Microsoft launches cloud-based Office 365

Software

Moments ago, Microsoft officially released its new cloud-based Office product, Office 365, which will compete directly with Google Docs. The Office 365 suite, which has been in public beta for awhile now, is being targeted at the enterprise market and plans for the entire suite cost between $10 and $27 each month depending on the feature set chosen. Small and medium-sized businesses can also choose a more cost effective $6 option that only includes Office Web Apps and Microsoft Exchange. Those options, however, are all more expensive than the $50 annual fee that Google charges corporate users for access to its Google Docs suite. Microsoft’s full press release follows below.

Microsoft Launches Office 365 Globally

World-class collaboration tools are now available for businesses large and small.

NEW YORK — June 28, 2011 — Today, at media events around the world, Microsoft Corp. announced the availability ofMicrosoft Office 365, the company’s newest cloud service. Office 365 is now available in 40 markets, and it brings together Microsoft Office, Microsoft SharePoint Online, Microsoft Exchange Online and Microsoft Lync Online in an always-up-to-date cloud service, at a predictable monthly subscription.

The service was introduced in beta last year with enthusiastic response and, in a few months, more than 200,000 organizations signed up and began testing it. Businesses using Office 365 are already reporting impressive results and reducing IT costs by up to an estimated 50 percent while boosting productivity.

Today, more than 20 service providers around the globe also shared plans to bring Office 365 to their customers this year. Bell Canada, Intuit Inc., NTT Communications Corp., Telefonica S.A., Telstra Corp. and Vodafone Group Plc, among others, will package and sell Office 365 with their own services for small and midsize businesses.

“Great collaboration is critical to business growth, and because it’s so important, we believe the best collaboration technology should be available to everyone,” said Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. “With a few clicks, Office 365 levels the playing field, giving small and midsize businesses powerful collaboration tools that have given big businesses an edge for years.”

A Game Changer for Businesses of All Sizes

Office 365 is available in a wide range of service plans designed to meet the needs of businesses of all sizes, ranging from the largest to the smallest.

With Office 365, people can stay on the “same page” using instant messaging and virtual meetings with people who are just down the hall or across the world. They can work on files and documents at the same time and share ideas as easily as they can share calendars. Office 365 gives people new ways to work together with ease, on virtually any device.

Microsoft Office applications are at the heart of Office 365. Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, Excel, OneNote, Outlook and other Office applications connect to Microsoft Exchange, SharePoint and Lync to deliver a world-class solution for communication and collaboration.

“When I saw Office 365, I knew this was the way businesses would work in the future,” said Elia Wallen, owner of fast-growing temporary housing provider Travelers Haven. “With Office 365, I’m going to save $100,000 a year and cut 30 hours of work a day across my 35 employees, but most importantly, my team is going to be able to work together better — no matter where they are.”

More stories from businesses that have tried Office 365 are available athttp://www.microsoft.com/casestudies.

Office 365 Partners

Microsoft is building a massive partner ecosystem around Office 365, including systems integrators, software vendors, resellers and other partners. Today, that ecosystem is expanding as the company partners in new ways with market-leading service providers. These companies will package Office 365 with their own services — from Web hosting and broadband to finance solutions and mobile services — and bring those new offerings to millions of small and midsize businesses globally.

“Our partners represent some of the best-known, most-trusted brands in their local markets,” said Kurt DelBene, president, Microsoft Office Division. “Our customers will be able to rest easy knowing their cloud services are backed by Microsoft and some of the greatest service providers in the world.”

A list of Office 365 service provider partners is available here.

About Office 365

Office 365 offers a range of service plans for a predictable monthly price from $2 to $27 per user per month. With Office 365 for small businesses, customers can be up and running with Office Web Apps, Microsoft Exchange Online, Microsoft SharePoint Online, Microsoft Lync Online and an external website in minutes, for $6 (U.S.) per user, per month. These tools put enterprise-grade email, shared documents, instant messaging, video and Web conferencing, portals, and more at everyone’s fingertips.

Office 365 for enterprises has an array of choices, from simple email to comprehensive suites to meet the needs of midsize and large businesses, as well as government organizations. Customers can now get Microsoft Office Professional Plus on a pay-as-you-go basis with cloud-based versions of the industry’s leading business communications and collaboration services. Each of these plans comes with the advanced IT controls, innovative security technologies, 24/7 IT support and reliability customers expect from Microsoft.

Availability

Office 365 for small businesses and Office 365 for enterprises are available now. Businesses can try Office 365 for free for 30 days by signing up at http://www.office365.com or from their local Microsoft partner. Follow Office 365 on Twitter (@Office365), Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/office365) and the Office 365 blog at http://community.office365.comfor the latest information.

23 Comments
  • http://twitter.com/gnomehole The Gnome

    Gotta love their any device anywhere strategy… not… windows only folks.    Try hook a Mac up to Lync in the cloud = not supported.   FAIL, Microsoft… FAIL.

    • Anonymous

      Macs don’t have a significant presence in the corporate/enterprise environment. You might not like it, but I’d hardly call it fail.

      • Anonymous

        ipad?
        Android?

        Windows on a PC/Laptop  is just one ‘part’ of a SMB hardware footprint. 

      • Anonymous

        I didn’t think there was all that much tablet in the corporate environment just yet. As far as Android goes… corporate phones are still Blackberries the majority of the time, in my experience. They’re usually a little bit behind the state of the art.

        I could be wrong, though.

      • Anonymous

        sqube… SMB… It’s the growth area.   I have 20,000 offices of ‘agents’  under my management on a huge franchising org.   Their number one request is smaller footprint mobile devices that can do our web interface (customer CRM record, scan/upload signed forms (picture/upload),  business alerts, etc.).   read:  Ipad.

        Now… I’m not discounting that Windows use in the office will continue to be there… but the whole purpose of ‘cloud’ is to deploy against standards so the ‘end device’ becomes superfluous.   

        It’s a fail, if I can’t access the cloud from ‘my’ device.

      • Anonymous

        That makes sense. But considering that “the cloud” has become a meaningless marketing term… this is about what I’d expect. Everyone is going to have their own cloud, and they’re never going to be fully integrated.

      • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_AOFZNUYIFIO2XBZ7RLBX7IZUAU ArturoB

        Cloud based services that are not platform independent or, by definition, failures.

      • Anonymous

        If we were working with cloud services as they are properly defined, you’d be absolutely correct. But we’re talking about cloud services like we talk about 4G: as a pure marketing term, so that corporations can leach the proper meaning out of it. Then, they can do whatever the fuck they want under the guise of meeting the “real” definition.

    • Anonymous

      Lets be honest though… if you use a Mac with business 9 times out of 10 you have to run Windows on it in some form for some other app/requirement… I still don’t think Mac’s can exist in a typical enterprise business without some tie into windows… either via Citrix, Parallels, VMWare, etc… Now newer 2.0 type businesses that are not built on the massive legacy infrastructure that most enterprises are these days Mac fit in great… I think that over time MS will make everything run on all the major platforms… I would be we will even see a Lync client for IOS and Android…

      The services themselves though in Office 365 are first class…

      • Anonymous

        I don’t think it’s 9 out of 10.   not for small businesses.   I think as the ‘outlier’ in a large business, or as the ‘creative tech’ in a non-creative (figuratively) office,  8 out of 10 (with a lot of shops just giving you ‘a cheap PC’ to sit beside your mac).

    • Biggibby

      Flash on an ipad?  flash on an iphone? Apple… FAIL

  • Anonymous

    I have been using the beta for several months now and I love it… Google Docs just doesn’t compair to the office web apps… plus Google Docs doesn’t have anything like SharePoint which is included in the $6/month version of Office 365. 

    • Anonymous

      agreed.  sharepoint is the linchpin of what the cloud should do… 

  • Anonymous

    I have been using this service for some time now, with Google Apps being my primary solution, and I can say that it is not even on the same level as Google Apps. I am not sure if this was a smart move for Microsoft or not. I think this will be good for the Cloud-based industry as a whole, but sadly for Microsoft I think it will only push companies to Google Apps. In the end, those companies that never bothered to checkout Cloud-based solutions will now be more willing, which will strike up cost and usability conversations in the echelons of power. Such conversations will lead to a comparison, and potential pilot, of Google’s solution, which will be bad for Microsoft.

    • Anonymous

      Administration is a little better with Google Apps, but besides that these two products are pretty comprable in my opinion.  To say it’s not on the same level is pretty out there.

      • Anonymous

        Perhaps, if all you want to do is have single person working on a document of spreadsheet at a time.  But the fact of the matter is, within my company every document and spreadsheet has anywhere from 3-22 people working on it at the same time.  This level of collaboration is simple not possible on Office 365.  Also, the fact that Office 365 relies on you having Microsoft Office Suite installed, for any heavy lifting, is a major flaw.  I have not had a locally installed office solution on my computer for over 5 years, and to force one, and the costs that come with it, on me to use a “Cloud” solution properly is absurd.

        I could go on and on about all the fantastic collaboration features strewn throughout all of the products in the Google Apps Suite, like free phone calls from Gmail, contact and calendar syncing that works on every device and personal computer, Appscripts, which allow us to use Google Docs as the database for our intranet, etc. The thing is, I am not here to sell people on one service of the other. I am here to shed some light on all the crazy stuff that Google Apps can do, with it being a true Cloud Solution, that Office 365 simply can not do yet. 

  • Anonymous

    At the rate my company updates software, We’ll see this in 10-15 years. 

  • Wouter

    would you have expected anything less from Microsoft?

    They should be forced to downsize their company/influance. They have a monopoly positions which no other company could match :-(

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ML67DN65LGCQWCZENTJX5Z7TYI Dollie Flynn

     we’re talking about cloud services like we talk about 4G. @Andrew, I paid $32.67 for a XBOX 360 and my mom got a 17 inch Toshiba laptop for $94.83 being delivered to our house tomorrow by FedEX. I will never again pay expensive retail prices at stores. I even sold a 46 inch HDTV to my boss for $650 and it only cost me $52.78 to get. Here is the website we using to get all this stuff, LiveCent. com

  • EndangeredApple

    I will still take free of fee

  • http://profiles.google.com/islander1974 peter kelly

    So…with my google apps account, I don’t need to buy any software. I’d still need the full regiment of MS Office software to work with their cloud computing and collaboration suite…advantage: Google…
    When MS Office upgrades, I have to pay for the upgrade – or make do with increasing obsolete software…or stay with google apps that upgrades while I sleep…advantage: Google. Nice try Microsoft..go home now.

    • D4ng3r0us Idi0t

      Seems like it. But anyway, Microsoft could never match the flexibility of Google App Suite.

  • Anonymous

    OK, I dont get it, whats up with all this cloud stuff??

    http://www.total-privacy.se.tc

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