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FrontRunners 2022
Digital Pigeon is a file-sharing platform designed to help media producers, creative directors and advertising agencies securely share large media files using geo-matching technology. It allows users to change page layouts by addi...Read more about Digital Pigeon
monday.com is an award-winning work and project management platform that helps teams of all sizes plan, prioritize, manage, and execute their work more effectively. The platform offers solutions for a wide range of use-cases such...Read more about monday.com
Bitrix24 is an online workspace for small, medium, and large businesses. It features over 35 cross-integrated tools, including CRM, tasks, Kanban board, Gantt chart, messenger, video calls, file storage, workflow automation, and m...Read more about Bitrix24
Winner of Capterra’s Ease of use Badge, OnBoard is a board intelligence platform that simplifies board meeting management and empowers more informed decision-making, more secure remote meetings, and real-time accessibility from an...Read more about OnBoard
FrontRunners 2022
MOVEit is a file transferring platform that has a flexible design which provides workflow automation, reporting and multi-layered security. It provides enterprises with the flexibility to control, observe and schedule critical fil...Read more about MOVEit
ShareVault is a virtual data room solution that facilitates the sharing of confidential documents with third parties during due diligence and other vital business processes. It suitable for businesses of any size and serves a broa...Read more about ShareVault
Bynder goes far beyond managing digital assets. Our digital asset management platform enables teams to conquer the chaos of proliferating content, touchpoints, and relationships in order to thrive. With powerful and intuitive sol...Read more about Bynder
Clinical research data, loan applications, blueprints, and videos: It’s all content. And it’s your organization’s most valuable asset, no matter your industry. Box gives you a a single, secure platform for managing the entire cont...Read more about Box
MASV is a cloud-based file sharing application that enables professionals to upload, transfer and download files of any kind from one system to another. The solution is offered on a usage-based pricing model. MASV’s file transfer...Read more about MASV
Serv-U File Transfer Protocol (FTP) Server is an on-premise collaboration solution by SolarWinds. The solution enables organizations to exchange files with trading partners. Key features include file management, user group creatio...Read more about Serv-U FTP Server
Cleo Integration Cloud is a platform purpose-built to design, build, operate and optimize critical supply-chain integration processes. With greater choice, companies can blend self-service and Cleo Services for integration agility...Read more about Cleo Integration Cloud
Onehub is a cloud-based collaboration tool and virtual data room that helps users securely store and share their business files. It can be customized to meet users' specific requirements and custom branding needs. Onehub offe...Read more about Onehub
Sync.com is a file sharing and collaboration solution designed for small and midsize businesses. It offers collaboration, data backup and recovery within a suite. The product is available both in cloud-based and on-premise deploym...Read more about Sync.com
FrontRunners 2022
Slack is a cloud-based project collaboration and team interaction tool designed to facilitate communication across organizations. The solution caters to various industries, including media, research, technology, education, financi...Read more about Slack
Wimi is a cloud-based and on-premise project management suite that helps users in document management, project collaboration, portfolio management, task management and time tracking. It offers document sharing and synchronizing in...Read more about Wimi
M-Files is a global leader in information management. The M-Files metadata-driven document management platform enables knowledge workers to instantly find the right information in any context, automate business processes, and enfo...Read more about M-Files
Huddle is a cloud-based project management solution that help project teams in businesses across various industry verticals to manage different components of projects and collaborate with other team members. Key features include f...Read more about Huddle
Droplr is a cloud-based file sharing solution that helps marketers, developers, designers and project managers to collaborate remotely. Key feature include screen capturing, note taking, URL shortening, file storage and analytics....Read more about Droplr
FrontRunners 2022
Cerberus FTP Server is an on-premise file sharing solution that helps small to midsize businesses manage file transfer with two-factor authentication and secure SSL encryption. The platform also includes IP whitelist/backlist and ...Read more about Cerberus FTP Server
FrontRunners 2022
Tresorit is an end-to-end encrypted, cloud-based file sync and sharing solution. It is designed for various industry verticals such as law, healthcare, finance, and tech businesses. It offers remote device wipe, file restore (afte...Read more about Tresorit
File sharing is integral to many of the workflows found in modern digital offices. It's almost impossible to imagine how modern businesses would operate without sharing digital files.
Thankfully, there's no shortage of file sharing tools and applications. However, because there are so many options available, businesses often struggle to choose among them. Options for security, collaboration and mobility differ greatly between the many types of file sharing tools, and businesses need to weigh a wide range of variables during the selection process.
This Buyer's Guide will help you better juggle and more accurately weigh your priorities when selecting file sharing software. It covers:
What Is File Sharing Software?
Common Features of File Sharing Software
What Type of Buyer Are You?
Key Considerations
The term “file sharing software" actually encompasses many different platforms, applications and add-ons. There's a huge range of products that can be considered file sharing software, but the range of products that will meet your company's specific file-sharing needs is going to be much, much smaller.
For example, Gmail and Outlook both let users share files as email attachments, but these email apps would only meet the file-sharing needs of companies with extremely basic file-sharing requirements. For example, they don't support collaboration or content management and they don't integrate well with other business platforms, like CRM or project management software.
To help you narrow down your search, we'll look first at the common features of file sharing software. Once you have a feel for the scope of applications, we'll look at some common use cases to help you decide which most applies to your business.
The following table illustrates the range of applications and capabilities available across the wide spectrum of file sharing offerings. Be aware that there may not always be clear lines dividing some of these applications from each other.
File sharing | The core application that lets users upload files, tag or save them them under a specific department, category or folder and share the files with other users, internally, externally or both. |
File storage | Provides cloud-based file storage to upload and store files on either company or vendor servers. File storage apps may include various versioning control, user access tools and file recovery functionality. |
File search | Offers an indexing and search functionality to help locate files by searching for a variety of parameters, such as: words or phrases in the title or body of the file; upload and last-modified dates; user interactions and more. |
File sync | Lets users sync the files they're working on directly from a native application (e.g., word processor). Can automatically sync cloud-stored files to a local folder on your computer and vice versa. |
User management | Create user accounts and distribution groups, set user permissions (e.g., "view only" or "editing"), match files to accounts based on email addresses, authentication type, pick storage zones and group memberships. |
Mobility | These applications offer support for, and management of, data access from and storage on mobile devices, including smartphones and tablets. Similar applications can be found in some mobile device management solutions. |
Security and encryption | Adds MMS functionality to the platform allowing customers and businesses to send and receive multimedia messages, like photos, videos and audio recordings. |
Contest and polling tools | These features control security and administration settings for users, content and endpoints, including encryption at all stages of the process, logging, access control, identity and authorization management. Encrypt file attachments sent via email, or even the body of the email itself. |
Back-end integration | Capabilities here allow the file sharing software to manage, access or otherwise integrate with back-end services, such as network file systems, directories, workflow systems, repositories and business applications. |
Collaboration and social | These capabilities help users work together on the documents being shared. They can include tools for recommendations, commenting, sharing, co-authoring and markup, task assignment and gamification. |
Content management | Includes support for features that control and manage document content, including versioning, metadata, e-discovery, archiving and syncing. These applications are also present in dedicated CMS systems, which typically also offer file sharing capabilities. |
Deployment models | Provides support for different server and endpoint operating systems and different deployment models, such as public cloud, on-premises, hybrid and private cloud. Most SMBs prefer public or private cloud options for their relative ease of use. |
Gartner's report "Top 10 Best Practices for Choosing and Deploying an Enterprise File Sync and Sharing Solution" (available to Gartner clients) outlines three general use cases for file sharing software. Keep in mind that these examples are not mutually exclusive; most companies will find that all three apply, but to varying degrees.
In choosing among the many file sharing solutions, you should pay attention to the level of control each offers. This level of control should be examined on two fronts: control over the operation of the platform—the “control plane"—and control over the data and the files themselves.
Small and midsize businesses with basic file sharing needs and small IT departments typically do best with fully cloud-based solutions. While some of these platforms offer APIs for customizing parts of the control plane, they're generally designed to be used out of the box with minimal configuration.
At the other end of the spectrum, on-premise solutions offer much more flexibility for more complex integrations. These companies may want to create a file-sharing service that blends seamlessly with an existing application. They may have stricter data privacy concerns, or are implementing real-time analytical tools. For such businesses, on-premise solutions may be a better fit, so long as the company has the IT staff needed to implement and support these customizations and systems.