For over 10 years, Sherpa Software has provided award-winning email management software specifically designed to address email archiving, e-Discovery, PST management and compliance requirements for Lotus Notes and Microsoft Exchange environments. Based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Sherpa’s solutions have been installed at over 2,000 worldwide organizations. Its products offer reasonable prices, easy-to-use interfaces and flexible architectures that streamline administrative processes without requiring any additional hardware or add-on components. Sherpa Software is an IBM Premier Business Partner and a Microsoft Certified Partner.
Specialties
Email Management, E-Discovery, Email Compliance, Email Archiving, Lotus Domino, Microsoft Exchange
New hires at Sherpa Software
Sherpa Software Activity on LinkedIn
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Sherpa Software Sherpa Software named to KM World Magazine 100 companies that matter in knowledge management! -
Sherpa Software "Five Tips for Saving Money on e-Discovery" -
Sherpa Software "There is No 'Small Company' Excuse to the Duty to Preserve Emails or other Electronically Stored Information (ESI)." -
Sherpa Software Srinivasan Balaji offers up common IT pitfalls and best practices to managing the growing amounts of digital information in organizations nowadays. -
Sherpa Software Do you use email archiving software? If your an IT admin, on top of being prepared for litigation, and for compliance purposes, it could make your life a whole lot easier by drastically reducing time managing your mail server, drastically reducing costs and increasing storage space. -
Sherpa Software What do you think? Is the cloud really cheaper? -
Sherpa Software Just another way "big data" is becoming the trend of the future... -
Sherpa Software No small case dilemma when you use Sherpa Software’s Discovery Attender. Practical, reliable, affordable, & very user friendly! -
Sherpa Software Ever wonder what's in our Almost Famous Lotustini? It's so good, we had to share! http://www.facebook.com/sherpasoftware -
Sherpa Software Is keeping legacy data more trouble than its worth? The short answer is yes!
