an exhaustive list of all the factors that you may want to consider when choosing a messaging service for your institution, it is meant to highlight some of the more common considerations that we’ve seen when working with our customers.

Understanding the requirements for your institution is a key step (one that we believe is the most important) to deciding which environment is right for your school. Without understanding end-user and administration requirements, it is almost impossible to make the best decision for your users. This involves an evaluation of what capabilities are ‘required’ versus which ones are ‘nice to have’, and what restraints / challenges are you facing (shrinking budget, limited or eliminated resources, etc.). Please keep in mind that requirements may differ depending on the segment of users you are working with, so finding a solution that allows for flexibility even within the environment may also be important. For example, the capabilities that faculty and staff require usually differ greatly when compared to what’s required by students.

This is where the flexibility and the ‘power of choice’ across all of our services provide the best advantage for your environment. Although we’ve compared and contrasted each of the services, it is important to note that you do not have to make an all-inclusive model decision. This means that you can deploy a hybrid model which includes multiple solutions. For example, some of our customers have decided to deploy faculty and staff on Exchange On-premises or Exchange Online, but put their students and alumni in to the Outlook Live service. This approach is advantageous to a lot of our customers because it allows the school to keep all of their users on the same technology platform (so that you can leverage investments you’ve made or will make in Exchange and not have to support two technology platforms), but also reduces costs while increasing capabilities for their users (although there is capital investment made with the On-premises or Exchange Online service, by moving your largest population to the free but highly functional Outlook Live platform you save money). What’s even better, is that you can integrate the two models by providing shared free / busy or GAL synchronization between your on-premises and hosted users! Although it is important to note that this depends on the models you choose to integrate, and what you choose to integrate). This is what we call the hybrid deployment approach, and is becoming increasingly popular among our customers.

After all of these considerations have been taken in to account, it is important to thoroughly test the environment that you are interested in; this should not be limited to a few simple test cases, it should

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include a pilot period with several unique users who represent your broader audience. This will help you test day to day scenarios with your users, to make sure the service will meet your needs. You should also then consider the collaboration and storage implications and integration options across all services. We have created a similar paper to review these services, which can be found here:

Although each service offers unique value, capabilities, and benefits, they all are built on our powerful Exchange service technology and offer amazing ways that you can provide extra immediate value to your school. Having scalable, hosted and on-premises Exchange services provides you with multiple options to make the best decision based off of the requirements, integration, and future needs of your school. There is no wrong or irreversible choice, since all three services provide ways for you to make singular or hybrid option decisions, and provide for ways from you to move from one service to another (though you have more migration flexibility with Exchange On-premises and Exchange Online, than you do with Outlook Live today).

If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to post your question or feedback, on our education software + services blog, which can be found here:

We have also included a guide which provides additional resource information for all three services discussed in this paper. For additional support, please contact your local Microsoft resource. If you do not know who your resource is, please contact our education support team here:

Resource Exchange On-premises Exchange Online Outlook LiveOverview Exchange Online Service

DescriptionOutlook Live Service Description

Getting Started Getting Started Getting Started Getting Started

Planning and Architecture

Planning and Architecture Planning and Architecture Planning and Architecture

Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment

Operations Operations Operations Operations

Troubleshooting Troubleshooting Troubleshooting Troubleshooting

Security and Protection

Security and Protection Security and Protection Security and Protection

Technical Reference Technical Reference Technical Reference Technical Reference

Development Development Development Development