September 3, 2010
WHEN IS THE RIGHT TIME TO INVEST
IN UNIFIED COMMUNICATIONS?
To many casual observers,
the idea of “unified communications”
appears to
be a bit of overkill. Maybe
it’s even seen as an attempt to fix something
that’s not even broken.
Others may see value in
being able to consolidate a
range of communications
capabilities in a single place.
The notion that all incoming
and outgoing communications
could somehow be funneled
through a single interface is an
appealing concept.
But, at the end of the day, is unified
communications really worth the hassle?
Put yourself in the shoes of a corporate IT
manager deciding on the future of corporate
communications solutions. Does it
really make sense to junk existing telephone
systems and online conferencing
services simply for the sake of creating a
unified communications environment?
The answer, of course, is a big, fat
BigIdeas
“No.” Such a solution merely re-packages features and
functionality already available to end users. With such a
unified communications solution, companies would
merely be paying thousands, and perhaps millions, of
dollars to re-create communications capabilities that
already are at their disposal.
In short, business users need some reason for pulling
the trigger on investing in unified communications—a
valid rationale for making the investments of both IT budget
and training resources that can prompt a wider corporate
embrace of unified communications solutions.

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Interactive Media Strategies Q4 2009 Survey
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In this debate, it’s video that stands as a crucial linchpin
in shaping the future of the market. Of particular
importance are solutions that make it easier for executives
to create, manage, and distribute
video from the corporate desktop.
Video can provide the technical
“sizzle” that encourages
executive decision makers
to take a second look at
unified communications
alternatives. And, in many
cases, the elements that
wrap around video can be
parlayed in other forms of
Web-based communications. The
audio from a video feed, for instance,
can take the place of a traditional telephone call. The
PowerPoint slides presented alongside a video stream
can form the foundation of an online collaborative event.
And, if video is integrated properly into a true unified
communications solution, its impact will extend far
beyond the prospects of technology vendors trying to
sell the next great communications platform. It also will
have huge impact on the people who produce and develop
high-quality video content.
That’s because video deployed within a unified communications
solution will fill a variety of roles in the corporate
environment.
Naturally, it should be expected that a viable unified
communications solution will excel at enabling live, twoway
video enriched communications events. But this is
not the only viable video application.
Advanced unified communications solutions will
make it easier, for instance, to share professionally produced
corporate videos both in live meetings and in
time-shifted environments. Essentially, executives will
have libraries of product videos and other video content that can be retrieved and shared at the click of a button.
As it becomes easier for executives to share these videos, it
will become increasingly valuable for their organizations to
invest in the development of professional videos that cast their
company in the best possible light.

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TIMES HAVE CHANGED
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And that day of broader video enrichment via unified
communications deployment may not be quite as far off some
might think. Already, we’re seeing business deployment of
some rudimentary platforms that begin to integrate multiple
communications technologies under a single user interface.
To grab a glimpse at prospective demand for unified communications
in the business sector, Interactive Media Strategies
asked in a survey of 1,003 executives conducted in the fourth quarter of 2009 about the implementation of
platforms that combine two or more Web communications
solutions in a single user application.
Such a description encompasses everything
from the types of all-encompassing elaborate
solutions described above that make all Web communications
capabilities available in an on-screen
application to more “simple” unified communications
solutions that combine a handful of communications
capabilities, such as merging instant
messaging into an online Web conferencing tool.
And, as a group, these organizations that are
most engaged with today’s mostly limited forms of
unified communications have high regard for the
role of video in day-to-day business. Nine out of 10
respondents in the survey citing plans or interest
in unified communications, for instance, agree
with the statement that their organization should
use video more extensively in order to streamline
business operations.
The basic message here is not to turn a deaf
ear when executives start talking about the
prospects for unified communications. The
adoption of unified solutions invariably will
translate into more rapid implementation of a
range of video-enriched communications capabilities.
And that, in turn, will translate into fresh
opportunities for selling more robust video production
technology and services.
A unified communications marketplace at rest
is likely to stay at rest unless acted upon by video.
But if this logjam of inertia is broken, it would create
significant new opportunities for the production
and distribution of business video.
Steven Vonder Haar is Research Director at
Interactive Media Strategies and can be reached at
Svonder@InteractiveMediaStrategies.com
info
CISCO:
ciscosystems.com
MICROSOFT:
microsoft.com
NEC:
nec.com
POLYCOM:
polycom.com
TANDBERG:
tandberg.com
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