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Anyone Migrated from Local Email to 3rd Party Email Hosting?

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4 comments

  • jazee
    Looks like Zoho is free too up to 25 users but with pretty limited functionality (don't think it allows aliases or forwarding) and probably some ads?
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  • cPanelMichael
    Hello, You may want to reach out to individual companies offering email hosting to verify if they offer any specific options or tools to import the existing email. The best approach for migrating the existing emails is likely to vary for each provider depending on the type of mail server they utilize. Thank you.
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  • Denis Gomes Franco
    I want to move some of my Cpanel accounts' email from locally hosted on Cpanel to a 3rd party email hosting. Obviously Google (Gmail) hosting comes to mind first as they probably have one of if not the most robust infrastructure and HTML interface (although not the most attractively designed one), but frankly I don't need all the other Gsuite features other than email so paying $5 per email account means I'm paying for stuff I don't need.

    Hey guys, hopefully I'm not too late to answer this one :D I registered on the forums just to help @jazee. I currently do not use Cpanel on my servers, but have used in the past and I might consider coming back to it. In any case ever since starting my web design/hosting business I decided to host mailboxes separatedly. This is pretty handy as it allows me to migrate sites whenever I want without disrupting email access. As for migration, some services do offer automated message moving from IMAP/POP3 mailboxes. I'm currently using Zoho and moving old messages is a breeze, I just need to recreate every mailbox, and in the Migration step I add every account and point them to the old server. It'll copy thousands of messages without difficulty. I think G-Suite may offer a similar option. And as a last resort you could use tools such as this one: - Removed - . Doing it manually via Microsoft Outlook or desktop email clients is possible but highly *not* recommended. I like Zoho, even though their interface is not as refined as others. But they downsized from 25 to 5 free users. There are also other caveats: - only one domain (no catchall domains/aliases/etc) per sign-up - no ads ever... - ...but no IMAP/POP3/SMTP access (mobile app works on free accounts, though) - if you need more than 5 users you'll have to pay for all of them (eg, can't have 5 free users and 2 paid users, you'll need to pay for 7 users) But there are upsides: - is a full productivity suite (vs. a simple email solution such as Rackspace) - way cheaper than G-Suite ($3 per month per user, cheaper if you pay annually) - it gets even cheaper if you join their reseller program - which is free and needs no upfront payments - reseller program allows you to centrally manage all your clients/domains - you can charge your client's credit card directly, or you can pay for your client using your own card. I use the latter so I can bill my client together with hosting services, thus they charge me reseller prices. If I paid with my client's card, they'd pay me a small comission. This arrangement's been working for me for the past few years now. Works fine for most of my customers, but I'm looking for something else for bigger clients (eg. 10+ or 20+ mailboxes).
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  • jazee
    After much research I did conclude that Zoho was the value for what you get. As you pointed out, the key is the free account doesn't support IMAP/POP3 so unless all the users are going to use the web interface, you'll need to pay. But as you point our it's cheaper than Google. If the end users were already used to using Gmail for other accounts though it would probably be worth it to go with Google as long as the budget wasn't super tight. I haven't transitioned yet because I'm still managing my own server. When it comes time to get completely out of the hosting side of my business, I'll migrate my email over to Zoho. I kind of enjoy my email being stored privately though. I can't imagine how much of your mail data gets exposed when you are on Gmail or Outlook.com. I'm sure those companies strive for maintaining your privacy but I'm skeptical. I imagine Zoho is no different but at least it's not a major target. Not like I'm discussing anything illegal in my email but kind of nice to maintain some order of true privacy in this day and age.
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