{"id":1730,"date":"2016-09-21T16:30:53","date_gmt":"2016-09-21T14:30:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.retarus.com\/blog\/es\/email-still-going-strong"},"modified":"2024-05-07T19:52:05","modified_gmt":"2024-05-07T17:52:05","slug":"email-still-going-strong","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.retarus.com\/blog\/es\/email-still-going-strong\/","title":{"rendered":"Email still going strong"},"content":{"rendered":"
Despite ongoing attacks from the world of (instant) messaging, email remains a central pillar of workplace communication. <\/span> By <\/span>the end of 2019 there are expected to be more than 2.9 billion email users<\/span><\/a>, who between them will send and receive in excess of 246 billion emails every day (in 2015 there were just 205 billion). As we are already drowning in too many emails anyway, a lot of other platforms are now on offer to provide alternative messaging options – from Slack and Yammer to Facebook Messenger, Hipchat and Kik all the way through to Google Hangouts. Despite all the speculation about the next upcoming \u201cemail killer\u201d, no such conqueror has thus far appeared and the decades-old means of communication still retains its relevance. <\/span> The fact that our inboxes are overflowing with jokes and marketing messages, in addition to emails relevant to real business, has already driven some users to declare <\/span>email bankruptcy<\/span><\/a> and led to trumpeted celebrations of the occasional <\/span>\u201cInbox Zero\u201d<\/span><\/a>. We are quick to complain that providers like Microsoft, Google or Yahoo are not doing enough to improve email. But this is not as easy as many people seem to think. And while we are toasting apps which are now achieving a billion users a month, we are quick to forget that these are all linked to an email address which acts as a universal form of identification for all our services, as Ken Yeung rightly points out in a <\/span>feature on \u201cVentureBeat\u201d<\/span><\/a>.<\/span> <\/p>\n