Both platforms can run a business perfectly well — genuinely. We're registered partners with both Microsoft and Google, so this is an honest, feature-by-feature look at where they differ, not a case for one over the other. The right answer depends on what you already run and how your team likes to work.
On paper, both suites cover the same ground — email, documents, storage, meetings and admin controls. The differences show up in how each one gets there.
| Microsoft 365 | Google Workspace | |
|---|---|---|
| Outlook, with the deepest rules, offline access and calendar integration of the two — familiar to most Windows-based staff. | Gmail, with a simpler interface and strong search, built web-first and often preferred by teams already living in the browser. | |
| Document editing & collaboration | Word, Excel and PowerPoint — richer formatting and offline editing, with real-time co-authoring in desktop or web apps. | Docs, Sheets and Slides — built for the browser from day one, with real-time collaboration that feels slightly more seamless for teams working purely online. |
| Storage | OneDrive for personal files, SharePoint for team and company document libraries — more structure, more setup. | Google Drive for both personal and shared files in one simpler model — less structure to configure, less flexibility for complex permission hierarchies. |
| Video conferencing | Microsoft Teams — combines chat, calling and meetings in one app, and doubles as the collaboration hub for the whole suite. | Google Meet — lightweight, fast to join, and tightly integrated with Calendar and Gmail invites. |
| Admin & security controls | Deeper, more granular controls (Entra ID, Intune, Conditional Access) — powerful, but with a steeper learning curve for a generalist admin. | Simpler admin console covering most day-to-day needs quickly — fewer knobs to turn, which is either a relief or a limitation depending on your requirements. |
| Pricing tiers | Business Basic / Standard / Premium, then E3 / E5 — more tiers, more room to match a specific role's needs precisely. | Business Starter / Standard / Plus, then Enterprise — fewer, simpler tiers that are quicker to choose between. |
Neither column is "better" here — Microsoft 365 generally offers more depth and configurability, Google Workspace generally offers more simplicity and faster onboarding. Which of those you want depends entirely on your business.
These are tendencies, not rules — plenty of businesses succeed running against type. But they're a reasonable starting point.
Migrating between the two is a well-worn path — both Microsoft and Google provide tooling for it — but it's rarely a weekend project.
Switching purely to chase a marginal cost or feature difference is rarely worth the disruption. It tends to make sense when your current platform is actively working against how your business operates — not just because the other one looks a little cheaper or shinier.
We're registered partners with both Microsoft and Google, so we'll assess your setup and recommend honestly — not whichever we sell more of.
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