When organisations merge, acquire another business or undergo major restructuring, attention is usually focused on systems, people and processes.
Email archives rarely make the top of the agenda.
That can be a costly mistake.
Historic email data often represents one of the largest and least understood information assets within an organisation. During organisational change, legacy archive platforms can quickly become a source of compliance risk, operational complexity and unexpected cost.
Why archives become a problem during organisational change
Most organisations have accumulated years of historic email data.
Over time this data may have been stored across:
- Enterprise Vault
- Mimecast
- Proofpoint
- PST files
- Journal archives
- Legacy Exchange environments
When organisations merge or restructure, these archives frequently remain untouched while active mail systems are consolidated.
The result is a fragmented landscape where historic email data is spread across multiple platforms, each with different retention policies, permissions and search capabilities.
The hidden risks
Inconsistent retention policies
Different organisations often operate different retention schedules.
Following a merger, it is common to discover that identical categories of information are being retained for vastly different periods.
This creates governance challenges and increases compliance risk.
Complicated eDiscovery
Legal, HR and Information Governance teams expect to search across historic data quickly and accurately.
When archives remain split across multiple platforms, responding to litigation, investigations, FOI requests or Subject Access Requests becomes more complicated and time-consuming.
Rising costs
Legacy archive systems continue to incur:
- Licensing fees
- Infrastructure costs
- Support contracts
- Specialist expertise requirements
Many organisations continue paying for platforms that are only being retained to provide occasional access to historic data.
Vendor lock-in
Archive platforms are often inherited rather than chosen.
Years after a merger, organisations may find themselves dependent on unsupported or unwanted technology simply because historic email remains trapped inside it.
Why migration should be part of the integration strategy
Successful organisations increasingly treat archive migration as part of wider cloud modernisation and integration programmes.
Migrating historic email data into Microsoft 365 allows organisations to:
- Simplify governance
- Consolidate retention policies
- Improve eDiscovery
- Reduce operational overhead
- Eliminate legacy archive platforms
- Reduce vendor lock-in
Most importantly, it creates a single source of truth for historic email data.
Planning ahead
Archive migration does not need to happen on day one of a merger or restructuring programme.
However, organisations that ignore archive strategy often find themselves dealing with higher costs and greater complexity years later.
Historic email data should be viewed as a strategic asset, not a forgotten by-product of organisational change.
If your organisation is planning a merger, acquisition, restructuring or cloud modernisation programme, we can help assess your archive landscape and develop a practical migration strategy.