How to WIN During an Outage
Don’t get me wrong, by win, I mean limit the bleeding to as minimal as possible. Let’s face it, nobody wins during an outage, everybody gets yelled at by someone else for the entire duration and thereafter. Knowledge of technology goes out the window and gives way to frustration and anger at other folks. I’m going to keep my opinions out of the post and just recap the some of the “best” solutions we saw come from partners. And I’ll additional preface this by saying, this isn’t meant to imply what could have been done, because it’s not my place to say that, period. But these were some things that I saw executed that worked for partners and their clients and I figured I would share.
This list isn’t in any sort of order…
Plan A – LiveArchive – Contact Export Combo
This was pretty impressive to me, out of the gate. I had a partner that rolled their clients to LiveArchive and they actually had links on their desktop to do this, like we recommend. The first person to pull this off, had it the easiest for sure. Most smartphones support Contact exports from ActiveSync to the phone SD Card. So he was able to have them have their email via LiveArchive and still not have their contacts disappears once we went to the Dial tone migration route.
Once we enabled that, we had another partner that had the same idea but a day too late, so he had to go fetch the contacts from the old OST to put them into the Temp Mailbox to facilitate the process above. Then he had to move the contacts under a different contacts folder to avoid duplication once we merged the data back.
Plan B – Migrate to Rockerduck, like yesterday!
We had a few of those that basically saw a pattern of hardware issues and limitations on the Exchange 2007 software and decided they’d had enough and they moved to Rockerduck on day 1. Yes, they took a hit on the man hours required to export then upload PSTs, but this group of folks were done with the outage as soon as those PSTs finished uploading.
Plan C – Find an ExchangeDefender employee and hire some people to beat them with bats on sight.
I was hoping they would find Vlad, but that didn’t happen. Obviously, there are great variables that prohibit or make it more difficult for folks to try do items A & B, and I understand there is a cost in labor that was assumed at the time of deployment and it is hard to take that hit again. We understand and we have a plan in place to migrate all users that do not opt out to 2010 via online moves. This is going to take some voodoo work to make it seamless but our Exchange team has a plan designed to make it happen. Unfortunately, some of the prep work caused some extra authentication windows to pop up for already irritated end users, but this is one of those “one step backwards to go to two steps forward” scenarios.
Carlos Lascano
VP Support Services, ExchangeDefender
carlos@ownwebnow.com
(877) 546-0316 x737