top stories

Analysis

Yahoo's secret Google Docs killer: Zimbra

Last September, Yahoo acquired Zimbra, an enterprise Web email company. Zimbra is an impressive product. It does e-mail in a browser better than you've ever seen it. The company also makes a business-class e-mail server, and many of its services interconnect to Microsoft's e-mail products--the Exchange server and the Outlook client. Nonetheless, it is hard, at first glance, to see how Zimbra fits into Yahoo's business. Yahoo previously acquired OddPost, another dazzling e-mail technology company, and it was still in the process of rolling out OddPost-powered improvements to its millions of Yahoo Mail users when it acquired Zimbra.

But when I sat down with Zimbra CEO Satish Dharmaraj to get a demo of the new offline e-mail client (very impressive), the importance of Zimbra to Yahoo became clear. Zimbra is not just an e-mail play. It's a nascent productivity suite. While aside from its well-developed e-mail offering it's still a very young product, it looks like it could eventually become a competitor to Google Docs and Google Apps (Google's consumer and business productivity suites, respectively) and potentially a competitor to Microsoft Office. On the other hand, if Microsoft acquires Zimbra, then this initiative will be in serious jeopardy, since it's doubtful Microsoft would scrap its own developing online suite products in favor of Zimbra's.

Is this the Web app or the desktop client? It's hard to tell the difference.

At any rate, here's what Zimbra has that makes it an emerging threat to other business productivity suites: first, it has a complete e-mail product set, including a mailbox service and a very strong client--online, offline, and mobile. The relatively new offline client is especially interesting: It uses the Firefox core (called Prism), but you'd never know you were in a browser-based app. Even links in e-mails to Web sites don't by default go to your Firefox browser; instead, they go the system default. If your PC is set to open up URLs with Internet Explorer, that's what the Zimbra client will do.

The Zimbra e-mail client is extensible through "Zimlets," which is Zimbra's word for code that tells the Zimbra app what to do with certain types of links. It's pre-coded to recognize URLs and pop up a preview when you hover over a link; and it offers intelligent options to pull up relevant data when it sees addresses, airline flight information, and stock market tickers. Zimbra administrators can add their own Zimlets as well, such as hooks to CRM apps like Salesforce.com, bug tracking (Bugzilla), a local wiki, and so on.

Zimbra's synchronization engine runs separately from the client and can be applied to more than e-mail. Part of Zimbra's emerging suite of business apps includes a budding document editor that lets you create "notebooks" that act as directories with different "pages" (documents) inside them. All the pages are word processing files now, although you can insert an extremely rudimentary spreadsheet into a page if you like. Zimbra has no current plans to build out its spreadsheet. No doubt the company waiting to see which way the Microsoft deal falls before trying to build an Excel competitor.

Zimbra now has a document editor and a repository for shared files, too.

Zimbra pages can be shared, wiki-like, but can't be edited in parallel as Google Docs can. That feature will be added in Q3, Dharmaraj told me.

Zimbra is currently pushing hard to win education (university) clients as well as ISPs; it has Comcast as customer, for example, although the suite hasn't yet been rolled out. The Yahoo subsidiary's focus on building out its e-mail app and winning big customers that account for thousands of users each is smart, but going on underneath that is a ramp-up of adding other productivity tools that's even more clever. The offline client is a key part of that strategy. With it, no matter what Zimbra builds, it can offer its users an experience that goes beyond just the Web.

For another look at a clever product that agnostic of the user's platform, see Evernote: "A tool for lazy slobs."

 
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 5 Comments (Page 1 of 1)
by Guruvardhan March 13, 2008 10:49 PM
Wow.....a really thought provoking article and i do believe that Zimbra has the capability to conquer Google's productivity tools....one should wait and watch..... www.80feetroad.blogspot.com
Reply to this comment
by jwhoweth March 15, 2008 6:41 AM
Now I understand the real reason for MicroHoo. They have to stamp out this to protect their mega Office Product line - makes the Yahoo price look cheap.
Reply to this comment
by Olivier-m March 16, 2008 3:34 PM
Are you kind of joking? Zimbra is *far* away from Google Apps. Looks like you never gave it a try. One of my client (world leader in his domain) tested Google Apps and Zimbra before summer 2007: they abandoned Zimbra before testing it before they didn't even manage to make it work properly! While they're now thinking about going globally to Google Apps...
Reply to this comment View reply
by rafe March 17, 2008 10:02 AM
@Oliver-m, You're right that currently, Zimbra's "apps" can't hold a candle to Google. But strategically (in other words, over the long haul) this platform could become Yahoo's (or MicroHoo's) delivery platform for a business-class online collaboration suite.
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software