The Two Platforms Every Business Should Understand

Choosing between Microsoft 365 and Google Workspace is one of the most consequential technology decisions a business makes. These two platforms power email, file storage, collaboration, and communication for the vast majority of businesses worldwide, and the choice between them affects how your team works every single day.

Both platforms are mature, reliable, and capable. Neither is objectively “better” than the other in every scenario. The right choice depends on your business’s specific needs, industry requirements, existing workflows, and priorities. This guide gives you an honest, side-by-side comparison so you can make an informed decision.

Email and Communication

Microsoft 365: Outlook

Microsoft Outlook remains the gold standard for business email, particularly in industries that rely heavily on email for formal communication. The desktop application is feature-rich with robust calendar management, shared mailboxes, distribution groups, and tight integration with the rest of the Microsoft ecosystem. Outlook’s search is powerful, its rules engine is flexible, and it handles large volumes of email gracefully.

On the communication side, Microsoft Teams provides chat, video conferencing, and phone system capabilities in a single platform. Teams has become the dominant enterprise communication tool, and its integration with Outlook calendars, SharePoint files, and other Microsoft services makes it a compelling unified platform.

Google Workspace: Gmail

Gmail’s web interface is clean, fast, and intuitive. Its search capabilities are excellent – unsurprising given Google’s core competency. Gmail’s label-based organization system is different from Outlook’s folder-based approach, and people tend to either love it or find it frustrating. The web experience is generally considered smoother than Outlook’s web version, though the gap has narrowed significantly.

Google Meet handles video conferencing well and integrates naturally with Google Calendar. Google Chat provides team messaging, though it has not achieved the market penetration of Microsoft Teams. For businesses that prefer a web-first, lightweight communication stack, Google’s tools are polished and effective.

File Storage and Collaboration

Microsoft 365: OneDrive and SharePoint

OneDrive provides personal cloud storage for each user, while SharePoint serves as the platform for team sites, document libraries, and intranet capabilities. The real-time co-authoring capabilities in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint have improved dramatically and now rival Google’s collaboration features.

SharePoint’s strength is its depth. It can serve as a document management system with version control, metadata tagging, approval workflows, and granular permissions. For businesses that need structured document management – particularly in regulated industries – SharePoint offers capabilities that Google Drive simply does not match.

Google Workspace: Google Drive

Google Drive pioneered real-time collaboration, and it remains exceptionally good at it. Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides are designed from the ground up for simultaneous multi-user editing, and the experience is seamless. The commenting, suggestion, and revision history features are intuitive and well-implemented.

Google Drive’s simplicity is both its strength and its limitation. For teams that primarily need to create, share, and collaboratively edit documents, it is excellent. But it lacks the structured document management capabilities of SharePoint – no metadata-driven organization, limited workflow automation, and less granular permission controls.

Security and Admin Controls

Microsoft 365

Microsoft 365’s security and admin capabilities are extensive, especially in the Business Premium and E3/E5 tiers. Features include advanced threat protection for email, conditional access policies, data loss prevention, information protection labels, mobile device management through Intune, and Azure Active Directory for identity management.

For organizations that need granular control over their security posture – particularly those in regulated industries like healthcare or finance – Microsoft 365 generally offers more depth. The security tooling is more extensive, the compliance center is more comprehensive, and the ability to enforce policies across devices and applications is more mature.

Google Workspace

Google Workspace provides solid security fundamentals: two-step verification, admin-enforced security policies, mobile device management, and data loss prevention (in higher tiers). Google’s infrastructure security is world-class, and the platform benefits from Google’s massive investment in security research.

However, Google Workspace’s admin console, while improving, does not yet offer the same depth of control as Microsoft’s admin center. For businesses with straightforward security needs, Google Workspace is perfectly adequate. For businesses that need extensive policy controls, advanced threat protection, or detailed compliance reporting, Microsoft 365 typically has the edge.

Compliance

This is where the two platforms diverge most significantly for certain industries. Microsoft 365 holds a broader range of compliance certifications and offers more granular compliance tools. The Microsoft Purview compliance center provides retention policies, eDiscovery, communication compliance, information barriers, and insider risk management.

For HIPAA-regulated healthcare organizations, both platforms can be configured for compliance and both providers will sign a Business Associate Agreement. However, Microsoft 365’s compliance tooling is generally considered more comprehensive for healthcare use cases, with features like sensitivity labels, message encryption, and detailed audit logs that are more straightforward to configure and manage.

Google Workspace is compliant with many standards including SOC 2, ISO 27001, and HIPAA (with proper configuration and a BAA). But businesses in heavily regulated industries often find Microsoft 365’s compliance features more robust and easier to audit.

Desktop Applications

If your team needs full desktop applications – particularly Excel with advanced features like macros, pivot tables, and Power Query – Microsoft 365 is the clear choice. The desktop versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook are significantly more powerful than their web-based counterparts or Google’s equivalents.

Google Workspace is web-first by design. Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides work in the browser, and while they cover the needs of most users, they lack some of the advanced features that power users rely on in Microsoft’s desktop applications. If your finance team lives in complex Excel spreadsheets or your team relies on PowerPoint templates with advanced formatting, Google’s web apps may feel limiting.

That said, if your team primarily works with straightforward documents and does not need desktop-app-level features, Google’s web applications are lighter, faster, and more than sufficient.

Pricing

Both platforms use per-user, per-month subscription pricing with multiple tiers. As of early 2026:

Microsoft 365 Business Basic starts at $6 per user per month and includes web versions of Office apps, Exchange email, OneDrive (1 TB), and Teams. Business Standard at $12.50 adds desktop Office applications. Business Premium at $22 adds advanced security and device management features that many businesses need.

Google Workspace Business Starter starts at $7.20 per user per month with 30 GB of storage per user. Business Standard at $14.40 increases storage to 2 TB and adds recording and advanced meeting features. Business Plus at $18 adds enhanced security and compliance features.

The per-user costs are comparable at each tier. The real cost difference comes from what features you need and which tier provides them. Microsoft’s Business Premium tier is more expensive than Google’s Business Plus but includes more advanced security features. Consider the total cost of ownership including the cost of any additional security tools you would need to purchase separately.

Integrations

Microsoft 365 integrates deeply with the broader Microsoft ecosystem – Dynamics 365, Power BI, Power Automate, Azure services, and the vast library of enterprise software that supports Microsoft authentication and data formats. If your business uses any Microsoft-centric line-of-business applications, Microsoft 365 is likely the smoother choice.

Google Workspace integrates well with Google’s own services (Google Ads, Analytics, Cloud Platform) and has a strong ecosystem of third-party integrations through the Google Workspace Marketplace. Many modern SaaS applications integrate equally well with both platforms, so this is less of a differentiator than it once was.

Our Recommendation

Choose Microsoft 365 if you operate in a regulated industry that requires advanced compliance tools, your team relies on desktop Office applications (especially Excel), you need robust device management, or you are already invested in the Microsoft ecosystem.

Choose Google Workspace if your team values simplicity and a web-first approach, real-time collaboration is a primary workflow, you do not need advanced compliance or desktop application features, or your team is already comfortable with Google’s tools.

For most businesses we work with – particularly those in healthcare, professional services, and other regulated industries – we recommend Microsoft 365 Business Premium as the best balance of functionality, security, and compliance capabilities. But we have also helped businesses deploy and manage Google Workspace effectively when it is the better fit for their workflow.

The most important thing is choosing a platform and configuring it properly. A well-managed Google Workspace environment is more secure than a poorly managed Microsoft 365 deployment, and vice versa. Whichever platform you choose, make sure it is set up and managed by professionals who understand both the technology and your business needs.

Related Questions

Is Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace better for small business?

It depends on your priorities. Microsoft 365 is generally better for businesses that need advanced compliance features, robust desktop applications (especially Excel), or work in regulated industries like healthcare or finance. Google Workspace is often better for businesses that prioritize simplicity, real-time collaboration, and a web-first workflow. Both platforms provide reliable email, storage, and productivity tools for small businesses.

Can you use Microsoft 365 and Google Workspace together?

Technically yes, and some businesses do run both. For example, you might use Microsoft 365 for email and compliance while using Google Drive for collaborative document editing. However, running both platforms adds complexity, increases costs, and can create confusion about where files live. Most businesses are better served by standardizing on one platform and using it consistently across the organization.

Is Google Workspace HIPAA compliant?

Google Workspace can be configured for HIPAA compliance, and Google will sign a Business Associate Agreement (BAA) for eligible plans. However, simply having a BAA does not make you compliant – you must also configure security settings, data loss prevention policies, and access controls appropriately. Microsoft 365 generally offers more granular compliance tools for regulated industries, but Google Workspace is a viable option with proper setup and management.

Need Help Choosing or Managing Your Platform?

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