Google must upgrade hosted apps to appeal to IT, analysts say
Google Apps lacks adequate architecture and several features needed by corporate users
March 6, 2008 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - Google Inc. must provide stronger data models, along with role-based access and records management archiving capabilities, before most IT managers will take its Google Apps hosted application suite seriously, analysts said this week.
The search tool maker's hosted offerings are getting a closer look by IT managers looking to compare them with Microsoft's Online Services hosted offering, which was unveiled last September.
"I think Google has underestimated the complexity of the enterprise space," said Guy Creese, an analyst at Midvale, Utah-based Burton Group. "So far, they basically have [delivered] consumer products and slapped an enterprise name on them. They talk a lot about usability, but they fall down" because of the lack of an enterprise data model.
In an interview with Computerworld this week at the AIIM Conference in Boston, Matthew Glotzbach, director of product management for enterprise at Google, noted that 500,000 organizations are using Google Apps, though he also acknowledged that large organizations are hesitant so far to join in.
"One challenge we've had is building that enterprise credibility," conceded Glotzbach, who added that the company expects the consumer and business versions of Google Apps to maintain "90% consistency" going forward.
Creese said Google must further differentiate the versions, noting that several new features must be added to meet the needs of large IT operations. Some of those include data archiving tools to augment records management searches, e-mail distribution list functionalities and role-based management tools.
"Somebody worried about a soccer schedule is not worried about records management -- and they don't have a distribution list," Creese noted about the difference between consumer and business users. "It's all of this underlying way of managing the business that [Google] is missing."
Matt Cain, an analyst at Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Inc., added that Google Apps likely won't be seriously considered by enterprises until the company can show it can support reporting, audit trails and service-level agreements of large-scale commercial users.
"[Google] has everything else, but that's what we need to see. They need to prove it," remarked Cain. "There's a lot of skepticism and let's wait and see," among corporate users.
Nonetheless, he expects Google and Microsoft to be the primary providers of hosted applications to corporate users when Gartner expects the market to take off between 2010 and 2012.
Google first launched the Google Apps offering in 2006 as a free service and began charging in 2007 with the introduction of a Premier Edition. Last week, Google further beefed up the service by adding the Google Sites wiki service to the service's Google Docs, Gmail, Google Calendar and Talk applications.
Microsoft this week countered the addition of Google Sites -- an obvious competitor of Microsoft SharePoint -- by unveiling beta versions of hosted Exchange and SharePoint server products. The hosted Microsoft offerings will be generally available by the end of 2008, the company said.
Cain said the software company will trail Google Apps' capabilities until it adds Microsoft Office applications to the hosted suite.
"If you look at the way the industry is playing out and the way Google is going, I would have to imagine that the lights are burning long and bright over in Redmond working on hosted versions of Office," Cain said.
Read more about saas in Computerworld's SaaS Knowledge Center.
Additional Resources



Learn the important issues you must consider before starting your next mobility initiative. Get your mobility white paper from IDC now, compliments of Sybase.
White Papers & Webcasts
Open Source Master Data Management: The Time is Right
MDM is a natural extension to data integration and data quality. Open source MDM introduces a new, more accessible approach. It reduces implementation...
The Value of Real SaaS at Workday
Download this short video! Provided by Workday
The Top 10 Reasons for Choosing Open Source Data Integration
Are you trying to understand your options for data integration? This White Paper presents the top 10 reasons why organizations are choosing open...
BMC Application Performance and Analytics: Predictive Intelligence in Action
See the highlights of BMC's Application Performance and Analytics today!
Overcoming Single Provider MPLS Limitations
Download this white paper today!
Data in Action: Making the Planet Smarter
Register Now
The Shift from Legacy Application Servers to Tomcat
Download this valuable white paper written by Bill Laberis, Editorial Director of Computerworld Custom Solutions Group.
Bringing Web 2.0 to the Enterprise
Downlaod this white paper now!
The Workday User Experience Video
Watch Workday's Creative Director, Scott Lietzke, discuss the business-centered design philosophy at Workday.
Computerworld Reports
Strategic Content ManagementLearn how the right Enterprise Content Management (ECM) solution can start saving you money within a week and pay for itself in as little as three months. These case studies and white papers provide practical information on how to go from theory to reality - to help you put together a plan that will achieve your content management and process automation goals. Enter the Strategic Content Management Zone now |


