We all know how to make "apple to apple" comparisons. But, the reality is that "apple to orange" comparisons are far more common in the business world. I guess that's what makes our jobs more interesting. If all of our choices were "apple to apple," the decision process would get pretty obvious.
Why am I going off on a seemingly "fruitful" tangent? You see, I was having a chin-wag with a respected IT veteran and was told of the time when she was tasked to recommend whether her employer should go with leasing a word processing solution on a Wang Labs mini-computer and terminals vs purchasing and installing PCs with word processing software and connecting them by LAN.
(I realize that this may seem like an obvious decision today. However, 20 years ago, when PCs were considered marginally smarter than a dumb terminal and everyone you would meet on a professional basis considered the Wang Labs solution as the industry standard for enterprise word processing, the decision was anything but.)
The point is, it’s often difficult to do a direct comparison of two things because features and costs often do not line up one-for-one. On the other hand, her instinct that the PCs' capabilities were equally or more important than cost was right on. The LAN would usher in a new era of business process enablement where engineers were more productive because they could process their own documents whenever and however they wanted. And, instead of typing letters and files, secretaries could move into higher level roles (e.g. administrative assistants) and added more value to business processes new and old.
And, naturally, this recommendation launched our heroine to the better and brighter future that eventually let to our chitchat as related above.
Fast forward 20 years and compare FTP/SFTP or email attachment to a secure file transfer appliance from Accellion. IT teams are coming to Accellion for SFTA because, even though FTP/SFTP is a free utility on most server operating systems and email attachment is a standard capability of the email system that has already been paid for, SFTA is a Horizontal Business Process Improvement Opportunity. It's just like how installing PC and LAN can give you so much more than the "industry standard" word processing solution could 20 years ago.
How about the costs? SFTA is not free and how does the cost measure up against the "business process improvement opportunity"?
The costs of an SFTA include:
In dollar terms, there is a one-time purchase cost followed by the cost of less than one (<1)> headcount for an experienced IT person going forward because support and maintenance are largely automated and do NOT increase as the organization ramps up with SFTA usage.
The costs of FTP include:
The costs of Email attachments includes:
As you can plainly see, and please pardon the "buzz word", SFTA provides a Scalable secure file transfer process that lowers its usage cost as users adopt it. Whereas the traditional FTP/SFTP and email attachment processes are Not Scalable and requires more feeding and caring as more users come on-line.
So, the question is not unlike what our heroine faced 20 years ago. Do you go with the accepted "industry standards" with FTP/SFTP and email attachment for file transfer process or go with SFTA that has been proven in the field to lower the cost of same transaction while making the whole organization more productive?
ACA Guy