Working out a new server for an agency of 200 Employees – with approx 240 email accounts.
Internally I'm arguing with myself over the amount of drive space to allocate to each user for the disk quota, I'm just looking for suggestions.
Once i have a quota size decided, it will define the solution for storage.
I've had everything from 4 GB per account ( which i feel is being generous ) down to 500 Mb ( with is rather restrictive in today's day and age. )
Thing is 4 GB per acocunt is just under 1 TB of allocated storage for email alone.
Does anyone follow a "rule of thumb" or have thoughts on this?
thanks in advance
Best Answer
This is a "length of a piece of string" situation - it depends a lot on the amount of mail and the content of it (all small simple text messages, or do your users regularly send and receive large attachments?).
Your best bet is to have look at recent mail patterns for a sample of users, set your base quota by that multiplied by a small factor.
Two rules of thumb for mail quotas:
4Gb is certainly too much as a general quota - I have over 18 months worth of mail in less than 256Mb on our current system (we kept the old mail server for archive purposes instead of migrating old data over) and I'm sure many people need less than I unless you are archiving mail for a long time. 1Gb is more realistic, but may still be too much as your base quota for everyone.
As well as considering the volume of allocated space for the live mail stores, remember that you need to allocate enough resource to backups of this data.
And if your users are sending large objects by mail internally (I've seen people send 10s of Mb to everyone in a company address book even though only a few people actually needed the documents), which could result in big mailboxes over time, you should at least consider encouraging them to use a more special purpose document sharing system - this might be easier to manage size wise, could allow useful things like revision/signoff control and other workflow helpers, and might be easier to backup in a way that makes restoring individual documents less work.