email, hate the stuff!

I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about email recently and I mean a LOT! I’ve concluded I hate the stuff, both on a personal level and on an enterprise level. It’s like sand, it gets everywhere and you can’t get rid of the stuff. And even if you put it in a sandbox, you’re still finding the stuff all over your feet and clothes for days.

The worst thing is that email plays to our natural instinct to hoard. We actively go and collect the stuff. Then we keep hold of it for years! I know of lawyers who have mailboxes running in the Gb’s and have inboxes with tens of thousands of items in them. I remember doing a rollout in 2005 and noticing PST’s in lawyers mailboxes going back to the early 1990’s!

So what does it matter if we collect the stuff? Well let’s ignore the fact that as a lawyer there should be an organised file somewhere (PDF) and just look at the pain they cause…

First off the performance nightmare!

The chances are you’ll be storing all the stuff in Microsoft Exchange and Outlook like most corporates.

Matt Cain, lead email analyst at Gartner. "We forecast that Microsoft will get 70 percent of the commercial email market by 2010”

Bottom line is big mailboxes equal bad performance (unless you’re lucky enough to have a quad core desktop with a solid state hard drive at work!). There are a number of factors involved in Outlook performance, but basically big in size (Gb) is bad and big in number of items is bad!

Sure Exchange 2007 brought improvements as did Outlook 2007 Sp1 on the desktop. And Outlook/Exchange 2010 may bring more, but if email usage continues to grow then they will just be playing constant catch up (also I bet most of you are on Office 2003!).

Then you have to worry about storage!

There are probably gigabytes or terabytes (or petabytes!!!) of the stuff that your organisation collects. More and more money thrown at playing catch up with shelves of discs to collect all the emails you hoard. Sure if you’re a small firm you can outsource your email to say GMail or as a large corporate perhaps to a hosting company (it might ease the hassle but probably not the cost). In fact I suspect that maybe this is the future, we will treat email as a utility like with we do electricity. But that’s not addressing the problem is it? It’s like buying space at Big Yellow Self Storage because your back bedroom is full and you can’t bring yourself to throw away your shoe, comic, book, record (delete as applicable) collection!

So what’s the future?

Can’t we just kill it off? As well as performance and storage there’s the time sucking controlling nature of the stuff. I was hoping instant messaging (IM), wikis or social media would kick in and reduce emails dominance (like facebook has virtual killed my useful home email, I say useful to distinguish from the almost spam messages I get from sites like LinkedIn, Amazon etc). It’s starting slowly in firms but IM is like the healthy vegetable sat next to the krispy kreme doughnut of email!

I don’t have all the answers for the problem above unfortunately. But if someone can solve them for me, then from a lawyers perspective I did come up with an idea for organising the stuff that would require virtually no effort on the lawyers time. No filing, no tagging, but that’s a post for another day ……

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3 thoughts on “email, hate the stuff!”

  1. Email is platform agnostic and that’s why it wins. Anything else will require all businesses you communicate with to be on the same Wiki/Facebook/social media platform as you. LinkedIn are in the best position to make this happen, BUT and here’s the killer… no corporate in their right mind would trust all the information currently pushed around in email on a shared, public platform like that.

    So, email stays. How to manage it? Exchange 2007 introduced MRM – Messaging Records Managment. And it is much improved in Exchange 2010. Users to classify emails as records to be retained. Other stuff gets automatically deleted. Server rules can also do classification automatically. Exchange 2010 also adds Legal Hold functionality and a load of other compliance and email management capabilities. See http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd351165.aspx

    Hope that’s some help.

  2. Mark, that link is really useful. thanks.

    As I said in a start of year post, I am hopeful that IM starts to get a foothold this year. It only takes one platform to get a toehold and we may get traction.

  3. Love it- what a great post!

    Managing email has become a total nightmare for large organisations- and I don’t think email is going away either- as pointed out on the Morgan Stanley State of the Internet report a couple of weeks ago- Time spent on Social Networking has overtaken email, but email is still growing- albeit slowly.

    Like you pointed out- social networks need email to underpin their communication, because it is agnostic, filling up our email with facebook, linkedin and twitter messages… So email is definitely not going away! In fact social networks might be driving email traffic, plus the shift to mobile is going to drive that even more IMHO.

    I’m genuinely not sure however that IM is the answer though… especially in regulated environments like legal.

    I’ve also got some great analysis on 2010 I’d love to share with you…

    @justinpirie

    Director of Content and Communities at Mimecast

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