In the era of digital transformation, migrating to Microsoft 365 presents an opportunity for organizations to leverage cloud efficiency and innovation. However, this transition is not without its challenges, especially when it comes to satisfying legal and compliance requirements. Cloudficient stands at the forefront, ensuring that migrations into M365 not only meet technical expectations but also legal imperatives.
This blog serves as a brief overview of the points to consider when migrating from legacy email archives to Microsoft 365, especially when an email journal is part of the migration process. Journal email introduces some significant challenges for legal teams when migrating to M365.
A corresponding white paper available here provides much more detail about these migrations and will be valuable to IT or Legal teams while researching and planning a migration to M365.
Migrating email systems to Microsoft 365 means carefully thinking about data integrity, retention, and accessibility. Our expertise in migrating email from platforms like Microsoft Exchange, and email archives from platforms such as Veritas Enterprise Vault, EMC SourceOne, and various cloud archives ensures that the process aligns with legal teams’ needs, securing rapid, efficient, and secure migrations.
Understanding the difference between "suitable" and "unsuitable" data is paramount. Suitable data includes user mailboxes, user archives, and PST files directly mapped to M365 users, while unsuitable data encompasses journals and other non-user-specific information. This distinction is crucial for maintaining the chain of custody and ensuring that each piece of data finds its right place in the cloud, complying fully with legal standards.
Cloudficient’s strategy focuses on uncoupling user data migration from legal data considerations. While Microsoft 365 excellently serves user data needs, legal data requires a specialized approach to ensure compliance and efficient eDiscovery. Our suite of solutions addresses the migration of user data with unmatched speed and accuracy, ensuring legal compliance without compromising user experience.
We also find, however, that there are certain data sets that may not fit well within the M365 ecosystem. This is data that is classified as “Legal” data. This is data that is used by the legal team to search and export for legal matters and is usually in the legacy archive in the form of a “journal archive”, or multiple journal archives.
We recommend migrating user-based, or suitable, data to M365 so your end users can take advantage of the efficiencies and tools that M365 offers to end users. Cloudficient has a suite of tools to aid in this process, providing a completely automated workflow and speeds that are unmatched in the industry.
Journal data, considered unsuitable for M365, requires special planning and consideration. There are currently two options to migrate this data to M365, and one solution that is provided by Cloudficient.
The two options to migrate journal data into M365 are:
The first option is to take the emails in the journal and “explode” them into individual mailboxes. This creates a massive expansion of the mailboxes in M365 and introduces duplication, as a large portion of the emails in the journal may also still reside in the individual mailboxes. You may think that this is not a major concern because storage in M365 is abundant, but there are many other factors to consider besides storage.
With Journal Explosion, a 50 Tb (small) journal archive could result in the amount of data to migrate being be 250 Tb to 750 Tb. Of course, this massively lengthens the migration timeline as well.
The second option for migrating journal archives into M365 involves dividing up the journal emails into sizable chunks and migrating that data into shared M365 mailboxes. This process includes creating a shared mailbox, migrating a set number of items into the shared mailbox, and then moving to the next shared mailbox until you have migrated all data into a number of shared mailboxes. There are many considerations for legal when you migrate journal data into shared mailboxes, such as:
With Journal Splitting, a 50 Tb (small) journal archive would need 500 or more shared mailboxes, potentially requiring additional licenses, and complicating eDiscovery.
Cloudficient's Expireon platform emerges as a next-generation solution, particularly adept at handling the intricacies of legal and eDiscovery processes. With features like rapid data onboarding, continuous email journal capture, targeted indexing on demand, data autonomy, and right-sized eDiscovery tools, Expireon ensures that legal teams can efficiently manage discovery processes, maintain data integrity, efficiently discovery data for legal workflows, and comply with regulatory requirements, including the stringent SEC 17a-4 compliance. Our whitepaper provides more details on each of these Expireon features:
The journey to Microsoft 365, guided by Cloudficient’s Expireon and migration solutions, provides a roadmap for organizations to achieve legal satisfaction. By addressing the dual needs of operational efficiency and legal compliance, companies can embark on their cloud transformation journey with confidence, knowing that their data is not just migrated but strategically aligned with legal and compliance imperatives.
For organizations navigating the complexities of cloud migration, Cloudficient offers a beacon of innovation, efficiency, and legal compliance, ensuring that migrations to Microsoft 365 are conducted with the precision and foresight that legal teams demand.
Our detailed whitepaper available here provides much more detail and is recommended for anyone that is currently researching a migration of email and email archives to M365.