What would your drive to work be like without shock absorbers in your car?
What is your organization's messaging experience like when spam and malware unexpectedly flood your email servers and bring server performance to a crawl?
Even worse, what is your end-user e-mail experience like (or your customers' experience) when the messaging system experiences an outage and they can't send or receive email at all?
If you are trying to protect and secure your emails and email infrastructure from viruses, spam, inappropriate inbound or outbound content, and business interruption, you may be running your messaging environment without the equivalent of shock absorbers for email.
Join Osterman Research and Azaleos for an informative, 55-minute Webinar that could protect your organization from unwanted threats and disasters, and help you run your messaging environment and Exchange a lot smoother.
Michael Osterman, President of Osterman Research, and two experts from Azaleos (Joel Raper, Vice President of Operations and Scott Gode, Vice President of Product Management) will lead the discussion.
This new Webinar, Adding Shock Absorbers to Your Messaging System, will be held on December 11, 2008 at 1:00pm EST / 10:00am PST / 1800 UK Time.
Michael Osterman will share insights gleaned from a just completed survey of organizations to understand today's threats, the trends in how organizations like yours are addressing those threats, and how you can quantify the benefits of Web services. Azaleos will present their view of messaging security and business continuity delivered as a set of remotely managed Web services and offer real-world examples from recent client deployments.
In this Webinar you will learn:
- What are the latest threats, statistics and trends in spam and malware for 2009 and beyond?
- How can you evaluate and quantify the benefits of an email security and continuity service for current Exchange implementations and those migrating to Exchange?
- How can you free up your IT staff members' time and get more value from them in 2009 and beyond?
- What are some examples of how a typical organization running Exchange implements remote email services?
- What are the common challenges and different solutions associated with solving these problems with remoteservices?
- Do messaging security and continuity strategies differ by types and sizeof organizations?