The following is the AI sanitized version of Rob... consume with caution...
If the goal is simply to eliminate Teams licensing costs, the most straightforward option is to move to an M365 plan that excludes Teams and rely on Slack for collaboration. That alone reduces spend without disrupting the rest of the ecosystem.
Switching to Google Workspace is a very different conversation. Doing so means giving up on‑premises application support unless the organization is prepared to reinvest in equivalent tooling. It also means losing integrated endpoint management, built‑in security capabilities, and several layers of compliance and governance again, unless the organization duplicates those investments with third‑party solutions. The net result is typically higher total cost of ownership, not lower.
When this argument comes up, it’s usually because someone is looking only at the subscription line item and not the full operational impact. If this perspective is coming from leadership, it’s a signal that the organization may be heading toward broader strategic and financial challenges.
Real Rob reporting...
RED ALERT F'ING MORON BUSINESS OWNER DETECTED! RUN! REPLACE CLIENT! EJECT! PULL UP DRAGON ONE!
P.S. Expect this pressure to continue because people are freaking out about the cost increases hitting Business Standard, and Business Basic subscriptions effective July 1. These users aren't aware... their mailboxes just doubled in size... that's where the cost went... you got 100gb mailboxes now... no more Exchange Online Plan 2 foolishness to support people properly. Welcome to 2026.
On December 4, Microsoft announced a global price and packaging update for select Microsoft 365 commercial suites and standalone components, including Enterprise, Business, Frontline, and Government commercial equivalents.
www.microsoft.com
P.S. #2, literally had this conversation with a google customer that's got ~600 users today. They told me about their estate, I showed them where they were spending ~20% more than just standardizing on M365 E3 + Defender Suite. Their CFO was on the call... his jaw hit the floor.
Microsoft rules the enterprise space for a reason people. Google cannot touch it, I don't care what people think. A Google stack simply never adds up when it comes to proper cost of ownership analysis. And that's on the DIRECT COSTS, I haven't gotten into the indirect stuff spoken of here.