Only two percent of Fortune 1000 companies are not already in active pilot or deployment or are considering a unified communications implementation, a survey sponsored by Plantronics finds.
The only thing surprising in that finding is that there are any Fortune 1000 firms that are not using, planning or testing a UC implementation of some kind.
Given the wide range of UC applications, it would seem unlikely that any firms large enough to qualify for the Fortune 1000 list would not already be using some unified communications apps, whether they know it or not.
The survey suggests 34 percent of workers at such firms are road warriors while 29 percent are telecommuters (working mostly from home). As workforces become more distributed, technology that connects people and enables real-time collaboration becomes essential.
About 94 percent of those surveyed plan to roll out voice-related UC apps within the next 24 months while 66 percent of respondents plan to deploy desktop video within the next two years.
Some 45 percent of respondents said end-user training is key to help users understand basic audio and voice end-point functionality and to enable them to customize options and solve basic issues on their own.
Similarly, 48 percent of respondents said it’s critical to train IT on audio end-points, so they can educate users about end-points and resolve potential issues before they arise.
Employees who are accustomed to using traditional desk phones have very high expectations for audio quality. In fact, more than 50 percent of decision makers said end-points and audio quality are “extremely important” to the overall UC experience. If audio quality is poor when talking to customers, partners and other important audiences, users won’t adopt UC and deployments fail.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
98% of Fortune 1000 Firms Have UC Tests, Deployments or Plans
Labels:
UC,
unified communications
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
"More" TV Seems to be the Story
U.S. consumers seem to be buying more TVs even as they watch more online video. "More," not "either, or" seems to be the story.
Labels:
online video,
tv
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Net Neutrality Would Reduce Investment, Says Frost & Sullivan
Network neutrality has the potential to significantly discourage broadband infrastructure investment, increasing the investment risk, Frost & Sullivan analysts say.
You won't be surprised at that conclusion if you are in the communications service provider business and have to work with investors, or are on the capital allocation side of the business, or ever have modeled expected returns from broadband investment under conditions where robust wholesale access is the rule, where competition is very heavy or where there is little opportunity to provide new revenue-generating services beyond simple access.
In a highly-competitive market, nvestments in access infrastructure are highly sensitive to expected subscriber revenue. Anything that reduces the potential new revenue can drastically affect the investment analysis.
In the presence of net neutrality, operators would likely reduce investment due to the increased risk. Where projects proceeded, consumers would ultimately pay the cost, as they always do.
Net neutrality acts like a tax on the Internet, Frost & Sullivan says. It imposes overhead on network operators, which, in turn, decrease network investments, providing less opportunity, not only for the operators, but also for those that use the operators' networks as well, analysts say.
link
You won't be surprised at that conclusion if you are in the communications service provider business and have to work with investors, or are on the capital allocation side of the business, or ever have modeled expected returns from broadband investment under conditions where robust wholesale access is the rule, where competition is very heavy or where there is little opportunity to provide new revenue-generating services beyond simple access.
In a highly-competitive market, nvestments in access infrastructure are highly sensitive to expected subscriber revenue. Anything that reduces the potential new revenue can drastically affect the investment analysis.
In the presence of net neutrality, operators would likely reduce investment due to the increased risk. Where projects proceeded, consumers would ultimately pay the cost, as they always do.
Net neutrality acts like a tax on the Internet, Frost & Sullivan says. It imposes overhead on network operators, which, in turn, decrease network investments, providing less opportunity, not only for the operators, but also for those that use the operators' networks as well, analysts say.
link
Labels:
net neutrality
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Google to Launch E-Bookstore This Summer
Google will begin selling digital books as early as late June or July, Google Manager Chris Palma says, as reported by the Wall Street Journal.
"Google Editions" hopes to distinguish itself by allowing users to access books from a broad range of websites using a broad array of devices, instead of tying software to one piece of hardware.
Google says users will be able to buy digital copies of books they discover through its book-search service. It will also allow book retailers, including independent shops, to sell Google Editions on their own sites, taking the bulk of the revenue. Google is still deciding whether it will follow the model where publishers set the retail price or where Google sets retail prices.
"As a publisher, what I like is that I won't have to think about audiences based on devices," says Evan Schnittman, vice president of global business development for Oxford University Press.
"Google Editions" hopes to distinguish itself by allowing users to access books from a broad range of websites using a broad array of devices, instead of tying software to one piece of hardware.
Google says users will be able to buy digital copies of books they discover through its book-search service. It will also allow book retailers, including independent shops, to sell Google Editions on their own sites, taking the bulk of the revenue. Google is still deciding whether it will follow the model where publishers set the retail price or where Google sets retail prices.
"As a publisher, what I like is that I won't have to think about audiences based on devices," says Evan Schnittman, vice president of global business development for Oxford University Press.
Labels:
ebook reader,
Google
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Status Drivers are Changing: What it Means for Consumer Marketers
Status in "consumer" societies is fragmenting rapidly, say researchers at Trendwatching.com. That's important for every consumer marketer because, "like it or not, the need for recognition and status is at the heart of every consumer trend," the researchers say. "Status is the ultimate hidden motive."
In a traditional consumer society, where consumption is one of the leading indicators of success, those who consume the most, and especially those who consume the rarest and most expensive, will typically also attain the highest status.
Mature consumer societies are changing, though. Though there is no shortage of the old type of status seeking, an increasing number of consumers are no longer solely obsessed with owning or experiencing the most or the most expensive goods.
In a growing number of cases, status is about acquired skills, eco-credentials, generosity, love and connectivity, Trendwatching says.
Not a single status symbol is ever safe from devaluation, as these symbols and stories are mere agreements between groups of people. The moment ‘society’ agrees that a car is just a method to safely move from A to B, or a nuisance that needs to be avoided due to environmental worries and space constraints, and not one of the dominant indicators of one’s financial standing, luxury car manufacturers will have a problem.
Status, in other words, is "social" to a large extent. A large part of the satisfaction any product, capability or experience provides is that most other people do not own a product, do not have a skill or have not been to a place.
Traditional consumption is about buying, enjoying and showing off more stuff or better stuff than other people have. That doesn't mean traditional satisfactions are gone; it is just as alternate satisfactions are growing.
It does explain why "experiences" increasingly are valued. The ‘mass’ that consumers are willing to put up with is either the stuff they don't really care about.
However, when it comes to experiences, status can only be derived from being seen by others, while experiencing the experience or by telling others about the experiences afterwards. In a real way, the status comes from the telling of the story.
Consumers increasingly will have to tell each other stories to achieve a status dividend from their purchases. Expect a shift from brands telling a story, to brands helping consumers tell their own status-yielding stories to other consumers, Trendwatching says.
Scotch whiskey brand Laphroaig offers lifetime leases for a square foot of land on the island of Islay (where the distillery is located) to each consumer who buys a bottle, for example.
Owning is no longer the only way for consumers to gain status; the act of giving also confers status.
Generosity is one example. Many consumers not only are disgusted with greed, but also can take advantage of an online-fuelled culture of individuals who share, give, engage, create and collaborate in large numbers.
One example of the "generosity" trend is the collaborative, free, crowdsourced, gift and sharing movement online, that fulfills in entirely new ways the perennial need of individuals to feel part of the greater good, to contribute, to help. But the online world of course also makes it easy to showcase and share one's acts of altruism.
The status-implications for non-profit organizations, and B2C brands big on giving initiatives? Work harder on helping your consumer-donors show and tell others about their donations and contributions.
As entire societies have embraced sustainability in everthing as the way forward, and as millions of consumers are now actively trying to greenify their lives, green credentials are an endless source of status. Just witness a substantial subset of consumers already bestowing recognition and praise on Prius and Insight owners while scorning SUV owners.
Consumers' interest in green credentials will lead to even more eco-friendly goods and services sporting bold, iconic markers and design, that help their eco-conscious owners show off their eco-credentials to their peers.
Also count on a massive increase in green stories (as told by consumers): detailed information on (eco-friendly) sourcing, production, ingredients and distribution all represents a potential benefit to consumers who are keen on sharing their green status stories. And the concept is extra attractive for service providers, who often don't have physical products with which to convey their eco credentials.
What will make green stories even more powerful is the fact that while each individual can ‘do their bit’ on the environmental issues, their actions are going to be wasted unless everybody else does the same. This gives individuals a great excuse to share their stories and to enjoy a status boost from occupying the moral high ground.
For an increasing number of consumers, the mere act of consuming less is the greenest status fix of all.
Needless to say that practitioners of "unconsumption" will heavily depend on the telling of stories to make their "low or no" impact on the environment known to others.
Growing pockets of consumers find pleasure and gain potential status by mastering skills and acquiring knowledge.
To be on the inside, to be in the know, to have access, to be knowledgeable, but also, to be able to lead the way to the unique, the avant-garde, the cool, the latest, the cutting-edge now is an established source of status.
Anything you as a brand can do to assist the pursuit of deep or trivial knowledge will be appreciated.
Nike’s True City is an iPhone app that aims to give consumers ‘insider’ information on six European cities, while also allowing users to share their own tips and delivering exclusive Nike offers and information.
The Adidas Urban Art Guide is a free iPhone travel guide listing Berlin and Hamburg's best graffiti. Users can click on each marked location to retrieve images and information about the piece and the artist.
Beck's Gig Finder app helps users to find local music gigs. The app's map and GPS interface allow users to see where they are in relation to the gigs.
Closely related to status and knowledge are status and skills. Especially for younger (and younger-at-heart) consumers, participation is the new consumption. Brands that help consumers develop skills and create professional-grade output will gain an appreciative audience.
Tesco’s Wine Finder app is capable of recognizing any wine in the retailer’s database from a photo of the bottle. The app also recommends wines based on price, country of origin and accompanying cuisine.
Swedish food brand Santa Maria offers an iPhone app that offers grilling tips and advice. The application features recipes, a BBQ handbook and a grilling timer.
Where it comes to online status, it’s all about who you connect to, and who connects to you, tribal style. It still is about being unique, but it's about belonging, too: belonging to tribes whose membership renders status to its members.
Unlike in the 'offline world', these connections (in numbers and in profiles) are visible. Then there are virtual goods garnered in online games, or gaming skill itself.
So what can consumer marketers do? Develop a better understanding of who (and how) your customers are trying to impress. If you find your brand is still mainly focusing on bigger and better but your customers aren't, then you might have a problem.
If you already actively serve a diverse crowd of status seekers, figure out how you can help them to better show off their new status symbols or better tell their status stories. Showcasing, visibility, and story ingredients are still often overlooked.
link
In a traditional consumer society, where consumption is one of the leading indicators of success, those who consume the most, and especially those who consume the rarest and most expensive, will typically also attain the highest status.
Mature consumer societies are changing, though. Though there is no shortage of the old type of status seeking, an increasing number of consumers are no longer solely obsessed with owning or experiencing the most or the most expensive goods.
In a growing number of cases, status is about acquired skills, eco-credentials, generosity, love and connectivity, Trendwatching says.
Not a single status symbol is ever safe from devaluation, as these symbols and stories are mere agreements between groups of people. The moment ‘society’ agrees that a car is just a method to safely move from A to B, or a nuisance that needs to be avoided due to environmental worries and space constraints, and not one of the dominant indicators of one’s financial standing, luxury car manufacturers will have a problem.
Status, in other words, is "social" to a large extent. A large part of the satisfaction any product, capability or experience provides is that most other people do not own a product, do not have a skill or have not been to a place.
Traditional consumption is about buying, enjoying and showing off more stuff or better stuff than other people have. That doesn't mean traditional satisfactions are gone; it is just as alternate satisfactions are growing.
It does explain why "experiences" increasingly are valued. The ‘mass’ that consumers are willing to put up with is either the stuff they don't really care about.
However, when it comes to experiences, status can only be derived from being seen by others, while experiencing the experience or by telling others about the experiences afterwards. In a real way, the status comes from the telling of the story.
Consumers increasingly will have to tell each other stories to achieve a status dividend from their purchases. Expect a shift from brands telling a story, to brands helping consumers tell their own status-yielding stories to other consumers, Trendwatching says.
Scotch whiskey brand Laphroaig offers lifetime leases for a square foot of land on the island of Islay (where the distillery is located) to each consumer who buys a bottle, for example.
Owning is no longer the only way for consumers to gain status; the act of giving also confers status.
Generosity is one example. Many consumers not only are disgusted with greed, but also can take advantage of an online-fuelled culture of individuals who share, give, engage, create and collaborate in large numbers.
One example of the "generosity" trend is the collaborative, free, crowdsourced, gift and sharing movement online, that fulfills in entirely new ways the perennial need of individuals to feel part of the greater good, to contribute, to help. But the online world of course also makes it easy to showcase and share one's acts of altruism.
The status-implications for non-profit organizations, and B2C brands big on giving initiatives? Work harder on helping your consumer-donors show and tell others about their donations and contributions.
As entire societies have embraced sustainability in everthing as the way forward, and as millions of consumers are now actively trying to greenify their lives, green credentials are an endless source of status. Just witness a substantial subset of consumers already bestowing recognition and praise on Prius and Insight owners while scorning SUV owners.
Consumers' interest in green credentials will lead to even more eco-friendly goods and services sporting bold, iconic markers and design, that help their eco-conscious owners show off their eco-credentials to their peers.
Also count on a massive increase in green stories (as told by consumers): detailed information on (eco-friendly) sourcing, production, ingredients and distribution all represents a potential benefit to consumers who are keen on sharing their green status stories. And the concept is extra attractive for service providers, who often don't have physical products with which to convey their eco credentials.
What will make green stories even more powerful is the fact that while each individual can ‘do their bit’ on the environmental issues, their actions are going to be wasted unless everybody else does the same. This gives individuals a great excuse to share their stories and to enjoy a status boost from occupying the moral high ground.
For an increasing number of consumers, the mere act of consuming less is the greenest status fix of all.
Needless to say that practitioners of "unconsumption" will heavily depend on the telling of stories to make their "low or no" impact on the environment known to others.
Growing pockets of consumers find pleasure and gain potential status by mastering skills and acquiring knowledge.
To be on the inside, to be in the know, to have access, to be knowledgeable, but also, to be able to lead the way to the unique, the avant-garde, the cool, the latest, the cutting-edge now is an established source of status.
Anything you as a brand can do to assist the pursuit of deep or trivial knowledge will be appreciated.
Nike’s True City is an iPhone app that aims to give consumers ‘insider’ information on six European cities, while also allowing users to share their own tips and delivering exclusive Nike offers and information.
The Adidas Urban Art Guide is a free iPhone travel guide listing Berlin and Hamburg's best graffiti. Users can click on each marked location to retrieve images and information about the piece and the artist.
Beck's Gig Finder app helps users to find local music gigs. The app's map and GPS interface allow users to see where they are in relation to the gigs.
Closely related to status and knowledge are status and skills. Especially for younger (and younger-at-heart) consumers, participation is the new consumption. Brands that help consumers develop skills and create professional-grade output will gain an appreciative audience.
Tesco’s Wine Finder app is capable of recognizing any wine in the retailer’s database from a photo of the bottle. The app also recommends wines based on price, country of origin and accompanying cuisine.
Swedish food brand Santa Maria offers an iPhone app that offers grilling tips and advice. The application features recipes, a BBQ handbook and a grilling timer.
Where it comes to online status, it’s all about who you connect to, and who connects to you, tribal style. It still is about being unique, but it's about belonging, too: belonging to tribes whose membership renders status to its members.
Unlike in the 'offline world', these connections (in numbers and in profiles) are visible. Then there are virtual goods garnered in online games, or gaming skill itself.
So what can consumer marketers do? Develop a better understanding of who (and how) your customers are trying to impress. If you find your brand is still mainly focusing on bigger and better but your customers aren't, then you might have a problem.
If you already actively serve a diverse crowd of status seekers, figure out how you can help them to better show off their new status symbols or better tell their status stories. Showcasing, visibility, and story ingredients are still often overlooked.
link
Labels:
consumer behavior
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
YouTube to Launch Movie Rental Store
YouTube, the Google-owned video sharing site that claims to serve an average 96 videos per person to 135 million viewers each month, is building an automated system that will let movie makers upload full-length movies to the site’s recently launched video rental store.
Some observers think that feature might be most valuable for filmmakers unable to get much distribution from other outlets, especially independent filmmakers who cannot gain distribution on Netflix or Amazon, for example.
The service “will give moviemakers the ability to upload and provide their streaming content for rent,” MediaPost writer Laurie Sullivan says. Rental movies will be available in 1080-pixel resolution, much higher than the TV and movie streams on Hulu. Payments will be made through Google Checkout, a Paypal-like service.
Some observers think that feature might be most valuable for filmmakers unable to get much distribution from other outlets, especially independent filmmakers who cannot gain distribution on Netflix or Amazon, for example.
The service “will give moviemakers the ability to upload and provide their streaming content for rent,” MediaPost writer Laurie Sullivan says. Rental movies will be available in 1080-pixel resolution, much higher than the TV and movie streams on Hulu. Payments will be made through Google Checkout, a Paypal-like service.
Labels:
online video,
YouTube
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
The Future of TV Is... TV
"The potential for video over the internet is huge, and always will be," says Mark Cuban, Dallas Mavericks owner and technology investor. That isn't a new argument: Cuban has made the argument repeatedly and forcefully.
"The future of TV is TV," he says. "That is what consumers want." Arguing that forecasters need only follow the money, he notes that consumers have made their choice to spend money on new HDTVs because they want a no-hassle way to watch TV, and do not want all the hassles associated with PC-based or Internet-delivered video.
"I don’t understand why so many people think that having millions of videos available online to watch any time is some big deal," Cuban says. "Consumer choice is about having the brand new device on which you just spent hundreds of dollars or more work immediately and just as you expected.
"When you buy a car, you don’t want to have to figure out how to make it work. You don’t want to have to bring someone in to make sure the engine starts, or have to buy some 3rd party device so that you can go full speed or blast the stereo. When you buy that car, you want to jump in the driver's seat, smell that new car smell, be excited when you turn it on, and crank that stereo and roll down the road in your brand new car. You made your choice as a consumer. You spent your money. You want immediate gratification.
"The future of TV is TV," he says. "That is what consumers want." Arguing that forecasters need only follow the money, he notes that consumers have made their choice to spend money on new HDTVs because they want a no-hassle way to watch TV, and do not want all the hassles associated with PC-based or Internet-delivered video.
"I don’t understand why so many people think that having millions of videos available online to watch any time is some big deal," Cuban says. "Consumer choice is about having the brand new device on which you just spent hundreds of dollars or more work immediately and just as you expected.
"When you buy a car, you don’t want to have to figure out how to make it work. You don’t want to have to bring someone in to make sure the engine starts, or have to buy some 3rd party device so that you can go full speed or blast the stereo. When you buy that car, you want to jump in the driver's seat, smell that new car smell, be excited when you turn it on, and crank that stereo and roll down the road in your brand new car. You made your choice as a consumer. You spent your money. You want immediate gratification.
Labels:
cable,
online video,
telco TV
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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