August 25, 2009
Building a Business Case for Email Archiving: Live Web Seminar, September 16, 2009
I've been reporting a lot of statistics from our Outbound Email and DLP in Today's Enterprise research lately, and there are several interesting statistics that pertain to eDiscovery and email archiving. Consider the following:
- 24% of respondents said that employee email had been subpoenaed at least once in the past 12 months.
- 55% of email decision makers rated investing in "improving the ability to manage eDiscovery in email" as a priority or high priority in the next 12 months.
- More than 60% of respondents who have not yet deployed technology for email archiving intend to do so in the future.
Modern email archiving systems deliver numerous benefits, and one of the most valuable is that they can radically reduce costs related to electronic discovery of email. Without the proper technology in place, even one eDiscovery event involving email can cost an enterprise millions of dollars.
But just because you understand the value of email archiving technology and have the desire to invest in this area for your business doesn't automatically mean that you'll get the budget for such a project.
Proofpoint's VP of Technology and head of our email archiving business, Andres Kohn (pictured at right), has helped many companies build the business case for deploying email archiving technology. And in our next live web seminar, Andres will share practical advice on how to make the case for email archiving and explain the many ways that today’s email archiving solutions lower costs while improving security, regulatory compliance and control of your organization’s most valuable data.
Andres is a fantastic presenter and this is sure to be an interesting and useful presentation. Join us on Wednesday, September 16th, 2009 by registering at the URL below:
Proofpoint webinar: Make the Case for Email Archiving: No budget? No problem!
As always, if you can't make it to the live event, just register and we'll send you a replay link shortly after the actual event.

