ITExpo Shout-Out #1 - Panel Session: Customer Service, Evolved

TMCnet's flagship show, ITExpo gets underway next Wednesday, and I'll be there as usual. No complaints going to Florida in February, and I've got a full schedule of vendor briefings, meetings and am moderating two sessions.

The first one is on Friday at 10am, and as the title above suggests, we'll be discussing how technology is impacting customer service, and what businesses need to do to adapt. Joining me will be speakers from Plantronics, Telax, CGS and USAN. It's going to be good, and for more detail, scroll down the Conference Program page here, and when you get to Friday, look for us in the Enterprise Communications track. Hope you can join us!

UCStrategies Special Podcast - Avaya's Chapter 11 News

This was one of those news items that's too big to let pass, and many of us at UCStrategies were keen to share our thoughts on Avaya's long-awaited financial fate. It's easy to view Chapter 11 as a knockout punch, but just look at how the US auto sector rebounded since their financial collapse years ago. Of course, it doesn't always work out - Nortel - but Avaya has strong fundamentals, and with a fresh start financially, they could have a bright future.

Enough from me - you really should give a listen to what we all had to say from a variety of angles. Here's the link to the podcast, and we'd love to hear your thoughts.

My Next Webinar - UC and the Contact Center

Time for another Ziff Davis webinar based on my ongoing industry research. This webinar is about making the case to integrate UC with the contact center. There's a lot of common ground and needs between the contact center and office environments, and I'll explore that ground here.

The webinar is next Thursday, November 10 at 2pm ET. I hope you can join us, and all the details for registration are here.

September/October Writing Roundup

Been a very busy stretch lately, and for some reason, I missed my writing roundup for September. It's a while ago at this point, but there are still some posts you may find of interest if you didn't see them. If you follow me, you'll know most of my posts aren't super time-sensitive.

My focus is more on industry-based trends, and very little on breaking news. I just don't move that fast, and it's surprising how many requests I get from PR reps who think that's what I do. Enough about that - here are the highlights of my writing over the past two months, and I hope you find some things here that you like.

Making Sense of the Messaging Landscape, my blog, Oct. 31

Getting the Message About Messaging, UCStrategies, Oct. 25

How VoIP Facilitates Collaboration - it's Real Time, Toolbox.com, Oct. 18

What Collaboration Features are Essential for my Organization? TechTarget, Oct. 12

The Case for Private Cloud When Considering Hosted Solutions, my blog, Oct. 10

External Collaboration Scenarios that Drive UC, Part 2, Toolbox.com, Oct. 10

My Q&A with Jeff Pulver - MoNage and the Emerging Messaging Opportunity, my blog, Oct. 7

Video Meeting Gateway - Bridging the Islands of Video, my blog, Oct. 3

What Digital Natives will NOT do when Collaborating, Toolbox.com, Sept. 28

"This is Craziness" - my Takeaways from Jeff Pulver's MoNage Event, UCStrategies, Sept. 28

How Digital Immigrants Collaborate, Toolbox.com, Sept. 19

My Video Interview with System Integrator SPS About Collaboration, my blog, Sept. 12

Impact of Disruption on UC Vendors and Providers, Toolbox.com, Sept. 8

Why aren't you using Video?, Internet Telephony Magazine, Sept. 6

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. 

We're on to Kansas City - SCTC Event and Playing with the SIPtones!

Am flying to Boston this morning for a family wedding, and as Coach Belichick would say, from there, it's on to KC. Would love to see Brady's homecoming Sunday, but will be in transit then to KC, where I'm attending next week's SCTC event. It's their 40th anniversary, so it should be pretty special.

In addition to attending, I'm giving a presentation on Tuesday, and Wednesday night, I'll be playing with the SIPtones. Will be on keyboards again, and guitar for one number. More details are in the Events section on my website, and before you know it, I'll be updating it with the next one.

Next Stop - Genesys G-Force, Miami

Summer sure ended fast, and I've already put my shorts away. Doesn't mean I won't see any warm weather til April, though - will be in Miami next week, and other warm places soon after.  

Travel is usually light for me during the summer, but this is when things get going again. I was in Boston for MoNage last week, and next Monday I'll be heading to Miami for  G-Force 2016. This will be my first Genesys event, and now that Interactive Intelligence is in their fold, I'm very keen to see how things are going to fit together. I'll blog and tweet here - #gforce16 and @arnoldjon - as time allows, so come back soon and often!

Why Are We Still Talking to Customers? More From My TMC Column

This week is a rare double-shot from my Rethinking Communications column that I write monthly for TMCnet's Internet Telephony Magazine.

Earlier this week, I posted about my latest column running in the current issue, and now it's catch-up time. The title of this article continues the "WHY?" theme I've been running with, simply because one question leads to another, and before you know it, a lot of things we take for granted in the UC&C space aren't really that certain.

This post actually ran in a summer issue of Internet Telephony Magazine, but let's just say it fell through the cracks a bit with the publisher, and it's only coming to light for me now. Better late than never, and I still think you'll find it a good read. Don't be shy, I'd love to find out!

Welcome to my New Site!

Blogging has gone quiet for a while, not just because I was on vacation where there wasn't much broadband, but because we've been getting this new site ready for launch.

The site went live about a week ago. but the blog wasn't fully ported over until last night. I can finally blog again, and there's a big backload of posts coming.

For now, I just want to get the early word out about my new site. As you may know, until now my blog and my website were standalone entities. I'm very old school, and when I started out as an indie back in 2005, I had a strict church and state thing about keeping my objective content/analysis separate from the commercial side of my business. Being an indie analyst, I have to do both telling and selling, and felt they needed to be kept separate.

Things are different now, and being established, I can live with these under the same roof, and that's a big part of what's happening with this refresh. Apart from that, my practice has evolved since 2005, and so has my messaging, and hopefully the new site reflects that.

I hope you stick around and explore the site, and better yet, let me know what you think. There's still a lot of content coming, so I'm treating this as a soft launch. The basic content is in place, so if you're trying to figure out what I do and how I can be of service, you can do that now. I have tons of links coming that provide examples of my work, so the site will be in beta mode for a bit.

Until then, I hope you like what you see, and there's a signup form if you want to follow my blog, as well as links to my Twitter and Linkedin feeds. Stay tuned, lots more to come!

New JAA Content - Two Papers for ShoreTel

Been busy on several fronts, and ShoreTel is one of them. Last week was my well-attended webinar on how to choose the right deployment model for UC.

That webinar was based on my recently-completed white paper for them, titled "Cloud, Hybrid or Onsite: Assessing Deployment Options for UC."

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