Sunday, March 24, 2013

Email - One of your most important business tools



Today, I wish to discuss email.  Not such a fashionable topic these days with all the hype around social networking, blogging and Google ads.  It has been my experience though, that email has become one of the most important business tools for small and medium businesses.   Since its emergence in the mid 90’s, when gateway protocols allowed private corporate email systems to connect to each other, email has become integrated into our daily business processes. 

Despite its importance, email is often an afterthought to small businesses.

Here are my guidelines for business email
  1. Have and use your own domain for your email address.  Ten years ago, it would have been acceptable to use an email address with your isp or one of the free email services like Hotmail or Gmail.  Today when I see a business that does not have their own domain for emails, it raises a red flag. 
  2. Make sure that you archive and control your business emails.  So often, small businesses use an email client on an employee’s laptop.  What happens if that laptop is lost, stolen or the employee just decided to keep or delete your businesses emails?  Email us a critical part of your business correspondence, have a policy and know where your email is.
  3. Do not use a free email service.  Your email is critical to your business, free email services come with lots of strings attached.   You give up a lot of privacy and the email provider really has no responsibility to you.  Make sure that your email provider is responsible and works for you.

Up until a few years ago, for small businesses who wanted to have a secure, reliable email solution I would’ve recommended an MS Small Business Server which includes Exchange server.  This was a moderately expensive proposition that required regular maintenance. This solution only made sense in businesses that had 10 or more employees.  There really was no good solution for small offices of 1 to 9 employees. 

In the last few years cloud services have exploded and currently there are cloud based exchange services that are inexpensive and can be deployed to an individual, a small office or even up to organizations of 1000’s of employees.

I recommend Microsoft Office 365 hosted exchange services.    The hosted exchange service is currently $4.10 a month per mailbox. This service provides a number of benefits:
1)   25gig per mailbox, it can be allocated as you like
2)      Exchange access with outlook 2007 and above
3)      Activesync for Android, IOS and Blackberry 10 devices
4)      Blackberry cloud services for legacy Blackberries.
5)      Wireless calendar and contact sync for smart phones and tablets
6)      Shared calendar and mailboxes
7)      Email is secure and backed up.
8)      Available archiving services
9)      Control of your companies email.
10)   Spam and antivirus protected
11)   A service level agreement with guaranties

For smaller offices 1 to 10 people, Office 365 Hosted exchange service now provides an economical way to get the same advanced email capabilities that most large corporations have been using for years.  An assistant can have delegation rights and make changes to your calendar, these changes will almost immediately appear on your smart phone.  

For business that already have a Small Business server and are looking at upgrading the server due to capacity, can often avoid the hardware upgrade by moving to Office 365 for hosted exchange, disabling the exchange server function, which in most SBS servers is the biggest drain on resources.  The transition to Office 365 will be much less expensive than a new server for Exchange and your service will be improved, your emails will be protected and your ongoing costs will likely be lower.

Hosted exchange, is one cloud service, that is a real winner in my opinion

Monday, February 25, 2013

If you have a Yahoo account you should read this



As most of you know, I am a nerd with Nerds on Site and I end up having to deal with many computer infections.  About  a week ago, I had a call with a regular client who thought she was infected, she was getting failed delivery emails and people in her contact list were getting strange emails from her. 

I have seen this before, and most cases it turns out that someone the person knows has had their computer compromised and was impersonating the person who is getting the failed delivery emails.  In these cases there is not much you can do. 

However after testing out her computer and sending emails to my email accounts, I could find no infection.  I was quite surprised the next day as I started getting these strange emails from my client Something was definitely still active.

After a little research this is what I found.  The infected accounts are all on Yahoo and it is not the computer that is infected but your Yahoo login credentials are harvested  and sent back to whoever originated the malware.

If you want more info on this you can read about at these following 2 links



In a nutshell here’s what happens, an email arrives from someone you know, it only has a website link in it.  These types of emails are quite common, the one below is the email generated by my browser when I click on the command email link.  This is a perfectly fine email and most people would think nothing about clicking on it.


What the malware does is send out these emails to people in the infected accounts contact list, when you click on the link it takes you to how to get rich on the internet or some such website.  Most people will just close the page and forget about it. 

What happens, however,  is that if you have set yahoo to stay logged on, there is a cookie in your computer and the malware can read your logon credentials. 

What should you do if you are a yahoo user or have an account with an ISP that uses yahoo, Rogers is one such ISP?


  •  Log on to your yahoo account and uncheck the keep me logged on box
  • Go to  your yahoo mail options  à POP & Forwarding  make sure that there are no unexpected email addresses in the forwarding list.
  • Go to your Yahoo account info You will see a section called Sign-in and Security (See picture below)
    • Verify that all the email address or phone numbers that are used for verifying or notifying you are yours, If you find some you don’t recognize then delete them
    • Change your password
  • Log out and close your browser
  • Go back to your Yahoo email, it should ask you for your password, make sure the keep me logged on box is still unchecked.
 

As an extra precaution, I would consider always logging out of your web  accounts.