Copyright © 2012 The
Unified-View, All Rights Reserved Worldwide
April 20, 2012
By Art Rosenberg, The Unified-View/ UC
Strategies Expert
Even though the
term “collaboration” describes how people work together to solve business
issues, the bottom line is that “collaboration” needs all forms of
communication and information exchange between people. For that reason, the
flexibility of “unified communications” (UC) is an implied capability for
person-to-person business contacts. Business collaboration, through UC
enablement, can now be done more easily and quickly from anywhere and any time
that doesn’t require sitting in the same room together or using identical
communication endpoint devices. However, such collaborative activity will still
be dependent on every individual end user’s involvement and choice of communication
interaction.
“Collaboration”
means working together and communicating with others, but such
communications are not always in real time, e.g., face-to face meetings,
conferencing, and chat. Asynchronous messaging is increasingly becoming more
practical for quickly exchanging information and views, without necessarily
having a real-time interaction. Whenever a discussion in real-time is required,
voice and/or video conferencing can now be quickly initiated or scheduled,
depending on the availability of the participants. This is where UC enabled
applications allows dynamic shifting between modalities of communications to
satisfy the collaborative needs of the active participants.
“Collaboration,” like the traditional
face-to-face meeting, doesn’t start automatically; someone has to do something
to get the interactions with other people going. That “something” is a
communication action, like a message or a phone call to the people who are to
“collaborate.” In addition to being a simple notification, information
pertinent to the discussion may need to be referenced to provide the context
for review and discussion. So, people who “collaborate” will be using a variety
of ways to communicate and exchange information in real time or asynchronously,
and that’s where the flexibility of UC enablement comes into play.
Do People Who Collaborate Need Identical Devices?
Clearly,
business communications are not confined to people within a single
organization, but will involve people outside an organization as well. In
addition, with the rapid increase in mobile communications and BYOD policies,
individual end users will be collaborating (communicating) under different
circumstances and with different endpoint devices. Some will be sitting in
front of desktops (PCs, laptops, tablets), while others may be involved while
using mobile smartphones.
For messaging exchanges, mobile end users
will have few problems in communicating when on the go. If the required
information exchange involves a lot of data or video, a larger screen from a
tablet may be better than a smartphone. However, when a real time conference is
required, mobile participants can handle a voice conference easily, but not a
videoconference well. So, the recent advent of UC enabled video conferencing will
provide the flexibility for individual end users to choose various flavors of video
and voice participation that fit their needs and preferences.
The Implementation Bottom Line for IT management, Solution Integrators, and Channels
Individual
end users will not be thinking along the lines of “collaboration,” but rather
about how they want to access and interact with people and automated
(self-service) business applications. This will be particularly important as
end users all become more mobile and dependent upon smartphone and tablet
devices for everything they do with others. That is the level that UC enablement
provides for the flexibility of end user choice to fit their personal needs and
preferences.
Obviously,
providing end users with such communication flexibility will allow them to more
easily and efficiently collaborate with others. So, for business management,
collaboration benefits will be foremost, but for individual end users,
personalized UC benefits will be most visible and realistically exploited.
The
bottom line for implementation of UC enabled applications is for IT management,
with the support of VARs and Channels, to integrate them for private or public
cloud-based use in order to support both desktop and mobile device usage. This
is how “collaboration” technologies will actually get done in the new world of
UC enablement.
Learn
more by joining unified communications industry leaders at UC Summit
2012, the only channel and consultant-focused event for the Unified
Communications and Collaboration industry.
For more insights on UC-enabled Collaboration go to CIO Collaboration Network
For more insights on UC-enabled Collaboration go to CIO Collaboration Network
.