The Morning Call

Small-business owners vexed by new Google suite charges

- By Nico Grant

When Google told some small businesses in January that they would no longer be able to use a customized email service and other workplace apps for free, it felt like a broken promise for Richard Dalton, a longtime user who operates a scholastic test-prep company in Vancouver, British Columbia.

“They’re basically strong-arming us to switch to something paid after they got us hooked on this free service,” said Dalton, who first set up a Google work email for his business, Your Score Booster, in 2008.

Google said the longtime users of what it calls its G Suite legacy free edition, which includes email and apps like Docs and Calendar, had to start paying a monthly charge, usually around $6 for each business email address. Businesses that do not voluntaril­y switch to a paid service by June 27 will be automatica­lly moved to one. If they do not pay by Aug. 1, their accounts will be suspended.

While the cost of the paid service is more of an annoyance than a hard financial hit, small-business owners affected by the change say they have been disappoint­ed by the ham-handed way that Google has dealt with the process. They cannot help but feel that a giant company with billions of dollars in profits is squeezing little guys — some of the first businesses to use Google’s apps for work — for a little money.

“It struck me as needlessly petty,” said Patrick Gant, owner of Think It Creative, a marketing consultanc­y in Ottawa, Ontario. “It’s hard to feel sorry for someone who received something for free for a long time and now are being told that they need to pay for it. But there was a promise that was made.”

Google’s decision to charge organizati­ons that have used its apps for free is an example of its search for ways to get more money out of its existing business, similar to how it has sometimes put four ads atop search results instead of three and has jammed more commercial­s into YouTube videos. In recent years, Google has more aggressive­ly pushed into selling software subscripti­ons to businesses and competed more directly with Microsoft, whose Word and Excel programs rule the market.

After a number of the longtime users complained about the change to a paid service, an initial May 1 deadline was delayed. Google also said people using old accounts for personal rather than business reasons could continue to do so for free.

But some business owners said that as they mulled whether to pay Google or abandon its services, they struggled to get in touch with customer support. With the deadline looming, six small-business owners who spoke to The New York Times criticized what they said were confusing and at times vacillatin­g communicat­ions about the service change.

“I don’t mind you kicking us off,” said Samad Sajanlal, owner of Supreme Equipment Co., which does software consulting and other tech services in McKinney, Texas. “But don’t give us an unrealisti­c deadline to go and find an alternativ­e while you’re still deciding if you really want to kick us off in the first place.”

Google said that the free edition did not include customer support but that it provided users with multiple ways to get in touch with the company for help with their transition.

Google launched Gmail in 2004 and business apps such as Docs and Sheets two years later. The search giant was eager for startups and mom and pop shops to adopt its work software, so it offered the services at no cost and let companies bring custom domains that matched their business names to Gmail.

While it was still testing the apps, it even told business owners that the products would remain free for life, though Google says that from the beginning, the terms of service for its business software stated that the company could suspend or terminate the offering in the future. Google stopped new free sign-ups in December 2012 but continued to support the accounts of what became known as the G Suite legacy free edition.

In 2020, G Suite was rebranded Google Workspace. The overwhelmi­ng majority of people — the company says it has more than 3 billion total users — use a free version. More than 7 million organizati­ons or individual­s pay for versions with additional tools and customer support, up from 6 million in 2020. The number of users still on the free legacy version from years ago have numbered in the thousands, said a person familiar with the tally who asked for anonymity because the person was not allowed to publicly disclose those numbers.

 ?? JENNILEE MARIGOMEN/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? G Suite user Richard Dalton runs a test-prep company.
JENNILEE MARIGOMEN/ THE NEW YORK TIMES G Suite user Richard Dalton runs a test-prep company.

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