Today’s IT investments require bottom-line, quantifiable truths and Unified communications (UC) is no exception. This whitepaper covers best practice tips on building a comprehensive business case for UC systems
Successfully implementing a collaboration platform is essential for realizing business value. The implementation should be split into two distinct phases: initial platform deployment and ongoing solution design. IT managers are familiar with the former, but must also be actively involved in the latter to ensure the long-term success of the collaboration environment. This research will help you:
•Understand the common pitfalls that organizations encounter in implementing a collaboration solution.
•Develop an implementation strategy that addresses all steps in the initial platform deployment, as well as ongoing solution design.
•Create a collaboration business analyst role to bridge the gap between IT and the business, and create solutions that meet the needs of permanent and ad-hoc teams.
•Foster an environment that is conducive to end-user adoption of the collaboration platform.
Collaboration implementation misfires are costly and time-consuming. Adhering to best practices around both steps of the implementation will ensure that the full potential of the platform is realized.
Computer Aided Applications Design (CAAD) installs a near-real-time method of authoring business software applications. It differs from previous systems and methods (such as Rapid Applications Development, Agile and Workflow) by morphing the role of project manager, business analyst and developer into a single role competency. This is made possible by a new ‘see-no-code’ form of apps design and deployment tooling that can de-skill the life-cycle of applications development formed around a unifying tool-kit and common skills competency.
Successfully implementing a collaboration platform is essential for realizing business value. The implementation should be split into two distinct phases: initial platform deployment and ongoing solution design. IT managers are familiar with the former, but must also be actively involved in the latter to ensure the long-term success of the collaboration environment. This research will help you:
•Understand the common pitfalls that organizations encounter in implementing a collaboration solution.
•Develop an implementation strategy that addresses all steps in the initial platform deployment, as well as ongoing solution design.
•Create a collaboration business analyst role to bridge the gap between IT and the business, and create solutions that meet the needs of permanent and ad-hoc teams.
•Foster an environment that is conducive to end-user adoption of the collaboration platform.
Collaboration implementation misfires are costly and time-consuming. Adhering to best practices around both steps of the implementation will ensure that the full potential of the platform is realized.
Computer Aided Applications Design (CAAD) installs a near-real-time method of authoring business software applications. It differs from previous systems and methods (such as Rapid Applications Development, Agile and Workflow) by morphing the role of project manager, business analyst and developer into a single role competency. This is made possible by a new ‘see-no-code’ form of apps design and deployment tooling that can de-skill the life-cycle of applications development formed around a unifying tool-kit and common skills competency.
Simple whitepaper about all the new social capabilities of IBM Sametime 9. Read it and share it. New design, many updates for Social, Mobile and HD Video
Requirements Definition For Distributed Teams (White Paper)Jon Hansen
Requirement Definition for Distributed Teams a white paper by Blueprint Software Systems
Description:
Join Blueprint's product team as they discuss how global organizations can leverage empowered business analysts to ensure clear articulation of business requirements.
Learn how requirements visualization enables teams with different native languages and different cultural backgrounds to replace document-based BRD's with "Interactive Movie Simulations" to visualize project requirements.
Use the following link to access the on-demand Webinar: http://www.blueprintsys.com/webinar.php
"Design Thinking + IT-Mediated Services = Innovation Excellence"
August 2009
White paper from Motiv Strategies CEO Jeneanne Rae and Director Carl Fudge.
The Internet has fundamentally changed the way we do business, and it has created huge opportunities for entirely new business models, from Web portals to e-commerce. Many of these new companies have succeeded, and many have failed, but this first wave of the Internet economy has set the stage for even more innovation and success throughout all sectors of business. As exciting as the dot-com revolution was, the Internet continues to provide an even greater opportunity for more traditional businesses.
Social tools are now being offered by a number of collaboration vendors. Many organizations are unsure of how to integrate social tools with existing team workflows. Managers must embrace, rather than hinder, integration of social collaboration tools. This storyboard, along with its accompanying tools, will help you:
* Understand social collaboration and how it builds team effectiveness.
* Develop a strategy for enabling social collaboration patterns with technology.
* Understand the major vendors and feature sets for social tools.
* Foster a culture that encourages the use of social collaboration tools.
Managers must recognize that social tools are powerful enablers of knowledge-sharing and productivity in the age of the team.
Maximizing the business value from social computingSocialKwan
Social computing is an important strategic platform for increasing workplace collaboration and knowledge management, and a strategic platform for modernizing enterprise applications to connect collaboration with business processes and transactions, thereby achieving tangible productivity gains and customer value.
There are concrete steps organizations can take today in order to address both parts of the enterprise opportunity around social computing in terms of “horizontal” strategic knowledge management and innovation functions and “vertical” mission-critical business applications. Addressing both parts of this equation is key to success and to unlocking the full potential of social computing in the enterprise.
Discute as facilidades que uma ferramenta como portal corporativo pode oferecer a uma organização, apresenta os critérios de avaliação, infra-estrutura de tecnologia de informação, e o posicionamento, visão e impacto do portal na corporação.
www.terraforum.com.br
For the eighth year in a row, ShoreTel received the highest ratings for IP telephony products from IT decision makers in the Nemertes Research annual PilotHouse Awards report.
Simple whitepaper about all the new social capabilities of IBM Sametime 9. Read it and share it. New design, many updates for Social, Mobile and HD Video
Requirements Definition For Distributed Teams (White Paper)Jon Hansen
Requirement Definition for Distributed Teams a white paper by Blueprint Software Systems
Description:
Join Blueprint's product team as they discuss how global organizations can leverage empowered business analysts to ensure clear articulation of business requirements.
Learn how requirements visualization enables teams with different native languages and different cultural backgrounds to replace document-based BRD's with "Interactive Movie Simulations" to visualize project requirements.
Use the following link to access the on-demand Webinar: http://www.blueprintsys.com/webinar.php
"Design Thinking + IT-Mediated Services = Innovation Excellence"
August 2009
White paper from Motiv Strategies CEO Jeneanne Rae and Director Carl Fudge.
The Internet has fundamentally changed the way we do business, and it has created huge opportunities for entirely new business models, from Web portals to e-commerce. Many of these new companies have succeeded, and many have failed, but this first wave of the Internet economy has set the stage for even more innovation and success throughout all sectors of business. As exciting as the dot-com revolution was, the Internet continues to provide an even greater opportunity for more traditional businesses.
Social tools are now being offered by a number of collaboration vendors. Many organizations are unsure of how to integrate social tools with existing team workflows. Managers must embrace, rather than hinder, integration of social collaboration tools. This storyboard, along with its accompanying tools, will help you:
* Understand social collaboration and how it builds team effectiveness.
* Develop a strategy for enabling social collaboration patterns with technology.
* Understand the major vendors and feature sets for social tools.
* Foster a culture that encourages the use of social collaboration tools.
Managers must recognize that social tools are powerful enablers of knowledge-sharing and productivity in the age of the team.
Maximizing the business value from social computingSocialKwan
Social computing is an important strategic platform for increasing workplace collaboration and knowledge management, and a strategic platform for modernizing enterprise applications to connect collaboration with business processes and transactions, thereby achieving tangible productivity gains and customer value.
There are concrete steps organizations can take today in order to address both parts of the enterprise opportunity around social computing in terms of “horizontal” strategic knowledge management and innovation functions and “vertical” mission-critical business applications. Addressing both parts of this equation is key to success and to unlocking the full potential of social computing in the enterprise.
Discute as facilidades que uma ferramenta como portal corporativo pode oferecer a uma organização, apresenta os critérios de avaliação, infra-estrutura de tecnologia de informação, e o posicionamento, visão e impacto do portal na corporação.
www.terraforum.com.br
For the eighth year in a row, ShoreTel received the highest ratings for IP telephony products from IT decision makers in the Nemertes Research annual PilotHouse Awards report.
Faced with more competitors, increasingly aggressive pricing, and demanding customers, business has never been more challenging for manufacturers. Whether you manufacture hardware, software, machinery, agricultural, chemical or pharmaceutical products, the performance of your phone system can help your company meet these challenges.
Healthcare organizations are under great pressure to improve patient care while keeping costs under control. They also require reliable communications around the clock. A ShoreTel phone system provides 99.999 percent (five-nines) reliability with no single point of failure, as well as the capability of keeping staff in touch whether they are onsite, at a remote location, or on the move.
As communications technologies evolve, government agencies are under pressure to provide high levels of connectivity, access to instant information, and modern collaboration capabilities. Faced with shrinking budgets and complex, aging IT infrastructures, the switch to IP-based communications is daunting.
The right technology helps SMBs maximize resources while minimizing costs.
This must-read publication features independent research from Gartner, providing a wealth of information around best in breed Unified Communication systems. 12 Unified Communications vendor ratings, along with their strengths and cautions, are provided.
Includes:
SMBs need easy-to-implement, full-featured solutions
Evaluating total cost of ownership (TCO)
From the Gartner Files- MarketScope for Unified Communications for the SMB Market, North America
The customer experience & UC case studies
Financial institutions of all types are under constant pressure to improve the efficiency of their operations, to bring down costs, and to provide the best in customer service. ShoreTel\'s all-in-one solution addresses these needs head-on, resulting in increased productivity and customer satisfaction
Unified Communications:
Comparing Cisco and
ShoreTel Solutions
Side-by-side comparison is conclusive: unlike Cisco, ShoreTel’s
all-in-one UC solution is designed to deliver lower total cost
of ownership (TCO).
Microsoft India - Achieving Cost and Resource Savings with Unified Communicat...Microsoft Private Cloud
Enterprises are always seeking to cut costs and optimize resource utilization. Now, in this harsh economic climate, the need is more compelling than ever. This paper highlights potential savings exceeding $5,000,000 per year for each 1,000 employees through the application of Microsoft Unified Communications to your business and IT operations. Unified Communications (UC) is a new approach to communications methods and solutions that opens up significant new ways to achieve both immediate and sustained cost and resource savings. In the past, communication-based business activities have been highly manual and prone to delays and workarounds. Now, with UC, these communications steps can be streamlined and software-assisted to reduce costs while also improving results.
Clique's CPaaS APIs and products bring HD quality voice where consumers and business want it. Clique's easy to use SDKs and APIs make it easy for businesses to provide secure and efficient communications by integrating voice, messaging, and other technologies across multiple platforms and end points. Our platform makes it possible to use voice regardless of format, application environment, operating system, device, or location.
This Wainhouse Research Ebook investigates Unified Communications and Collaboration (UC&C) as an enabler of Digital Transformation. We’re focusing on the broad, enterprise-wide impact that a well deployed, integrated, and expanded UC&C experience delivers, and its ability to enable a larger Digital Transformation strategy.
This eBook provides an objective, unbiased, and detailed overview of UC&C Transformation, covering the following topics:
Digital Transformation - key concepts, terms, and definitions
Enterprise Drivers - primary drivers leading the enterprise to a digital transformation strategy
Transformation Reality - common enterprise barriers to digital transformation
Key Steps & Best Practices - to making your transformation journey successful
Transformation Use Cases & Opportunities - transformation targets and benefits
This eBook includes expert analyst insight backed by the following research:
In-Dept Interviews – with product teams, IT Decision Makers (ITDMs), and executives with experience transforming their enterprises with the use of UC&C tools and solutions.
Wainhouse Research Data – we reference data points from end-user and ITDM surveys, briefings with technology vendors, and insight gained from enterprise consulting engagements.
The UC Journey - Seven Steps to a Unified User ExperienceWainhouse Research
A well-implemented and fully-adopted UC solution can yield material benefits, including increased productivity, reduced costs, and highly engaged customers. However, these benefits prove elusive for the average enterprise. The reality: many licenses are not deployed, and those that are may not be fully utilized.
This eBook, sponsored by Alcatel Lucent Enterprise, identifies the common challenges in front of a fully-deployed UC experience, and outlines a step-wise approach to moving from complexity into deployment, and further towards integration and transformation. By identifying the key steps ahead of time, you can determine the right path that makes the most sense for you. And, more importantly, you will establish a realistic path towards success.
Insights Success is a platform that focuses distinctively on emerging as well as leading IT companies, their confrontational style of doing business and way of delivering effective and collaborative solutions to strengthen market share.Our magazine talks about leaders and orators from the world of technology, which includes CEO’s, CIO’s, VP’s, Managers and other professionals who had set a benchmark in the revolution of IT industry.
Social Business in the Cloud: Achieving Measurable ResultsRawn Shah
As social technologies have evolved, they have increased in adoption across a wide spectrum of
businesses, industries, and geographies. Some organizations, usually with strong business and IT
alignment, are realizing that social technologies initiated for one business activity can spark innovative
uses in other areas. This insight creates motivation to widen the reach and adoption of these
investments. Unfortunately, this is not always the case; many organizations are still struggling with how
to justify social business investments in a way that reflects their actual business value. This inability to
quantify the business impact of social technology has become a key inhibitor to adoption.
Modern communications systems keep people connected and provide collaborative environments for disseminating information. And yet, as public expectations for such technologies are increasing, many educational organizations find themselves facing shrinking budgets.
Whether you provide architectural, design, engineering, legal, or IT services, your information technology impacts your ability to compete head-on in today\'s market, and to address rising client expectations. ShoreTel\'s IP-based phone system offers professional service organizations of all types and sizes communications tools far beyond those available from a traditional phone system. When users can collaborate easily — both at the office, and on the go — teams become more productive, and communication has more impact.
Monitoring and diagnostics capabilities for unified communications systems are becoming more important and there is a wealth of information that can be cost effectively collected within an Enterprise communication system.
This report examines the trend of “bring your own device” in context, using Aberdeen’s research to discuss the issues, challenges and option associated with mobile unified communications.
Throughout 2011, Aberdeen analyzed the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) associated with IP and legacy TDM (Time Division Multiplexing) telephony systems in 236 different corporate environments on a worldwide basis. TCO categories measured include:
Capital Costs
Implementation and Training
Ongoing Support
System Administration
Network/Long Distance Usage
Unified Communications:
Comparing Avaya and
ShoreTel Solutions
side-by-side comparison is conclusive: shoretel unified
communications offers a complete, integrated solution
with lower tco than avaya aura or avaya ip office
ShoreTel Solutions
Side-by-side comparison is conclusive: unlike Cisco, ShoreTel’s
all-in-one UC solution is designed to deliver lower total cost
of ownership (TCO).
Total cost of ownership is a key metric for assessing costs, benefits and risks of a UC solution – enabling organizations to properly evaluate competing solutions. It aligns their final decision with business needs, while understanding the effects of future requirements and functionalities.
1. WHITE PAPER
How Unified Communications
Pays For Itself
Best Practice Tips on building a Comprehensive Business Case for
Unified Communications
By Don Van Doren
3. 1. Introduction
Over the past decade, unified communications (UC) capabilities have been developed to
enable people to access other people, or to access information much more effectively.
This paper describes the foundations of these capabilities, the use cases for innovative
UC, the benefits available, and alternative approaches to implementation.
2. Communications industry transformation
There are many factors that drive UC’s innovative product developments. One
component is the underlying merging of voice, data, and video communications into
consolidated architectures. Another is the emphasis by suppliers to bring new solutions
to customers. But the critical, long-term driver spurring UC growth is the transformation
of the communications industry.
The innovations that are emerging stem from the cascading effects of the
communications industry as it changes from being largely vertically integrated within
one supplier’s products a decade ago, into a horizontally layered, standards-based,
increasingly-open environment. In this environment, system components, operating
systems, and applications programs may all come from different specialized suppliers.
Most of the communications suppliers now focus on software running on standard
hardware platforms. Emerging UC concepts and capabilities continue to extend the
importance of software to provide value to purchasers and differentiation among
suppliers as these trends extend into the future.
The data processing industry went through a similar transformation three to four
decades ago. The resulting explosion of creativity in applications programming
fundamentally altered business activities for virtually every enterprise on the planet. The
communications industry is currently undergoing the same sort of seismic shift.
We see clearly that this new era in communications is characterized by an emerging
ecosystem of application developers, partners, and systems integrators. Access to
SDKs, APIs, GUIs, and toolkits, all linked to evolving capabilities within suppliers’
solutions, increasingly enable third-party developers, in-house experts, and the solutions
providers themselves to create applications programs with embedded communications
functionality. Thousands of specialized communications-enabled programs are being
designed for specific industries’ needs, to address generic applications across industries,
or created to solve particular business challenges. Some of these are specifically
communications-focused. Others are simply better ways to address everyday business
issues by incorporating communications functionality within other applications.
How Unified Communications Pays For Itself! PAGE 3
4. The ability to embed communications software into business processes, applications,
and workflow programs will transform how an enterprise’s work gets done. The result
is to eliminate communications bottlenecks, speed business activities, and improve
productivity. In many cases, there also are good opportunities to reduce capital
expenditures and operating costs.
One of the results of the growth of UC has been the widespread adoption of these
capabilities by many vendors. Different suppliers have approached this market with
different capabilities, often concentrating their offerings, not surprisingly, on the
features and functions that extend core functionality in their existing product lines.
UC has therefore spawned the creation of a large number of tools that support these
new capabilities and functionalities. These include presence and federation, buddy
lists, instant messaging, chat, new conferencing capabilities, collaborative workspaces,
mobility capabilities, communication-enabled portals, dashboards for displaying metrics,
and other similar tools.
To achieve breakthrough results, it’s important to think about communications in a new
way. The tools are important, but the tools themselves are not ‘unified communications.”
The key is to organize these tools to support communications requirements within a
business enterprise’s operations – the workflows and processes that create revenues
and profits or otherwise help accomplish an organization’s goals. UC is “communications
integrated to optimize business processes.” This definition captures the essence of the
way UC can help businesses meet their goals. It’s not so much a system as it is a way
of thinking about the impact of the next generation of communications capabilities on
businesses large and small.
How Unified Communications Pays For Itself! PAGE 4
5. 3. Use cases for transformative communications
An important step for discovering ways that UC can impact business is to identify “use
cases” – how do people, in the ordinary course of their activities, use communications?
And what are the opportunities UC offers? In reviewing many different implementations
of UC, most fall into one of two distinct use cases.
• . C for user productivity (UC-U) concentrates on helping individual users better manage
U
their communications. Frequently this includes the use of instant messaging, click-to-
communicate, hovering over a name in a document to determine presence status, and
rapid set up of audio, video, or Web conferences.
• UC for business processes (UC-B) is focused on enhancing business activities by
integrating communications capabilities within workflows and processes.
The use cases for UC-B focus on identifying specific places in workflows or business
processes where communications bottlenecks and breakdowns impede meeting goals.
My business partner, Marty Parker, first identified these five application areas in a 2007
BCR article. They still describe many of the opportunities available:
i. Contact management. Helping callers reach the intended party, or providing
alternatives (“Your party is not available. Would you like to speak to someone on
his team?”). The opportunity is to dramatically increase access in order to provide
immediate services, answer questions, or provide information.
ii. Resource identification for issue resolution. Resource identification for issue
resolution. Finding an appropriately skilled and available individual to timely solve a
problem or provide answers. The opportunity is to speed transactions, solve problems
more rapidly, and get to the right “skill” as quickly as possible.
iii. Collaboration acceleration. Creating workspaces and providing tools to enable ad hoc
or ongoing teams to work together effectively often on a project basis. The impact is
to speed project completion, better disseminate information to team members, and
make better decisions.
iv. Seamless information to mobile personnel. Facilitating access to people and
information sources for personnel working outside of an office environment. This
overcomes limitations often imposed on staffers working remotely or relying on
mobile devices.
v. Communications-enabled portals. Providing secure access to people and information
through the use of browsers and other portal technologies. This can provide access
to enterprise personnel from outside the corporate network, or methods to enable
secure access for customers, suppliers, and business partners.
How Unified Communications Pays For Itself! PAGE 5
6. Many enterprises tend to begin deployment by focusing on the UC-U opportunities.
These are easy to understand, quick to implement, and generally require little training
or changes in activity. It’s really just about using new tools to do current activities in a
new way. UC-B starts by identifying business processes that can be improved by taking
advantage of UC’s capabilities to streamline workflows and reduce errors, rework, and
delays. Many enterprises find that the benefits of UC-B implementations are dramatically
greater than UC-U alone.
4. Building the business case
The business case for UC deployment involves considering both cost-saving and
revenue-enhancement opportunities. Here are three areas and opportunities for cost
savings:
•.reducing out-of-pocket expenses
•.helping individual staff members be more productive
• .mproving communications to optimize processes
i
5. Reducing out-of-pocket expenses
This is an important goal, especially in today’s economic climate. And there are a
number of opportunities to do this effectively. One of the most visible it is to cut travel
expenses. Its benefit is that cost reductions can drop immediately to the bottom line. The
challenge, however, is that work still has to be accomplished and travel was frequently
necessary to allow people to work together effectively. This is where the collaboration
enhancements that UC offers can be so helpful. Collaboration means both connecting
people to each other, and sharing documents and other information.
More effective conferencing and access to shared workspace environments can make
a real difference. Setting up conferences and even adding additional users is much
simpler with internal UC-based solutions than with externally provided services. There
are significant cost savings available by reducing the use of external conferencing
services. Many companies have paid for their entire UC solution just through these
services reductions. The payback from shifting to an internally supported solution is
very rapid and the transition for the users is simple. In many cases the current challenges
of setting up a conference call in advance can be totally eliminated. Simply glance at
your presence-enabled contact list, select whoever is available and needs to be in a
conference, and begin!
How Unified Communications Pays For Itself! PAGE 6
7. Another area for out-of-pocket reductions is telephone long distance toll costs and
cellular bills. When changing over to an IP-based solution, many companies have seen
important cost reductions. Equally important, the use of UC enables users to eliminate
calls by using instant messaging to ask a quick question rather than making a phone
call. In other cases, checking presence allows users to see that the person is available
before launching a call. This approach eliminates making a phone call only to end up in
someone’s voicemail box. The savings available can be important for mobile calls and
especially for international calling.
Finally, some companies have been able to reduce facilities costs by allowing staff to
have effective communications tools that allow them to work remotely—from home or
when on the road. Over time, moving to a more flexible workforce and allowing remote
workers can trim requirements for office space, equipment, HVAC, electricity, and
lighting. All of these opportunities can have a real impact.
6. Improve staff productivity
Beyond these examples of out-of-pocket savings, there are significant opportunities to
improve individual staff productivity. Some of the benefits are ease-of-use. It’s easy to
begin an interaction with someone on IM, then escalate that to a phone call, then shift to
a conference and bring in a third person, and finally share a document for editing.
Moreover, productivity improvements can improve business processes. Look at how
things get done in your enterprise. Frequently, individuals experience significant delays
trying to find the right person or the right information to take the next step on a project,
or to get approval to move to the next task. Presence-enabled solutions help people
to find the resources they need, access managers or experts who can help, or get data
communicated to the place it needs to go next.
Simplifying common communications tasks improves productivity. Of course, the
challenge is to convert this sort of productivity improvement into a measurable, bottom-
line impact. But in today’s environment, where headcount pressures are intense, having
these productivity enhancements can enable a slimmer workforce to still get needed
tasks done.
The ability to click-to-communicate from within a document or email not only speeds
access as described above, but because it’s easy, people will actually take the brief time
to clarify an instruction or comment on an issue. Traditional communications methods
impose barriers –telephone tag and email chains, and their challenges actually cause
people to decide not to bother trying. The impact is to reduce errors and rework.
How Unified Communications Pays For Itself! PAGE 7
8. 7. Improve communications to optimize processes
The previous examples focus on improved efficiencies. There are also demonstrable
revenue opportunities when UC tools are incorporated into business processes and
workflows. Many of these are based on improved collaboration among a workgroup,
department, or project team. The use of UC tools to speed collaboration or find
resources among these groups can have dramatic impacts on how work gets done.
Shorter sales cycles both speed revenues and improve sales closure rates. New products
can be brought to market in less time and with lower development costs. Faster decision-
making and rapid problem resolution remove delays from normal business operations.
All of these accelerate business processes, which can frequently mean greater and faster
revenue recognition.
UC capabilities, properly deployed, can bring improvements outside the company walls
as well. One of the biggest opportunities is to build better communication links between
a company and its partners, suppliers, and customers. Through federation of presence
information and links to other IM engines, staffers can interact more effectively with
those outside the enterprise. In other cases, communications-enabled portals can allow
people outside the company who have close business relationships with those inside to
establish secure communication links. This allows more rapid communications of delivery
status, orders, technical information, as well as direct communications between the
parties. Enabling these sorts of capabilities simply means that it’s easier to do business
with the company.
For customers, of course, this turns into greater satisfaction, greater loyalty, and
increased business opportunities. For suppliers it means more efficient operations
and faster ways to resolve any issues that arise. For partners, communications-enabled
solutions make the company “easier to do business with.” In today’s economy, these
sorts of benefits are compelling.
How Unified Communications Pays For Itself! PAGE 8
9. 8. UC success stories
Many suppliers have reported dramatic examples and case studies of how unified
communications capabilities have made dramatic improvements in their customers’
operations. Here is a specific example from ShoreTel:
TopLine Federal Credit Union has been serving the Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota
metropolitan area for decades. Today it has more than 30,000 members and provides
premium personal service “that people can bank on.” With numerous full-service
branch locations throughout the Twin Cities, TopLine offers quality financial products,
competitive rates, low fees, online banking and shared branching services.
By leveraging ShoreTel’s integrated unified communications capabilities, TopLine has
been able to reduce the amount of time for addressing customer issues. For example,
instant messaging is used across multiple sites. By knowing the presence status of
subject matter experts in any location at any time, service representatives are able to
get the latest information in less time and with less effort. For more complex issues,
they are able to escalate an instant message into a phone call with the touch of a
button, resulting in rapid resolution of customer issues and enabling superior customer
satisfaction.
These innovations have allowed the credit union employees to focus on retaining
customers, spending more time with their valued clients, improving service, and
creating the most positive experience possible for all of their customers. TopLine
management reports savings of support and maintenance costs of over 40 percent, a
significant decrease in call wait times, an increase in call completions, as well as out-of-
pocket savings by eliminating POTS lines.
How Unified Communications Pays For Itself! PAGE 9
10. 9. Implementation planning
UC supports different types of use cases, and a variety of different avenues to cost
justification. Similarly, there are also a variety of ways that UC solutions can be deployed.
• .n some cases, companies purchase UC functionality and roll it out broadly to all staff.
I
Typically this approach focuses on UC-U opportunities.
• .n others, the company will look for specific opportunities for UC functionality to
I
improve selected business processes or workflows (UC-B). This method can require
additional upfront planning but typically provides substantially greater benefits.
• Finally, there are techniques to deploy UC-U first and then incorporate UC-B
opportunities in the future.
The goal of a UC-U deployment is to enable all staff to gain personal productivity
benefits. Quite frequently we find that this approach accompanies the replacement of
a legacy PBX environment with a new IP PBX solution. In many cases, the fundamental
driver was to replace the PBX, and UC enhancements are viewed as an added benefit.
UC-U deployments are often led by the IT or telecom departments with relatively little
involvement from business managers.
In a UC-B deployment, the approach is different. Here, the goal is to identify specific
business processes in which communications bottlenecks or barriers exist. This means
that the IT staff often have to work with someone from business management or
operations who can help identify appropriate opportunities. IT understands the system
capabilities; the business manager understands where the best opportunities exist.
One effective technique is to review company workflows and processes and look for
areas where inadequate communications cause errors, delays, or rework. This is, of
course, similar to the use of lean six sigma techniques:
• Start with an overview of the company’s processes
• . ero in on those that have high value or high volume and where communication
Z
challenges impede the process
• Determine which of these “hot spots” can be mitigated by applying UC capabilities
• Translate these opportunities into use cases for how processes will work and the
benefits available
• Organize and prioritize opportunities to create a roadmap of UC projects
• Design an action plan for implementation
How Unified Communications Pays For Itself! PAGE 10
11. In one example, an insurance company claims department identified 63 places where
communications bottlenecks slowed the processing and payment of claims. Simple
implementation of three UC capabilities helped solve two-thirds of those bottlenecks.
10. Conclusion
If a company has deployed UC-U capabilities, there certainly is an opportunity to go
back and gain additional benefits from UC-B. Start by considering the UC-U deployment
as “familiarization.” Giving employees time to become accustomed to these new
communications functions can help in identifying ways to embed new functionality within
the workflows. What’s important is to not stop at the individual productivity benefits of
UC-U. Rather, take the time to scan the overall business processes and talk to key line
of business managers about areas where communications barriers might exist. It’s quite
likely that a senior manager will identify substantial opportunities within a particular
department and become the champion for a more targeted UC-B implementation.
Once some particular opportunities are identified, dive more deeply into the specific
business processes and workflows. Look for areas where communications challenges
impede these processes. Typically, there will be many such opportunities identified.
Prioritize the opportunities based on the impact that correcting the problem will have
and on the ease of deploying the capabilities needed to improve the situation. Pick a
few, high visibility opportunities and work on deploying them effectively. Measure the
results in the improvements and use this success to find and encourage other business
transformations.
The process can be assisted by creating teams including or led by line of business
representatives to go into their own areas and look for additional opportunities. In
addition, find ways to capture innovative ideas and publicize them throughout the
organization.
These techniques have produced compelling business improvements through the
effective use of unified communications. There are hundreds of examples of excellent
implementations. As this revolution in communications capabilities becomes ever more
widespread, we will see that unified communications will permeate virtually all areas of
business, just as data processing and computer technologies did three decades ago.
Why wait? Let’s get started!
How Unified Communications Pays For Itself! PAGE 11