Next Stop - Five9 Analyst Summit - Porto, Portugal

I haven’t done a “next stop” post in ages - kinda went away with the pandemic. In-person events are definitely back, and I need to get back into the habit of doing these shout-outs for upcoming events.

Next up for me will be for Five9, and this will be my first time visiting Porto, Portugal. Am sure will be a great experience, and I’ll share along the way, as well as after, of course.

Until recently, these were called “analyst events”, but as social media becomes more pervasive, and as demographics trend younger, they’re now called “analyst and influencer” events. I’d be swimming upstream trying to parse this out - maybe a topic for a future podcast - and for now, let’s just say I’m happy to be part of this group.

To stay totally connected, follow the event using the hash in the visual below, and if you want track what I’m sharing, my Twitter handle is #arnoldjon.

An Enterprise-Wide Approach to Connected Customer Experiences - My Latest White Paper for Cisco

Sometimes my thought leadership outputs are publicly shared right away, sometimes never at all, and yet other times only after a delay in time. This last scenario applies to my latest white paper, and most recent white paper done for Cisco.

The topic speaks to the growing need for businesses to think about CX in broader terms than the contact center. Things are changing quickly in this space and this white paper is a good example of how vendors are trying to educate the market in terms of how to respond.

My white paper was published back in April this year, but was only used internally by Cisco, and wasn’t promoted to other circles. That has recently changed, however, and during last week’s high-profile Webex One event, Cisco included the white paper in their set of resources for channels and end customers.

If you attended the event, you can access the white paper by logging in and going to the Resources section. The white paper is listed there, along with a public link where no further registration is required.

For everyone else - or those who can’t be bothered to log in again to Webex One - here’s a direct public link to the white paper. If you give it a read, I’d love to hear your thoughts, as I believe the contact center is on the verge of some major transformation, and this is an example of what’s coming.

New Kudo - Top 10 Telecom Experts to Follow

The anonymous nature of the Internet leads people to behave in unusual ways, but its vastness also means that we all get lost in the crowd. Everyone has an opinion, but that doesn't mean everyone else is interested, and it doesn't stop folks from sharing it online. So, it's really hard to know who knows about stuff, and that's where top 10 lists can be of value.

Everyone has an agenda, and we never really know what goes into these efforts, but it's always nice to be recognized. Yesterday, I was cited in one such list, from U.K.-based Telco Bytes. At least this site is industry-based, and by looking through the list, they've gone beyond their local market to include North American industry-watchers, so it's not just friends and family.

I'll take it, and it's great see fellow colleagues Ronald Gruia, Evan Kirstel and Gary Kim in there too. The others are new to me, but after checking them out, I can say I'm in good company, and you wouldn't go wrong following any/all of them. Here's the posting of their top 10 list, and if you like it, please share.

Next Stop - Indianapolis and Genesys/ININ

This will be US stop #3 for me this month, and then things finally slow down on the travel front. Am flying on Sunday to Indy for CX17, where the event tagline is "Together", referring to the combined conference for Genesys and Interactive Intelligence.

I posted the basic details about the conference already in the Event Calendar of my website, so please go there for that. I don't get to do this often, so I'd be remiss to not do another shout-out for our SIPtones gig next Tuesday during the conference. More info about that is also in the Event Calendar listing, including a link to a video compilation of our last show in Indy. Enjoy!

My Next Webinar - Digital Transformation and Collaboration

Am busy enough this month with conferences and speaking at events, but I still need to manage my regular workload with clients. Aside from various writing engagements, I'm doing another Ziff Davis webinar on May 30 - and another one after that in June.

The full title is "How Collaboration Helps Businesses Adapt to Digital Transformation", and the main idea is that collaboration offerings can help workers in many ways as they adapt to the impact of digital transformation. These are two big themes, and I'll be exploring how they intersect on this webinar. Details and registration form is here, and I hope you can join me.

Messaging, Slack and Facebook - it's Complicated

That's the title of my latest Rethinking Communications column for TMC's flagship publication, Internet Telephony magazine.  I've been writing this column for a few years now, but you haven't heard from me about it for some time. The reason is that at the start of 2017, the magazine cut back its publishing cycle from monthly to quarterly, reflecting the broader trend of reduced print readership. I got my start in the trade publishing business, and can totally relate to what they're up against.

As such, I haven't posted about my column since January, and for whatever reason, their Q2 edition has been slow to publish. However, it's out now, both in print form, and digitally, and here's the link to read it online. The title is self-explanatory, and I've been writing a lot lately about how players from outside the collaboration space are having a big impact on the market. I hope you like it, and comments are welcome.

 Aside from that, I'm also cited in three different features in that issue:

I hope you get a chance to read these as well, and any sharing is always appreciated!

Monage, San Jose - Quick Thoughts and Pix

Just sharing some quick thoughts and photos from the first two days of Monage, here in San Jose. Time is running short, and my session is in an hour. Got LOTS to say, but it will have to wait til after the event, although I've been tweeting a fair bit - #Monage.

In short, Jeff has delivered a great program as usual, with a wonderful diversity of speakers and perspectives on where things are going with chatbots, AI and messaging. It's mostly a consumer story, and in our session, we'll be giving the enterprise version of things. Check back with me in a day or so, and I'll have something more coherent to say - ears still ringing from the Herding Cats party last night.  :-)

Jeff Pulver and his welcome comments

Jeff Pulver and his welcome comments

Oisin Lunny of OpenMarket, talking about mobile engagement trends

Oisin Lunny of OpenMarket, talking about mobile engagement trends

Amir Shevat from Slack, talking about how bots are used in the enterprise

Amir Shevat from Slack, talking about how bots are used in the enterprise

Regulatory panel - so, why is Jeff smiling? What's Jeff thinking? Guess I caught the moment, here, huh? Perfect for a meme!

Regulatory panel - so, why is Jeff smiling? What's Jeff thinking? Guess I caught the moment, here, huh? Perfect for a meme!

chris fine leading the millennials panel - very interesting, wish my kids were up there too! Photo courtesy of Mike Jablon.

chris fine leading the millennials panel - very interesting, wish my kids were up there too! Photo courtesy of Mike Jablon.

NFV and hosted comms panel, moderated by Mike Jablon, including RingCentral, 8x8 and the Infield Group

NFV and hosted comms panel, moderated by Mike Jablon, including RingCentral, 8x8 and the Infield Group

Expo Hall - it's small, but engaging. Well, VON started small too.

Expo Hall - it's small, but engaging. Well, VON started small too.

Johnny Digzz holding court - just press go and away he goes - great stories and tech perspectives

Johnny Digzz holding court - just press go and away he goes - great stories and tech perspectives

jon and jeff! Photo courtesy of Uncle Jerry.  :-)

jon and jeff! Photo courtesy of Uncle Jerry.  :-)

Night time is the right to get out and have some fun - that what happens when the herding cats play - still sounding great!

Night time is the right to get out and have some fun - that what happens when the herding cats play - still sounding great!

  As good as it looks, and a local landmark for sure. ok, time to take a walk...

  As good as it looks, and a local landmark for sure. ok, time to take a walk...

A few blocks south - not everyone can afford to eat at Joe's,  and they'll go to Trine's instead. Not everyone in San Jose is a tech millionaire. or will be part of the bot economy. be thankful for what you have!

A few blocks south - not everyone can afford to eat at Joe's,  and they'll go to Trine's instead. Not everyone in San Jose is a tech millionaire. or will be part of the bot economy. be thankful for what you have!

If Trine's is too busy, go a little further south to the Burger Bar - the price sure is right!

If Trine's is too busy, go a little further south to the Burger Bar - the price sure is right!

Think I walked a bit too far - better keep going - not quite feeling it for this spot.

Think I walked a bit too far - better keep going - not quite feeling it for this spot.

Monage Spotlight: Bots, Messaging and UC in the Enterprise

That's the title of the session I'll be speaking on at next week's Monage conference in San Jose. Joining me will be Chris Fine, where we'll reprise the topic from last fall's inaugural Monage in Boston. Here's the full event schedule, and if you scroll down the page to Thursday, you'll see our session is scheduled for 11am.

More importantly, it's not too late to attend, and if you're still deciding, you should explore the Monage website, especially the impressive speaker roster, and the YouTube clip on the home page with Jeff Pulver giving his personal pitch to come, as only Jeff can! It's great, and if you follow him on Facebook, he's got a new clip there you won't want to miss.

Here Comes Gen Z - My Webinar is Tomorrow

Just one more post as a reminder about my webinar tomorrow at 2pm ET. 

This is my latest Ziff Davis webinar, and the title is self-explanatory. If you want to learn more about how Gen Z is different from Gen Y, and how businesses need to think about collaboration with them, then you'll want to join me. More info is here on the registration page.

 

Here Comes Gen Z - My Next Webinar

I've had a steady run of webinars lately, and my next one is coming up fast - next Wednesday at 2pm ET. The title is self-explanatory, and the topic builds on a series of posts I wrote recently for Ziff Davis on the emerging demographic, Generation Z.

They're on the cusp of entering the workplace, and in terms of collaboration, they won't be doing things exactly like their predecessors, Millennials. Am looking forward to sharing my perspectives on the webinar, and hope you can make it - all the details are here on the registration page.

Making Sense of the Messaging Landscape

Messaging continues to carry a lot of momentum, especially in the UC&C space, and the more research you do, new avenues open up that you hadn’t considered before. If it’s a lot for analysts to follow, it’s also a lot for decision-makers to follow, but it’s our job to provide perspective, and I’ll try to add some here.

The cloud is impacting every link in the value chain, and while it’s broadening the scope for what falls under the collaboration umbrella, it has also created entrees for new providers that businesses hadn’t previously considered. To some extent this is being driven by a concurrent trend, namely the rise of Millennials. They’re not the decision-makers yet – although that will change over the next few years, so be ready! – but their communications preferences go hand-in-glove with what the cloud is enabling.

This generation is leading an unprecedented shift from voice-centric to text-centric communication, and that has a lot to do with why messaging is so hot right now. They are adapting to new technology faster than their employers or the companies they buy from, and that’s presenting some major challenges.

While all this disruption is exciting, it’s getting a lot harder for businesses to both define their needs and to evaluate the offerings. I come across all kinds of vendors, carriers and software companies with a variety of UC&C solutions, and keeping up isn’t easy. My research is ongoing, and building on this preamble, I’m going to briefly highlight in this post three very different messaging offerings. While they all support the same messaging channels - including SMS, MMS, Facebook, Twitter, Telegram, etc. – their offerings and competencies are distinct, and collectively, they show just how diverse this space has become in a short period of time.

All of these companies have solid value propositions, but they address very different collaboration challenges. That’s why it’s so important to define your needs first. When I wear my strategic advisory hat, this is the first thing I emphasize – until you clearly define the problem set, you won’t know when you have the right solution. This isn’t about technology – it’s about understanding where and how collaboration drives business value, and making sure your people have the tools they need.

With that said, let’s look at three companies, listed in alphabetical order – Nexmo, Twilio and WEBTEXT. They have each taken a distinct path to the global enterprise messaging market, and represent just a few markers along the UC&C spectrum. I urge you to consider this a starting point for further research, not just on these companies but across the rest of the spectrum. I’ll continue doing my part as my research brings me to other companies, and welcome your thoughts on whom to focus on next.

Nexmo

What really put Nexmo on the UC&C radar was being acquired by Vonage earlier this year. At the time, this was just the latest in a string of pickups that saw UC players take on messaging players to ensure their portfolios had a CPaaS offering. Whether through acquisition or in-house development, most of the leading UC players now have this, firmly validating messaging as a must-have modality for communication and/or collaboration.

In short, the big driver for CPaaS is how UC&C is becoming very user-driven. Vendors can no longer dictate the rules of the game, and instead must offer flexible, customized applications. Rather than UC being the end product, CPaaS allows communications applications to be embedded or integrated with other business-level functions, and that’s a very different use case for these technologies.

This gives rise to new forms of business value, and with Millennials being text-centric, UC&C players have been scrambling to acquire messaging platforms, which is exactly what Vonage did with Nexmo. Not only was this necessary to stay competitive with other UC players branching out into CPaaS, but also to defend against pure play messaging players like Twilio who are ready now to enter the broader UC&C space and truly disrupt the status quo. More on that shortly.

What you need to know about Nexmo is that their roots are in SMS, so their messaging DNA is very strong. They recently developed a voice API, which can be used for things like building IVR menus on the go for ad hoc collaboration and customer engagement. While their messaging business is strong, Vonage brings a lot of leverage in the business market that a pure play simply doesn’t have.

The main thing is that by running over Vonage’s network, Nexmo’s voice APIs will have a quality of service that OTT-based competitors cannot match. Another network-related benefit that’s based on economies of scale is having both low cost SMS pricing, and per-second billing instead of per-minute billing, which can be a differentiator for high volume customers. Furthermore, Vonage has a large and growing installed base of business customers, so there’s a built-in market for Nexmo to expand their footprint right from the start.

In terms of the bigger picture, I’m featuring Nexmo in this post because they represent a hybrid solution under the Vonage banner. Both businesses are focused on the cloud now, and together there’s a very compelling offering that covers all the bases. Vonage brings the UCaaS piece, which addresses internal UC&C needs, whereas Nexmo’s CPaaS capabilities are more customer-facing. This would make Vonage/Nexmo a solid choice when looking for an end-to-end, integrated solution that covers the full gamut of UC&C.

Twilio

Like Nexmo, Twilio comes from the consumer space, and the success of their recent IPO says a lot about what Wall Street thinks about the messaging opportunity. If you have any doubt about that, feel free to review this very recent – and very long – presentation by tech strategist Michael Wolf, given at the WSJ’s global tech conference. While most of his focus on messaging is consumer-related, the impact on branding and customer care certainly has implications for the contact center.

Furthermore, I echo his view that as messaging becomes a preferred mode in the enterprise, existing UC&C players could be vulnerable. Another wildcard in all this is chatbots, which takes messaging into entirely new realms such as search, AI, workflows, e-commerce, etc. There’s definitely a lot at stake here, and this is what makes companies like Twilio so important to follow.

Whether Twilio will be successful in the enterprise market remains to be seen, but right now, they are too disruptive to ignore. It’s possible that Twilio could Uberize the UC&C space by making messaging so compelling and so user-driven, that other modes drop on the depth chart to the point where creative destruction sets in and new business models emerge.

I don’t think that will happen since integrating with other modes – especially real-time – is harder to do than it looks, and the established UC players will respond accordingly to protect what they have. From what I can tell, actually, Twilio may be disruptive, but they’re not really out to reinvent UC&C in their image. That’s a very hard road to hoe, and their vision is more along the lines of helping businesses work with what they already have, but to help them communicate more effectively.

As with the Slacks of the workstream world, Twilio emerged because they didn’t feel existing communications applications could properly serve the needs of today’s workers – and consumers. They responded in the same manner by creating their own platform based on today’s technologies – primarily cloud and Web-centric – and that is very developer-friendly.

This is a big reason why it’s hard to gauge where Twilio fits in the UC&C universe. They don’t have a pedigree in telephony, or mobility, or hardware, or customer care. They certainly are a software company, but the critical mass comes from having a platform that developers want to build around.

In this regard they are a pure play, not just for messaging or voice, but for having a developer-friendly platform that can drive constant innovation. They claim to have over one million developers on their platform, and as messaging comes of age, Twilio may well be the company that sets the bar for all to follow.

Whereas Nexmo is more of a carrier play by virtue of going to market with Vonage, Twilio is an enterprise play when it comes to UC&C. Businesses will deploy Twilio where they want to use messaging to improve communication on their own terms. A real strength of Twilio is its horizontal nature, where it’s adaptable to a wide range of use cases. This flexibility makes the platform a Swiss Army knife in that enterprises can use it wherever the needs are greatest.

The contact center is a prime example, where messaging – as well as voice and video - can be integrated with CRM or mobile customer care. Being cloud-based, their platform is a very scalable solution that will appeal to enterprises looking to virtualize their contact center.

That said, Twilio would be used in accordance with existing platforms, so the onus falls on IT to make these integrations work, and to have a vision for where messaging be can used in new ways. As such, the value comes from how enterprises deploy Twilio with other things, rather than using it as a standalone solution, either inside the office or the contact center. This means that Twilio should not be viewed as a UC&C solution, but rather how their platform can enrich what you’re using now.

The challenge comes for multivendor environments where Twilio doesn’t yet have deep integrations with specific vendors. For enterprises heavily invested in these vendors, Twilio will have less value than scenarios where there’s a higher comfort level with other approaches, or a frustration that the big vendors aren’t flexible or responsive enough to meet their changing needs.

WEBTEXT

Now I want to go from perhaps the best-known name in messaging to one that you may not yet have heard of. I’m focusing on this company because they are an enterprise messaging pure play, something that neither of the above companies can claim. Nexmo and Twilio do things other than messaging, but since this post is about the state of messaging, I want to draw attention to companies that are all-in. Furthermore, with messaging getting hot now, there are lots of smaller players and startups out there, so WEBTEXT is here to make sure you don’t overlook what’s happening at this end of the market.

WEBTEXT is noteworthy not just for being solely focused on messaging, but also with a core focus on the contact center. They do support other forms of messaging, but the broader context for this post is UC&C, and by now it should be clear that the contact center is a major opportunity for messaging players. Nowhere is the disconnect greater between changing communications expectations among customers and what businesses are able to support, and this is the sweet spot for WEBTEXT.

With customer care being a top priority for management these days, they are coming to understand what’s at stake when customers try to communicate with messaging, and their contact center is handcuffed because they don’t have the right tools. Consumer technology has simply changed faster than their ability to adapt, and this is compounded by the fact that the incumbent vendors haven’t changed fast enough either.

This is exactly the void that WEBTEXT addresses on three levels. First, they have correctly identified messaging as the key channel that’s driving customer engagement, at least among digital natives. This trend is accelerating, and as IoT and chatbots start to reshape the customer journey, messaging will be at the heart of all this constant communication.

Second, their go to market strategy. They recognized a shortcoming among the major vendors in terms of integrating UC with the contact center. There is a growing need for these spaces to work more closely together, and unlike Nexmo and Twilio, that offer voice along with messaging in an attempt to disrupt the major UC vendors, WEBTEXT has avoided voice and instead partnered with the market leaders.

Rather than aiming to provide full integration for the entire UC suite across these spaces – where the value is yet to be proven – WEBTEXT has focused solely on the messaging piece, which itself has plenty of integration challenges. As per the overall tenor of this post, text is the most pressing need in terms of what’s missing in customer care, and that’s the pain point they are addressing.

As a result, they are today the only messaging CPaaS platform that integrates with every Cisco and Avaya contact center, Genesys, as well as Oracle and Salesforce service cloud.  For example, the native messaging capabilities for Cisco Spark do not integrate with Cisco’s contact center offerings, and the same holds for Avaya with Zang and their contact center portfolio.

Third, these vendor relationships allow WEBTEXT to offer plug and play vendor API’s that enable contact centers to painlessly deploy messaging. With WEBTEXT, for example, contact centers using these platforms can allow agents to initiate messaging with customers to their mobile phones from the desktop. Agents can also switch to text while on a voice call, giving the customer choice on the fly for how they want to communicate. Another use case would be to allow customers to move out of an IVR queue and start a messaging-based chat session.

In this regard, WEBTEXT is really a vertical solution, since they have deep integrations with the leading contact center vendors as well as the leading messaging platforms/services. This approach makes WEBTEXT distinct from Nexmo and Twilio, and that’s why I’m featuring them in my analysis. Like voice, messaging is complex territory, and having completed the aforementioned integrations – with others coming - WEBTEXT should be seen more as a logical CPaaS partner for both vendors and carriers, rather than a direct competitor, which is more like how these other two companies are being positioned. 

Refresh Coming for my Blog and Website

I've been working on this do-over for some time, and it's getting real close. The blog you're seeing now has been running here since 2005, and the same is true for my website.

Not only is all of this getting a full updating - am working with a great web design team, and referrals are welcome! - but both entities are getting combined. So, my blog will now be folded into my website, just like how the rest of the world seems to do things. I'm still old school, and have resisted this for a long time, but it's futile, so onward we go.

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Is Microsoft's Purchase of Linkedin a Good Idea?

Big story and a big question. It's not quite at the heart of the UCC world, but close enough that it needs to be further understood. That's what we addressed in our latest UCStrategies podcast, and it's running on our portal now.

This is Microsoft's biggest acquisition to date, and their track record hasn't be great, generally overpaying and under-delivering. They are Skype's third owner, and you'd be right to question why this name has taken over from Lync, but clearly, they're sticking to it. MSFT paid a similar amount for Nokia, which was written off about a year ago, and a few years before that their pricy acquisition of aQuantive met a similar fate.

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Interactions 2016 - Reimagine the Future

How do you reimagine the future if it hasn't happened yet?

Hmm. Sounds like an oxymoron, but if you listen closely to what's been on tap during this week's Interactions 2016, it's not. The present is changing so quickly, that whatever notions we have about the future are very likely based outmoded thinking. Some of that thinking is outmoded by generations - but it still persists - but other thinking is outmoded by only a few years. The latter is kinda scary, but just look at our kids - what's cool to them right now probably wasn't even invented six months ago.

Interactive Intelligence definitely gets this, and that's the messaging they're trying to impart to the roughly 2,000 people here in Indy. Both customers and channel partners need to reimagine the future, and ININ provided us with a pretty good glimpse about the future they want to take the contact center market into.

Hold that thought for now, as time is short with this being my getaway day. Several of us at UCStrategies were here, and we'll be doing a podcast about our takeaways next week, plus, I'll be doing my own writeup on what that future just might look like, so stick around.

Until then, here are some photos from the conference, with highlights from a few different stages, both non-musical and musical. :-)

Head of Whoopass Marketing, Dan Rood - these guys know how to have fun, and it's great to see such a youthful team at Interactive - I think that's a big part of why they're doing so well.
Keynoter Salim Ismail - way too many big ideas to absorb about the future and disruption, so run out and buy his book. Better yet, order it from Amazon and have a drone deliver it in ten minutes. Or, before long, you can just download it to a chip that ultrasound waves will gently implant into your brain. Yeah, he's that kind of guy - loved it!
I know, they just had the Indy 500 here, and this car isn't going to set any land speed records. However, it's a great example of exactly what Salim was talking about. On demand driving - another form of car rental - just like with bikes - and it's ideal for cities. You pay at the kiosk, get authenticated to drive the car - it's all charged up, this one at post 01, and you're off. Just drop it off when done at any Blue Indy spot downtown and walk away. We talk about ease of use as a driver for getting people to adopt new technology like UC - same thing here - what could be easier?
PureCloud demo time - yes, it works as advertised
If you don't believe those guys, here are real customers talking about it with Dan Rood
Mr. Interactive, CEO Don Brown - great as always
Ed Omland of Amazon Web Services - explaining why the cloud is so powerful and why their partnership with ININ is so strong - agreed.
Fun time - Canadian Music Night at Tastings wine bar - I'm on the left playing guitar. Thanks to Lynn McCready for the photo!
More fun - Open Mic at the Slippery Noodle last night. We came out in big numbers, and our steady rolling SIPTones man, Steve Leaden sat in on drums for bit - he was great. The SIPTones didn't get to play at ININ this year, but hopefully next year. If you want us back, make some noise and let 'em know. If you didn't see us play last year at Interactions, here's the highlight video of our show.



Mitel's Crystal Ball - Business Communications in 2025

Well, sort of. Everyone needs to put thought leadership out there to enhance their brand, and few things grab attention more than looking into the future. It's always fun to speculate, but at the rate things keep changing, I'd be happy predicting accurately six months out.

Anyhow, this is one of the ways analysts stay busy, and Mitel recently polled a bunch of us for our thoughts. As you know, Mitel recently went through some serious re-branding, and it's still early to say where/how it's paying off. Well, they've pulled all this together, and the results have just been published in an e-book format.

I'm in there, along with several others you likely follow, so this provides a nice cross-section of views, including off-the-floor predictions from Enterprise Connect 2015 attendees. That's a lot of free advice, and the price you pay is viewing some promotion at the end showing case studies of how Mitel customers are solving problems using all the wonderful technology we've been crystal balling about.

Fair enough, but overall, it's a good read, and of course, a great way for analysts like me to share our views on where technology is going. You can download the e-book here, and if you want to chat further, drop me a line any time.

Your Boss Just Heard from your Tablet - You're Fired

If you believe this scenario is closer to being fact than science fiction, then you'll probably agree with me that the world is becoming a less friendly place. Thanks to technology, things will work more efficiently, and ideally, people will too.

Well, to some extent this is true, but the always-on lifestyle, coupled with the all-encompassing Internet of Things (and its cousin IoE) means there will be strings attached. You already know what some of those look like, and these are the trade-offs we make to manage the many moving parts that define our modern lives.

Without being too philosophical, that's the gist of my current Rethinking Communications column now running in TMC's Internet Telephony Magazine. The Internet of Things is going to take us in many new directions, and before going too far along that path, I hope you're giving this careful thought. If handled right, all this new connectivity can truly help us work smarter, but things can also run amok in the wrong hands.

If you want to think about this with a smile, my article contains some pre-Internet references to classic Woody Allen and Stanley Kubrick, and after reading it, you just might have a different take on IoE - hurry, before it's too late!

October Writing Roundup

October turned out to be a good month for writing activity as well as new projects, so no complaints here. I still don't know if there's a causal link, but something tells me if I keep writing, business will keep coming. I'm good with that, and I hope you are too, as this virtuous circle keeps me close to the trends driving the comms space, which is central to what I need to do as an analyst. On that note, here the highlights from October that I think you'll still enjoy reading if you didn't catch them first time around.

Hits and Misses - 6 Takeaways from Unify's Circuit Launch, UCStrategies, Oct. 30

More Ado About doing nothing with UC, part 2, Adtran UC blog, October 30

Is VoIP Cool Enough for you Yet?, Toolbox.com, October 30

Is the Internet of Things Good for your Business?, Internet Telephony Magazine, October issue

Bring your own 'danger', am cited in this feature about BYOD security risks - Toronto Star, October 20

Who are you really selling to with UC?, Adtran UC blog, October 16

Three Things you Lose with VoIP, Toolbox.com, October 15

What to look for in a Contact Center Solution when Deploying Lync with UC, UCStrategies, October 7

UCStrategies Interview with Jon Arnold About the State of UC, UCStrategies, October 3

Hits and Misses - 6 Takeaways from Unify's Circuit Launch

Earlier this week, I was part of the UCStrategies podcast that did a collective debrief of last week's Unify event, along with the Tuesday launch of Circuit. By now, I'm sure you've seen lots of buzz from Unify as well as the industry at large, so there's lots to digest.

As someone who there last week first-hand, I had more to say than my allotted three minutes on the podcast, so I've pulled my thoughts together and distilled things down to six takeaways. In the spirit of balance that characterizes being an analyst, I've got three hits and three misses. There is lots to like about Circuit, but there are definitely shortcomings, and if you want to know more, please read my post that's running now on the UCStrategies portal. I hope you like it, and would love to hear your thoughts - and no doubt, Unify would as well.

Unify, Ansible and now Circuit - UCStrategies Podcast

Many of us with UCStrategies attended last week's Unify summit for analysts and consultants, where we got an up-close preview of Circuit. This is the go-to-market name for their new offering which is based on the well-received Project Ansible. Beyond that, it's hard to concisely say what Circuit is, but you'll catch on really fast.

Speaking of fast, we've never turned around a podcast so quickly at UCStrategies, and for that, hats off to moderator Dave Michels. We recorded this yesterday so it would be ready for posting just after 10am EST today, which is when Unify's press embargo ended. It pays to play nice and respect the rules - otherwise we'll never get invited by back to swank spots like Scottsdale - can you blame us?

Since the Circuit news is spreading its way across the Web now, I hope you add our podcast to the list to stay uber-informed. You won't go wrong with our group, as we shared a range of opinions based on our first-hand exposure to Circuit last week. It's a mixed bag for sure, and I'll have more to say in my own analysis of Circuit, hopefully by tomorrow. Until then, here's the podcast, including time markers for when each of us is speaking.

Unify Analyst Summit - Quick Thoughts

Am at the 2014 Unify Global Analyst Summit in Scottsdale, AZ, and can only share some high level thoughts. This isn't a long event, but it has a purposeful, singular focus. Unify has been a work in progress for a while now, both as an organization and as an enterprise-grade vendor in the ever-changing UC&C space.

Most of what we're hearing is under embargo til early next week, so we're getting a preview of things to come, and no doubt you'll be hearing about it in a couple of days. Basically, we're getting a deep dive on Project Ansible, their UC platform, and suffice to say they have something bigger and better under wraps. That's all I can say for now, but once things go public, I'll have more to share then. In the mean time, I can at least share a few photos of yesterday's executive speakers.

CEO Dean Douglas

CMO Bill Hurley

EVP WW Channels, Jon Pritchard