Posts Tagged ‘gmail’


Google Apps / Gmail: Fixing the “Invalid Credentials” message using Unlock CAPTCHA

Every now and then one of our clients using Google Apps comes to us saying that their email client (eg. Outlook, Apple Mail, iPhone, etc) won’t accept their email username and password. Common error messages are:

  • invalid credentials’
  • ‘web login required’

The first thing to check is that you’re using the correct username. For Google Apps users, your username (for POP/IMAP access) is your entire email address (eg you@yourdomain.com).

If you still have problems, Google may have “locked” your account.  This can happen for any of the following reasons:

  • your password has been entered incorrectly multiple times
  • your mail client is configured to check for emails too often (Google recommends only once every 10 minutes)
  • your password isn’t strong enough

To unlock your account, you need to go to https://www.google.com/a/yourdomain.com/UnlockCaptcha
(be sure to replace yourdomain.com with your actual domain name)

If you’re a transitioned Google Apps account user, you should use this link to clear your CAPTCHA.

The page should look like this:

Google's Unlock Captcha Screen

Google's Unlock Captcha Screen

Type in the first part of your email address (eg type in “you” if your email address is you@yourdomain.com), password, and CAPTCHA. After submitting the form, your account should be unlocked.

If your account seems to get locked often, some people have suggested that using a strong password will help. You can also check the Last account activity details link at the bottom of your Gmail inbox. This should list all the systems that are attempting to access your account.

For more information, see Google’s help article: I’m having trouble logging in with my username and password.


Google Apps calendar and contacts sync available for iPhone, Windows Mobile and more

Update May 2010: Google Sync now supports push email, not just calendar and contacts. More info

We have previously recommended Google Apps as a great solution for your business email needs.

Google Apps works great while you’re in the office, but what about when you’re on the road?

For years it’s been possible to access your Google apps email on your mobile device, but until now there hasn’t been an easy way to keep your calendar and contacts up to date on your computer and your mobile.

Google has recently announced a new feature  – Google Sync:

Google Sync (beta) is now available, and allows two-way push sync of Google Calendar and Gmail contacts data to iPhone and Windows Mobile devices through ActiveSync. Two-way contacts sync is also available for devices that support SyncML.

This allows you to easily keep your mobile phone’s contacts and calendar up-to-date with your Google Apps calendar and contacts.

Need to schedule a new meeting while out of the office? Add the meeting to your phone’s calendar and it will automatically be added to your Google calendar.

Just added a new phone number to your mobile? It will now be available on your Google contacts when you return to your desk.

No longer is it necessary to maintain two separate address books and calendars.

More information on how to set this up on your mobile device is available here.


Deryck on Moving Email to Google Apps

Email is so very important to business. And yet working with a lot of different small businesses, I am regularly amazed at how much of a problem it can be.

Recently Deryck, MD of Boshack (one of our OM4Tourism clients) migrated his business to Google Apps – he paid $45 (that is $42 in USD) to make it happen. With Google Apps, he now has his Gmail running from consolidated email addresses at his own domain, calendaring, docs and other applications to run his business from Google – all with a single login for each person and at zero ongoing cost.

I decided to interview Deryck about his experience because it is a great example of how easy the move can be. Even where a small business doesn’t have its own technical expert. Note we have an article providing guidance on email hosting called Simplify Your Email Life, so if you want to do what Deryck did, all the information you need is there.

Boshack OutbackDeryck Brockhurst is the Managing Director of Boshack, a unique tourist experience one and a half hours drive from Perth, Western Australia. Boshack has been featured on Getaway, and is a popular destination for travellers wanting to experience the Australian outback, see a working wheat/sheep farm, eat bush tucker, see native Australian wildlife and learn about the Aboriginal dreamtime.

Glenn: Hi Deryck, I’ve got a few questions for you about your recent move to Google Apps. Many small businesses find email difficult and expensive, and don’t have tech experts on hand to manage it. On a scale of 1 to 10, how good are your technical skills?

Deryck: Two – what an embarrassing question.

Glenn: Why did you shift your email to Google Apps?

Deryck: I had 4 different email addresses and 2 of these with Gmail. Passwords alone were sending me crazy. Also on our main booking Gmail account (jointly monitored by my daughter and myself for bookings), I was always deleting stuff I shouldn’t have been. Since we have swapped over she now talks to me.

Glenn: What is different about using Google Apps?

Deryck: Very simply, consolidation. Easy access to my email from any computer.

Glenn: What are the best/worst aspects of it compared to what you did before?

Deryck: The best – consolidation. A time saver definitely, I can see it will be an easy way to gradually delete an email address of mine. And with Gmail the storage/filing system.
The worst, a little slower.

Glenn: You started using Gmail for a bit before going to Google Apps. Did you experience problems with email before moving to Google, and have they been resolved?

Deryck: I guess the systems we were using were getting antiquated as we had used for years. Spam wasn’t controlled or monitored as well as in Gmail. I am now very happy and more importantly so is my daughter/business partner. Spam is a lot better controlled.

Glenn: You used one of Google’s services partners (based in India) to do the setup for you – what was it like?

Deryck: I can’t speak highly enough of him. To help someone like me (with a technical ranking of 2 out of 10) he had to be very patient. This he was and very direct with very simple answers. Sunil was the man, although I think they pick a name and others answer on his behalf. But all very good.

Ed. Link to Sunil in Google Apps Solution Marketplace: Dhruvsoft

Glenn: What are the costs involved in moving to Google Apps and then running email with them??

Deryck: Setup $45 and no other costs.

Glenn: Were there any unexpected costs?

Deryck: Nothing extra was asked for or charged.

Glenn: Other than Mail, do you use any of the other parts of Google Apps?

Deryck: We moved to Google Docs about 6 months ago and this is also an amazing program as we run our business from 4 different locations with 3 different people needing to access emails and spreadsheets. We now have one log in each for all of this with our email included.

Glenn: Any tips for small business operators regarding Google Apps?

Deryck: Definitely the way to go for simplicty, accessibility and especially if you need to share docos or emails.

Glenn: Any further comments on Google Apps?

Deryck: One about sending addresses. I want people to know that using Google Apps your email is sent using whichever of your email addresses that you choose. There is a default address it sends from (initially the address you received the email at). But the option is there to change it to another address. For me I can now consolidate two email addresses over a period.

And another about the Personalized Start Page you get with Google Apps. I have just started on mine.
It is once again a consolidation of everything you want plus extra if you require. With the one login, you simply design your Start Web Page – here is what I put on mine: first 10 emails, special folders, Weather, Aussie News, World News, Calendar, The Frog, Facebook. You can put pretty well anything you want on the one page.

Glenn: Any concerns?

Deryck: I just wonder how we should back ourselves up as we have an awful lot of info on there, although there is less chance of a virus getting to it on Google than if I was keeping myself.
I guess the scary part is such a big company has so much info, and not only mine.

Glenn: So what back up procedures do you use.

Deryck: None.

Glenn: I’ll look into writing up some options for backing up Gmail. Thanks Deryck.

For the record, OM4 uses Google Apps. Neither OM4 or Boshack get any payment for promoting any of the products or services referred to in this interview.


Email Hurts Like Hell

Email is the lifeblood of business.  But man, it sure can hurt at times!

Just think of the pain we put up with:

  • toxic spam (by the truckload
  • it stops working and the technical jargon that hits you is almost worse than the spam!
  • clogged mail boxes meams time wasted trawling and deleting old messages
  • changing ISP and having to notify everyone of a new address

And of course when you have a small business the problems are magnified, because when your team has problems with email, you have a problem.

The pain of email forced me to change the way I did things. And yes, there is an easier way.  After more than a few email exchanges and conversations, I wrote up an article on how to Simplify Your Email Life.

I hope it eases the pain.


Office In The Cloud

I was talking to Andrew and Michael on the weekend and it turned out they are up for an expensive upgrade of the office file/print server and email server. And it got me thinking.

A lot of small businesses have these servers in their office, and they cost a bomb. But really, what do they do?

You can get email these days at no cost from Yahoo or Google. Why pay for email software, let alone an email server? Free is good, but even Google’s premium business email is only $50/yr. And calendaring is included.

A shared file server is now available at a fraction of the cost of what it used to be. Because we can use Amazon S3 to store the files, and Jungle Disk to make it easy to get at them. A 100 Gb shared file server might cost $20 to setup and $15-25/mth in storage and bandwidth costs.

You can print wirelessly. Even do backup wirelessly.

This all works for Mac, Windows and iPhones (wireless backup possibly only for Mac at this stage).

All in all, it seemed like a small office could run a lot of its expensive computing needs from the cloud. That is, from the Internet.

So I drew up this diagram to show how it would work. It is dead easy to setup. Don’t even need a technician.

Office In The Cloud

James and I will be testing this out more within OM4, and Michael and Andrew are going to try it as well.

Back in IBM days, the outsourcing teams used to budget lots of dollars to manage farms of file/print and email servers. If you can run a lot of your office in the cloud, you avoid a lot of cost. Hopefully in the not too distant future a lot of those servers will be redundant.

Some may be concerned that Amazon S3 or Google might go offline. Or the Internet might go offline. Possible. But its a matter of relative risk. Local servers can (and do) fail, and local backups don’t always take place. The office in the cloud concept can be backed up. And there are probably more significant risks in a business than Amazon or Google going offline.

Given how much money you can save, it will be interesting to see how long it takes to become popular.