About
Subscribe

Survival depends on early adoption

Johannesburg, 13 Apr 2010

Business communications are increasingly complex and require workers to manage multiple devices, applications, and face-to-face interactions in an attempt to stay productively connected with one another.

An emerging suite of integrated technologies, called unified communications (UC), offers the promise of converging voice, data, and video communication and of eliminating many roadblocks in communication, thereby enabling organisations to significantly increase their information workers' productivity.

UC integrates collaboration technology, such as calendaring, e-mail, Web conferencing, team rooms, and instant messaging, with communication tools, which include telephones (landline and mobile), audio and video, and voice messaging.

Galdon Data director Garry Ackerman says workdays for many people are no longer nine to five. “Nowadays, working hours are more like 24x7 and spans geographic boundaries, making communication and decision-making even more difficult and much more time-sensitive.”

Presence information lets people know whether others are available (eg, online, away, busy, in a meeting, out to lunch), they can publish their availability so others know how best to reach them. The system provides some automation; for example, if a user has not touched the keyboard or mouse for a set number of minutes, that user's presence information turns to “away”.

Using Office Communications Server's integration with Microsoft Exchange calendaring and the PBX or IP telephone system, additional state information is also automatically published. This rich presence enables even more effective communication between colleagues. If a recipient is available online, the sender can click on the recipient's presence icon and send an instant message. With IP telephony enabled, one can also click and call another from the desktop. If the person is travelling, it is easy to click to find her mobile number and make contact that way, or indeed Instant Messaging (IM) on the person's mobile phone. If the recipient is not available online, one knows to send an e-mail or leave a voice message, which can be received as a WAV file embedded in an e-mail and managed in Outlook.

Ackerman says all of this saves time. “With presence information, a sender does not have to try several different types of communication before reaching a colleague. The receiver does not have to sift through repeated communication in e-mail, IM, and voice messages. In a Forrester survey, 59% of workers stated they would save more than 15 minutes per day with this feature.”

Instant messaging is the capability to send and receive text messages in real-time over the Internet or a corporate network. The recipient typically sees an alert on the desktop indicating an incoming message and from whom. Enterprise IM maintains this capability within and increasingly beyond the corporate network, adding security that does not exist with public IM systems like AOL, Yahoo!, MSN, and Google Talk.

IM replaces e-mail chains; it can include just those who are party to the conversation while those who do not need to participate in next steps are kindly omitted. Depending on the context and need, parties to an IM conversation can complete their communication with IM, escalate the conversation to a phone call, or launch a collaborative session with Live Meeting.

Office Communications Server 2007 makes it possible for organisations to allow users to connect with IM “buddies” in other organisations - when both organisations are using OCS - and public networks in an arrangement called federation.

Furthermore, more than 60% of workers surveyed for a Forrester report indicated that they could save from one to five hours per week using real-time conferencing. Ad hoc Web and videoconferencing improves efficiency in real-time decision-making by providing easy set-up, links to presence management, and point-and-click conference launches. Value increases when the time to set up a videoconference drops to near zero.

He says videoconferencing also reduces travel costs. “Videoconferences are increasingly replacing business travel for internal meetings and client or supplier meetings. More companies are using Live Meeting to hold ad hoc work group sessions with colleagues in different regions, countries, and time zones. They also use Live Meeting to extend their organisations' services to customers, partners, and suppliers. The cost of video hardware has dropped to a point where PC-to-PC video is being increasingly deployed for valuable, albeit seldom, mission-critical situations.”

For more complex and critical contexts, more organisations are piloting the use of Microsoft RoundTable, an audio-video unit with a 360-degree camera.

RoundTable enables multi-location conferences with panoramic views of everyone in each conference room and close-up views of individual participants as they take turns speaking.

Forrester discovered that in pilot trials, an important finding was the productivity improvement that occurred when workers could view one another during routine communications. With video enabled between two people discussing an expense report, for example, conversations took slightly longer to complete, but when using video, the issue is usually resolved in a single instance rather than in a series of e-mail messages back and forth between the two parties.

Software-powered VOIP makes it possible to communicate via telephone over an IP network instead of over traditional PBX telephony infrastructure. Voice communications can be integrated with e-mail, calendaring, voicemail/unified messaging, IM, and conferencing to provide a streamlined experience rather than the disconnected experience provided by legacy systems today.

“We are approaching a time where all you need to find someone is his name, and all the means of contact are available immediately. Several organisations are looking toward a single identity for each employee that aggregates all the contact information (even individual's areas of expertise) stored in Active Directory with some of the ways staff in the organisation communicate (phone, mobile device, conferencing, IM, e-mail, calendaring),” he concludes.

For many organisations, mobility is an important part of their UC solutions, while for others it is an adjunct set of capabilities for select users. Certain mobile devices can run the OCS client, thus integrating the mobile phone with the individual's presence, IM, and e-mail. With a Windows mobile device, users can open and modify e-mail attachments, attachments within IM and other Word, Excel, or PowerPoint documents.

Finding the right person becomes faster, and determining his availability and communicating via his preferred, context-dependent medium is smoothed because presence is integrated into Microsoft Office applications. Also, organisations are integrating presence into their own line of business applications more frequently; users can “click to communicate” from within the applications.

Galdon Data is the first South African Microsoft National Systems Integrator (NSI) partner to have fully deployed and completed the Technical Adoption Programme (TAP) for Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007 Release 2 (R2). With only a limited number of Microsoft Voice Certified partners globally being offered the opportunity to complete TAP, Galdon Data has once again taken the lead in the local Unified Communications realm.

Galdon Data is hosting a series of roundtables to demonstrate how Microsoft Unified Communications has the ability to fundamentally change the way that businesses work and help drive operational costs down - in and out of the office.

For more information contact Galdon Data on (011) 805 4420 or e-mail sales@galdon.co.za.

Share

Galdon Data

Galdon Data is an information technology (IT) services company providing solutions for business process automation and unified communications. This encompasses information capture, business information delivery, convergence and document solutions using the Microsoft, Captaris and Autonomy (Cardiff) range of products. Galdon Data has been a Microsoft partner since 1998.

We are accredited as a Certified Microsoft Gold Partner and we hold competencies for Information Worker, Data Management and Unified Communication & Collaboration, specialising in Voice. As an AmVia Platinum Partner the company in the enviable position of being the largest CallXpress (Unified Messaging) and RightFax (business information delivery like fax, e-mail & Web) service company, with the largest service market share, in Southern Africa. Many of those clients are serviced through our business partners. Galdon Data's experience extends beyond the implementation and/or support of 400 unified messaging (voice and/or fax) sites. Our experience with unified messaging and auto-attendants implementation extends since 2000.

Galdon Data pride ourselves by the highly skilled team of Microsoft Solution specialists that focus in assisting customers understand various Microsoft technologies and advise them as to which technologies best suit their business requirements. These services range from business productivity infrastructure optimisation workshops, consulting around business requirements and business analysis. These areas of customer engagement are key in helping us understand our customers better. Our expertise in Microsoft Solution design, development and implementation allow us to tailor solutions around individual customer environments.

Galdon Data is a company boasting 40 highly skilled and certified staff members, with national representation in Johannesburg, Durban, Cape Town and Port Elizabeth. Galdon Data is also a black empowered company with shareholding from Abnoba. For more information, visit http://www.galdon.co.za.

Editorial contacts

Ivor van Rensburg
IT Public Relations
(082) 652 8050
ivor@itpr.co.za
Fairoz Jaffer
Galdondata
(011) 805 4420
FairozJ@galdon.co.za