Broadband Developments

September 5, 2008

Presence at the Heart of the Unified Communications Debate

Filed under: UC, Web 2.0 — Tags: , , — John Furrier @ 12:49 pm

I ran into Mike Gotta’s post about presence.  Mike nails it here.  While presence will remain a core element within platforms for unified communications, the social dynamics around presence require all of us to look beyond how presence is defined, packaged and delivered by UC vendors (e.g., Cisco, IBM, Microsoft). The benefits of “presence” span far beyond the boundaries of unified communications. In fact, presence is on its own convergence path with social networking trends.

I’ve blogged about it a few months ago here and here and here about presence changing.  Even Blair Pleasant who tracks the space agreed.  Now Mike has a great analysis. 

Web 2.0 seems to be dying but the reality is that UC is Web 2.0 or Web 2.0 is UC.

Check out Mike Gotta’s jentire article if your interesed in reading the tea leaves on Unified Communications.

July 29, 2008

Presence is Unified Communications Missing the Big Picture?

Filed under: BroadDev, UC, Web 2.0 — Tags: , , , — John Furrier @ 8:15 pm

Ok way back when we had the tsunami, then the London bombing, and today earthquake in SoCal. Why does it take a disaster or potential disaster to wake up the masses. This is about a new presence paradigm somethign out of left field - the Twitter value proposition.

Hey people Twitter is a real or should I say the twitter’s value proposition is real. MG Siegler at Venturebeat has a post nailing the real time nature of Twitter. Big Biz Stone at Twitter opens the curtain to show us the stats (Biz we love stats - keep them coming).

What came out of the blue was David Dalka (one smart guy in Chicago) who brings in his perspective to the Twitter business model question.

David writes: “Graphs and/or alert spikes of user defined keywords - ie ones that are important to oneself personally or to one’s business or clients. I would dare to say this might actually be business model that could lead to meaningful monetization - I think alot of web services haven’t thought this through nearly enough. Organizing real-time data for useful decision making as a business model worked out OK for Michael Bloomberg if I recall correctly. Some might say Google Trends does this already from a search perspective, but it doesn’t break down the word clusters to core words with “sidekicks” and is not the leading indicator that Twitter is by an uncertain but definite time margin.”

The triple net is this: take MG Siegler’s post, Big Biz, and David’s and you have the Twitter business model. It’s a communication system about real-time but with asynchonous logging as well. It’s a data mining “quantjock’s” dream. Expect some real innovation around this new twist on Unified Communications.

That is why convergence is happening around presence and why I believe that the Unified Communications (covered here on BroadDev.com) sector may be a pipe dream if presence paradigms like twitter continue to provide real time and non-linear value.

July 25, 2008

For UC: It’s All About Presence - Says Blair Pleasant

Filed under: BroadDev, UC — Tags: , , , — John Furrier @ 9:26 am

Blair Pleasant writes that in UC it’s all about presence. I agree with her and would add that it’s bigger than just UC. It’s everything right now: iPhone, Facebook, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, everyone. That is why I think that UC is Web 2.0. UC is bigger than telephony it’s how will be blending what used to be offline life with online. As that convergence moves from awkward to seemless it is UC.

I wrote that I think Facebook is establishing themselves for a land grab around Presence. Maybe by accident or with coordinated strategic moves, but they are getting stronger in this area. I wonder if some of the emerging services like Facebook, Twitter, Google, Myspace, on and on will really impact what Presence means?

Here is Blair Pleasant’s view:
There’ve been some interesting discussions recently about the role of presence in unified communications, and of course I want to put in my two cents. I strongly agree with what Zeus and Irwin wrote about presence (yes, sometimes analysts agree with each other) - presence is key, it is core, it is the dial tone of the 21st century, yada yada.

When I measure the UC market in my new report, “Enterprise Unified Communications 2007-2012”, one of four methodologies I use is to identify which UC elements must be present in order to be considered a UC solution. There are several elements or components that make up a UC solution, but not all of them are required in a UC solution – you can have a UC solution that does not include unified messaging or conferencing, for example. There are only a few requisite elements for UC, and presence is one of them. Of course there are different types of presence - in the UC world, presence capabilities can refer either to IM or online presence or to telephony presence (indicating if someone is onhook or offhook). In mobile UC applications, presence may be based on the mobile device being turned on or off.

The role of presence in UC cannot be understated. I wrote about presence quite a bit in my report - here are excerpts from various sections that discuss presence and UC:

The cornerstone of unified communications is presence. Every aspect of collaboration requires or is enhanced by knowing whether colleagues are available for a communication; how to best contact and interact with them based on what device they are using; and what their situation and circumstances are (in a meeting, at a customer site, etc.).

From a section on some of the challenges of UC:

For UC to be used successfully outside of the enterprise walls to customers, partners, suppliers, and others, federation is required across different types of IM services, and across different presence/IM servers and systems from different vendors (whether Microsoft, IBM, Cisco, Avaya, Alcatel-Lucent, etc.). For presence to be effective, it needs to work in a multivendor environment, especially when being used across company boundaries. This can happen either by system-to-system communications or by linkages to a central clearing house, and either way will require adoption of standards.

From a section describing the role of presence when analyzing and estimating the UC market:

Presence is the heart of the UC solution, and includes both the server software and clients in this analysis. The role of the presence server will increase over the next few years, as more and more capabilities are migrated to the presence server. For example, several vendors provide conferencing/collaboration capabilities on their presence servers.

The Presence category will evolve in two ways. At one level, it will provide user productivity to all types of users within an organization, and the platform will expand to include a wide range of capabilities, including IP Telephony. In some cases, the Presence servers will replace the IP PBX, either for departments or for the entire enterprise. For example, Microsoft’s Office Communication Server (OCS) is seen by some as an “IP PBX replacement,” and some companies are using OCS for their call routing and telephony capabilities. In three-to-five years, enterprise customers who need to replace their existing switches may instead use their OCS system for call control. We expect that for some small- and medium-sized companies, as well as in departments of large organizations, products such as OCS and IBM’s Sametime will eventually be used in place of the PBX.

So not only is the role of presence key, it is THE key to unified communications. But there are certainly challenges, and until there is true interoperability and federation of presence capabilities, UC will be effective for intra-company communications, but not for inter-company communications with customers, partners, suppliers, and others. We’ve come a long way, but much work is left to be done.

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