Analyst Discusses GSA Cloud Computing Bid
Data generated from government employees using these apps
is housed in a separate datacenter facility from consumer users of Google Apps,
noted Matt Glotzbach, director of product management for Google
Enterprise.
Google has another ace in the hole. The company attained the crucial Federal Information
Security Management Act (FISMA) certification from the GSA in July.
Neither Microsoft nor IBM have achieved the FISMA
certification yet. One would be tempted to think having FISMA gives Google the
inside edge on its venerable competition. Not necessarily, said GSA's Wali.
While FISMA accreditation is a statutory requirement in
order for the GSA to use a vendor's software, Wali said a GSA can pick any
vendor that wants to work with the federal agency as a technology supplier.
The GSA will then work with that vendor to achieve FISMA
certification. "But, obviously, it's easier to start migration if they
already have it," Wali said.
Wali said the GSA hopes to have chosen a vendor and begun
the move to the cloud by the end of year or in early 2011.
Forrester Research analyst Ted Schadler noted that
securing FISMA is important, but the bigger issues is the challenge of moving
15,000 workers who have generated who knows how much data in an existing
solution to another collaboration product and architecture.
"It takes a long time to get the program done,"
said Schadler, who in August published a detailed report concerning cloud-based
e-mail providers Google, Microsoft, Cisco and IBM.
"The issues for anybody in picking an e-mail
platform have something to do with the expectation of the workforce. It can be
hard to move a workforce from one solution to another."
Especially when it's a matter of going from the
on-premise solution to the cloud, he added.
"Not every employee loves a
Web-based email client and you don't want to put something in front of
employees they are not comfortable with. It could be a career-limiting move for
a CIO."
Schadler declined to say who out of those three vendors
he felt had the advantage in winning the GSA's hand, noting the cloud e-mail packages
Google, Microsoft and IBM offer are similar enough in price and functionality
to make them commodity solutions.
"There's no one breakthrough product that no one
else could match."








