Wednesday, Mar 17, 2010
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Posts Tagged ‘free email’

Use Gmail to Pump Up Your Company’s Email

Gmail Logo by Google

Gmail is not just for your personal email, anymore. Read more to find out how you can use the power of Google to power your small business's email, while using your company's domain name! Oh, did I mention that it's FREE?!


Like many, I use Gmail (Gmail.com) for my personal email. With it's expanding inbox size, easy accessibility, growing number of plugins, constant up time, integration into Outlook and Blackberry...it is hard not to appreciate what Google has done with this free email client.

What many don't know is that you can use the power of Gmail to power your company's email. Far too often I see cars and commercial vehicles with descriptions on the side that state, "email us at: MyBusiness@gmail.com". Right under that line it will say, "visit us at: www.MyBusiness.com". To me that screams small time and it looks like the company hasn't spent the extra $50 bucks to have their "web guy" update their email. That, or their web guy doesn't care! The easy solution is to combine the two and use the tools that Google provides to give you that more professional big-guy look.

The answer is simple:

Go to the Google Apps for Business website.

Here you can select the standard or the premiere versions of their email service. The premiere service is cheap (currently $50/user/year) and offers more space, no ads, archiving, encryption, and most importantly a 99.9% uptime guarantee (which is better than exchange server, read here).

You can see a side-by-side comparison of the two account types by going to this site. I currently use the standard FREE version.

Click "Get Started"

Google makes it easy from here to set up your domain to work with your Gmail account. The only tricky part is changing your CNAME file which requires admin access to your domain host website....no biggie.

Create email accounts that are "aliases" for you that say "info@MyBusiness.com" or "sales@MyBusiness.com". These go a long way to show your web competence and are easy to remember (much better than john.doe@MyBusiness.com). If you are concerned about not getting email from that old account, just forward it!

If you use a client on your work computer (PC or Mac) then going to this website will show you how to integrate it. This is another easy process and you should have no problem getting it to work with Gmail.

That's it! A lot of the "magic" that your web guy does is just this easy. You probably saw a bunch of different things that Google offers small business...and a lot of these tools have a ton of value. One of the features we use is the Google portal site. You can do a lot of cool things with that, too, but I will save that for another post.

In no time you should be set up with an email account that looks every bit as professional as what the big boys have...and you have done it all for free. If you have any questions, post a comment below.

 

 

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Collaborate Like the Big Guys with Google Calendar

google calenar's icon

Google gives us one more reason to move away from office and onto the "cloud" with this extremely useful calendar application. In fact, this free application has many advantages to it's stalwart calendar competitors.


As an avid Outlook user I liked the ability to "stay organized" by creating recurrences of important events, quickly jumping to dates and having those pleasant reminders go off every 5 minutes when an event occurred. Well, I do not like the reminder box, but that's a different story. Outlook offered a digital alternative to my written daily planner, and for that I was excited. Unfortunately, as is often the case, my desire to go digital outweighed the true benefits of using Outlook. It ended up becoming another tool I used rather than a tool that replaced many other outmoded tools.

Now, Google in their attempt to take us online and show us more ads created Google Calendar (still in beta after almost 3 years). While there are some downfalls, Google Calendar takes us another step forward in making it easy to be a true mobile professional, collaborate appointments with coworkers and colleagues thus making us more productive business owners.

Become a Mobile Professional

Outlook and other desktop clients like it fail because as we travel and make appointments there is no way to update on the fly. While Blackberry's can do this now (through RIM licenses) and Windows Mobile devices can update remotely as well (through Exchange) the reality is that you are locked to the old desktop paradigm with Outlook. For small business owners Google Calendar offers these solutions:

  • Update and retrieve your events through any web enabled browser -http://calendar.google.com
  • Use your web enabled phone to retrieve events directly from their mobile site -m.google.com/calendar
  • From your mobile phone, use SMS to text information. Text to: 48368 (GVENT)
    • Text "next" to get a notification regarding your next scheduled event.
    • Text "day" to get a notification containing all of your scheduled events for the present day.
    • Text "nday" to get a notification containing all of your events for the following day.
    • Text a date (e.g., June 8 or June 8 2009 or 6-8-09...) to get a notification containing all of your events for that day.
    • To create an event via SMS, simply send a text message containing your event's details.

Within the Calendar application you can either create an event or use the "Quick Add" feature (my preference) which allows you to very quickly create an event using a sentence like structure.

Finally, when setting a calendar event through the browser, you can configure a number of ways to notify you of the event's occurrence. Choose from a pop-up (like trusty Outlook), email (great for those of us with Blackberry's) or SMS. Nothing is better than forgetting that appointment and having the reminder come up in 3 different ways in synchronization. You will not forget your appointments that way!

Collaborate Appointments with Coworkers and Colleagues

I really liked the "free/busy" service from Microsoft. It allowed you to see if your colleagues or collaborators will available when you scheduled a meeting. This service went away...actually became a pay service. There were limitations to it as well like everyone had to be a subscriber, etc.

Google Calendar changes that. Unfortunately, the invitees need to be Google Calendar users. If they are not, they will be invited to join, free of charge, of course. However, it is easy to invite others using their email account. You can setup the invite to give them the ability to "modify event", "invite others" and/or "see guest list". All of these options make this feature even more dynamic.

Last of all, Google Calendar enables you to search for other calendars. Suppose Tom down the hall wants everyone to know when the weekly meetings are, he can create a recurring event in Google Calendar, publish it publicly and then you can find it by searching through Google's Calendar Search. Options like "What", "Who","Where", and "Date From" allow you to quickly find the one you want. Additionally, you can find out about local events, phases of the moon, when your favorite sports team is playing, etc. through the many publicly offered calenders throughout the service. This is a great tool to use if you run a networking group, schedule parties, or have weekly events that you want others to come to. You can tell an interested person, "Just check out Google Calendar and search for 'Fun Filled Leads Group' in 'Orlando, Florida'" and they will be able to see your events.

On the Downside

The way that calendars are shared is a little bit transparent. I would like the ability to grab events created by others and make them my own, but that is not an option. Each of the public calendars "sits" next to yours so that you can view them all side by side. Furthermore many of the public calendars out there overlap, so you might pick two that have about 2/3 of their events the same...but that final 1/3 might be different...and irresistible. This part kills me since it is not possible to eliminate the redundancy.

More Productive Business Owner

This part is the kicker and the reason why I have adopted Google Calendar. It's called Google Calendar Sync and it enables your Outlook to talk to Google Calendar. Everything that was "trapped" on your Outlook can be freed and sent to the web. Now they are able to talk and communicate in harmony. If you are in a large corporate environment chances are that the IT department has locked down installation of new programs, and if you are an iCal user, you still have to export and import.

I am a Blackberry user, and I have the Google Sync application for it (here's the link for other phones). With the latest upgrade comes batch calendar syncing from the phone to the Google Calendar service. With both of these pieces of software running, a calendar event created on my cell phone updates to my office Outlook in a matter of minutes. Digital Xanadu is realized.

This whole microcosm goes back to Google's open source model and along with this is integration with apps such as Remember the Milk, Jott, GMail and others.

Google Calendar is a worthwhile calendar program that can augment your current organizational needs. Despite the drawbacks I have yet to find an alternative nearly as complete and user friendly.

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