Get Tech Support Now - (818) 584-6021 - C2 Technology Partners, Inc.

Get Tech Support Now - (818) 584-6021 - C2 Technology Partners, Inc.

C2 provides technology services and consultation to businesses and individuals.

T (818) 584 6021
Email: [email protected]

C2 Technology Partners, Inc.
26500 Agoura Rd, Ste 102-576, Calabasas, CA 91302

Open in Google Maps
QUESTIONS? CALL: 818-584-6021
  • HOME
  • BLOG
  • SERVICES
    • Encryption
    • Backups
  • ABOUT
    • SMS Opt-In Form
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
FREECONSULT
Tuesday, 17 March 2026 / Published in Woo on Tech

Microsoft 365 vs. Google Workspace: Which One Actually Works for Law Firms?

Microsoft365 vs Google

Many businesses, when trying to get their processes in order, debate whether using Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace would work best for their needs. Although the business world tends to “expect” Microsoft applications, there are those who fully utilize Google.  

Here’s the honest truth: both platforms are good. Both will handle your email, calendar, file storage, and collaboration needs. Both have gotten dramatically better in the past few years. And both will cost you roughly the same amount of money. So if you’re expecting me to tell you that one is objectively superior to the other, you’re going to be disappointed.

What I can tell you is which one works better for the specific ways that accounting firms, law offices, and property management companies actually work.

Where Microsoft 365 Wins

For law firms specifically, Microsoft 365 is usually the better choice, and the reason comes down to two things: document formatting and industry expectations.

Legal documents require precise formatting. Numbered paragraphs, specific indentation, complex tables, cross-references, and redlining that tracks every change made by every attorney who touches a document. Microsoft Word is still the gold standard for this kind of work. Google Docs has gotten better, but it’s still not quite there for complex legal documents. According to ABA’s 2024 Legal Technology Survey, 94% of law firms still use Microsoft Word as their primary document creation tool.

The second issue is client expectations. When you send a legal document to a client or opposing counsel, they expect to receive a .docx file. They expect to be able to open it in Word, make their comments using Word’s track changes feature, and send it back. You can absolutely do this workflow with Google Workspace, but it creates friction. You’re constantly converting files, worrying about whether formatting survived the conversion, and explaining to clients why your documents look slightly different.

Microsoft 365 also integrates better with practice management software that law firms use. Most legal-specific software was built with Microsoft in mind. The integrations are tighter, the compatibility is better, and you spend less time fighting with your tools.

Where Google Workspace Makes Sense

That said, Google Workspace isn’t a bad choice, and for some firms it’s actually the better option. If your firm is smaller, more nimble, and doesn’t have decades of document templates built in Microsoft Word, Google Workspace can be easier to manage and more intuitive for people who aren’t deeply technical.

Google Workspace setup is simpler than Microsoft 365 deployment. There are fewer moving parts, fewer configuration options, and less that can go wrong. For a 5-person law office that just needs email, calendars, and basic document collaboration, Google Workspace gets you up and running faster with less complexity.

Google’s collaboration features are also more intuitive. Multiple people can edit a document simultaneously, and it just works. With Microsoft 365, you can do the same thing, but it requires OneDrive and specific versions of Office apps, and there’s more that can go sideways.

The Real Cost Comparison

Price-wise, they’re comparable. Microsoft 365 Business Standard runs about $12.50 per user per month. Google Workspace Business Standard is $12 per user per month. You’re not making this decision based on a 50-cent difference. The real costs come from cloud migration support, training your staff, and potential productivity loss during the transition.

According to Forrester’s Total Economic Impact study, organizations switching platforms experience an average productivity dip of 15-20% for the first 2-3 months while people adjust. That’s the real cost you need to factor in. If you’ve been using Microsoft for 20 years, switching to Google isn’t just a technology change, it’s a workflow change.

What About Hybrid Approaches?

Some firms try to split the difference by using Gmail with Microsoft Office apps. This mostly works, but it creates its own complications. You lose some of the tight integration between email and calendar. File storage gets confusing when people aren’t sure whether to save things in Google Drive or OneDrive. And you’re paying for redundant services.

I generally don’t recommend hybrid approaches unless you have a specific technical reason that requires it. Pick one platform and commit to it fully. Your people will be happier, your IT management will be simpler, and you’ll spend less time troubleshooting weird compatibility issues.

Making the Decision

For most law firms and accounting practices I work with, Microsoft 365 is the right choice. The document compatibility, the industry standard status, and the integration with other professional services software outweigh the slightly steeper learning curve and more complex administration.

But if you’re a smaller firm, if you don’t have complex document formatting needs, or if you value simplicity over feature depth, Google Workspace is a perfectly viable option. The key is making the decision based on your actual workflow, not on what some article on the internet told you was “better.”

Quick and Easy

For law firms and accounting practices, Microsoft 365 is usually the better choice due to document formatting requirements and industry standard expectations. Google Workspace works well for smaller firms prioritizing simplicity, but both platforms require careful cloud migration support and training to avoid productivity loss.

  • Tweet
Tagged under: Google, microsoft

What you can read next

A win for the good guys
The Elephant in the Voting Machine
Huawei logo
US Congress: Chinese Firms Possible Security Threat

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Accountant working on accounting software on laptop

    What Accounting Firms Learn About Technology During Tax Season

    Tax season is the best stress test your technol...
  • Someone working on a tablet with AI

    Your Employees Are Already Using AI With Your Client Data

    You just don’t know it yet. I had a conve...
  • 3-2-1 countdown over computer language background

    The 3-2-1 Backup Rule Explained for Non-Technical Business Owners

    The 3-2-1 backup rule is one of those things th...
  • Backup and recovery icons for computer overlaid on people working on computers

    Your Backup Strategy Is Probably Broken (Here’s How to Fix It)

    I’ve been doing this for over three decad...
  • Closeup on phone with YouTube playing

    What We Can Learn About Business Continuity From the YouTube Outage

    YouTube being down is a minor inconvenience for...

Archives

  • GET SOCIAL
Get Tech Support Now - (818) 584-6021 - C2 Technology Partners, Inc.

© 2016 All rights reserved.

TOP