
<p>When we looked at some reasons to consider an upgrade to Exchange 2013 inpart one, we considered the infrastructure and features involved in the upgrade. We covered howExchange can help organizations simplify infrastructure and extend its life by a few years, as wellas new features in Exchange 2013 that help with tasks such as automatic reseeding and keepingExchange up and running.</p><p>Here are some additional benefits you gain when you buy Exchange 2013 and implement it in yourorganization, including cloud readiness, the ability to move away from third-party software andfocuses specific to the end user.Exchange 2013 ensures that end users benefit from new features</p><p>We're moving into a bring-your-own-deviceworld, where users lead the way in requesting more features and compatibility with a wider range ofdevices. Moving to the cloud means you're ready for this, and with the same code base used foron-premises Exchange 2013, you'll gain the same benefits soon after their introduction into Office365.</p><p>With Exchange2013, we've seen some great new features for end users, with a much-improved Outlook Web App thatsupports a wider range of devices, with offlineOWA access and OWA for Devices. If deploying tablets to your workforce is on your agenda,Exchange 2013 helps you make the most of this so you don't have to rely on the inconsistencies ofExchangeActiveSync.</p><p><a href="http://searchexchange.techtarget.com/tip/Cloud-based-features-a-big-benefit-when-you-buy-Exchange-2013">Keep reading...</a></p>