Apple Business Chat - Messaging, Mobility and Brand - My Current No Jitter Post

I write a regular column for No Jitter, and it's long been a rich resource for the collaboration space. My followers will know that messaging has been a current focus of my research, and Apple's Business Chat has been on my radar for a bit.

I'll be writing and speaking about this topic elsewhere over the next few weeks, and hopefully this post will pique your interest enough to keep tabs on me during this time, and beyond. With that, here's the link to my No Jitter post, and if you like my analysis, I'd love to hear from you, and so would the folks at No Jitter!

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August Writing Roundup

It's hard to focus on work during the late days of summer, but I still managed to do my fair share of writing in August. Here's a digest of highlights that kept me busy (but by no means all of my posts/articles), and a sign of what I'll be working on and speaking about as my conference schedule resumes for the fall.

Sidebar - my website evolution continues, and there will be updates coming over the next few weeks. That includes the start of a program to support my blog subscribers, where I'll share exclusive content such as research notes or podcasts with colleagues about current events.

My blog subscription base is growing, especially among new followers, but I also have many RSS followers. Am happy to have any/all followers, but would prefer direct subscribers, and to drive that, I'm starting to offer exclusive content. So, if you're following my blog via RSS, I urge you to consider a direct subscription, which you can do here, or on just about any page on my website.

Enough said - here's my writing roundup for August:

Reimagining Voice in the Age of AI, UCStrategies, Aug. 31

How do you Prepare if your UC Provider is Acquired?, TechTarget, Aug. 30

Innovation and Disruption - Know the Difference, Toolbox.com, Aug. 29

Customer Care for the Digital Generation, Upstream Works Blog, Aug. 23

Formulating Your Collaboration Strategy - be a Leader, Toolbox.com, Aug. 18

The Benefits of Improved Agility with Collaboration, RingCentral Blog, Aug. 16

Selling Management on Omnichannel - it's a Driver for Customer Care, Toolbox.com, Aug. 10

Habitat Soundscaping - and Now for Something Completely Different, No Jitter, Aug. 8

What Omnichannel Brings to Collaboration and Customer Care, Toolbox.com, Aug. 3

The Benefits of Improving Workflows with Collaboration, RingCentral Blog, Aug. 2

Customer Care for the Digital Generation - Guest Post for Upstream Works

I've been exploring thought leadership themes with Toronto-based Upstream Works Software recently, and my first guest post has been published now on their blog portal. As I normally do with direct clients, my analysis isn't about their offerings; rather, my focus is on industry trends that impact their served market, which in this is case is cloud-based customer care.

Their site has a good repository of blog content and other resources, and it's worth reviewing to stay current in this space. Of course, I hope you'll give my post a read, and your feedback is welcome any time. 

My Next Webinar - Digital Assistants for Collaboration and Customer Care

I've been doing webinars with Ziff Davis on a steady basis lately, and the next one is about digital assistants. This is another way of saying chatbots, and what I'm really talking about is the emergence of conversational interfaces as a way to leverage AI to make both collaboration and customer care more effective.

There's a lot to explore here, and I'll be providing an overview of current trends and opportunities based on my current research in this space. The webinar is next Tuesday, August 22 at 2pm ET, and I hope you can make it. As always, Ziff Davis webinars are free, and you can register here.

Genband Perspectives17 - Quick Take

As usual, I just have time to post a quick take on Day 1 from the conference, along with some photos. I'll be writing up my thoughts in a separate post after the event, and will be posting that on UCStrategies, so watch for that over the next few days.

In short, Genband is making big strides with Kandy as a platform play to help carriers compete in today's hyper-competitive market. Much like how Cisco is focusing heavily on Spark for their collaboration story - instead of all the other pieces around this LOB - Kandy is the main story so far here. Genband is transitioning away from hardware - but it's still the biggest part of their revenues - and so far, we haven't heard anything about those lines of business. So, to whatever extent Kandy is actually generating revenue, it's the big focus here, and perhaps it's necessary to keep their carrier customers in-house rather than drifting over to the unspoken competitor, BroadSoft.

That said, there's a lot to like about what Genband is doing with Kandy, and I'll have more to say about that in my proper analysis. So far, Genband has done a great job articulating the opportunity for carriers to differentiate via Kandy, but takeup has been slower than expected, and there are lots of reasons around this.To be fair, we heard about lots of success stories, so good things are happening here. Otherwise, Genband is in a "quiet period" with Sonus, so nothing is being said about where that's going, but it seems like a logical move, especially if you view Genband as a consolidator along the lines of what Mitel is doing, most recently with Toshiba.

The other partnership of note is with Five9, and we heard a good update from Wendell Black. Adding contact center may seem like a stretch for Genband, but the integration with Kandy makes this an appealing option, especially for SMBs who are frustrated by how long it takes for their incumbent vendor to make changes to enable a better customer experience. Given how service providers are being wooed away by the likes of Twilio and various OTT players, this is an important move by Genband to help their customers retain more business, especially as the lines between UC and the contact center become blurred.

Time's up, so I'll stop now, and hope you'll read my follow-on post after I digest everything from the conference. Until then, here are some photos to give you a sense of the vibe here from Day 1. Otherwise, you can keep tabs in real time by following the conference twitter feed - #GBP17.

patrick Joggerst, EVP

patrick Joggerst, EVP

CEO David walsh

CEO David walsh

Judit andrasi, ceo immmr

Judit andrasi, ceo immmr

network evolution panel

network evolution panel

the soul tones - great band, keeping the energy level high

the soul tones - great band, keeping the energy level high

this private tour on monday was really great and would love to see a game here someday.

this private tour on monday was really great and would love to see a game here someday.

view from the press box - everything is original here for the 3rd oldest ball park in mlb - even the phones!

view from the press box - everything is original here for the 3rd oldest ball park in mlb - even the phones!

the WS trophy case - a lot of what we saw isn't open to the public - this stuff was great.

the WS trophy case - a lot of what we saw isn't open to the public - this stuff was great.

great statue for dodger legend #1

great statue for dodger legend #1

only in la - palm trees, baseball and a great skyline view

only in la - palm trees, baseball and a great skyline view

My New White Paper - Real-Time Collaboration and Proactive Customer Service

Been plenty busy the past few months, and have just finished up white papers for two clients. One of them is CafeX, a contact center vendor I've been following for a while. They've developed some strong real-time applications with an analytics layer that can really help contact centers cope with today's CX requirements. 

The white paper is titled "The Value of Real-Time Collaboration and Analytics to Drive Proactive Customer Service", and was just launched yesterday. Here's the link to download it from their website, and if you do that, I'd love to hear your thoughts.

My Q&A with David Crook, Enghouse Interactive

The scope of my ongoing industry research is broad, and from time-to-time, it includes doing executive interviews. Sometimes those interviews turn into longer conversations, and when there's a good story to tell, I'll share it here on my blog. The following Q&A is a good example of that, where I got to connect with David Crook, who recently joined Enghouse Interactive as their SVP of Sales and Marketing, Americas. 

Enghouse Interactive is quietly doing good things in the contact center space, and it's easy for that to get lost in the noise as bigger players have recently been making pretty big moves that take up most of the headlines. Being based in Toronto, I'm always happy to feature Canadian companies, but as a marketing guy, what's particularly interesting to me, is how David's role covers both sales and marketing. Much like we're seeing contact center and UC coming together, this mix is going to be interesting to watch. That's my spoiler alert, so it's time to stop talking, and let David take over.

Let’s start with the present, and work back a bit. When did you come over to Enghouse Interactive, and what attracted you most to the company?

I came to Enghouse Interactive in January of 2017. Before accepting the position, I was aware of Enghouse Systems as an acquisitive software company with a strong balance sheet; plus, they are a Canadian success story. Being Canadian myself, the company’s heritage was quite appealing.

After digging a little deeper, I saw that Enghouse Interactive was a great company with exciting technology that is uniquely positioned to advantage of the disruption in the contact centre market. What sealed the deal for me is the people at Enghouse – an energized, veteran group that is passionate about their work.

Now let’s hear about your role as SVP Americas for  Sales and Marketing. How much is this about taking over from your predecessor, and how much is this a new role within Enghouse Interactive, or one you’re in to transform?

The role of Senior Vice President of North America Sales & Marketing is new for Enghouse Interactive. The company recognized a need for and benefit of having one voice to lead both sales and marketing, as the two disciplines must be aligned for long-term growth. My mandate is to build on the success of my predecessors and help our team achieve new levels of performance. It’s an exciting challenge as we’ve raised the bar for everyone, setting higher expectations across the board and establishing a predictable operating rhythm.

To define the role, what’s the core vision, and what priorities are driving your goals for 2017?

We give our customers choice and control. The vision for Enghouse Interactive is be the world’s leader in omni-channel contact centre software and services. We want to own the customer interaction solutions marketplace by providing our partners and customers with the right applications in whatever environment they desire (i.e. public cloud, on-premise, managed private cloud or hosted on any UC platform), and the choice of consumption by subscription or perpetual licensing.

As such, our priorities for 2017 are two-fold: 1) tell the Enghouse story, and 2) enable and engage our channel partners

What specific opportunities you’re targeting from a S&M perspective? How much focus are you placing on vertical markets, and if so, which ones? What about on the product side – what problem sets are you focusing on right now? How about new markets or segments that you’re looking to move into for 2017?

Healthcare and financial services are two verticals that continue to present us with opportunities, as new regulations like M.A.C.R.A. and the DOL Fiduciary Standard, respectively, are creating new demand.

Consumers today want an effortless service experience and we understand what businesses need to address this reality. Enghouse Interactive offers a myriad of solutions that cater to small, medium and enterprise customers in need of a sophisticated, customized, omni-channel platform. As a global software company with expansive resources, we have the means, ability and expertise to integrate our products with multiple telephony platforms and applications – a tall order in today’s vendor ecosystem.

I also want to highlight our success in the Microsoft Partner Community. Not only is our Communications Center platform one of the most widely-deployed contact centers on Skype for Business, but TouchPoint Attendant is one of the first operator consoles native to both Skype4B and Office365.

James Skay, senior product marketing manager, Skype for Business Developer Platform, put it best by explaining how Enghouse Interactive helps Microsoft fill gaps in its portfolio by providing contact center, attendant console, and other applications that are native to their platform.

Looking more broadly at the contact center market, what are the top forms of disruption or evolution that you’re seeing? These are impacting everyone, and how do you see Enghouse Interactive adapting to stay ahead of the curve? Could you comment on this for both the overall portfolio as well as how you go to market?

There is a lot of disruption in the contact centre market today: traditional ‘legacy’ vendors are struggling as native cloud players are emerging; and industry giants are invading the ‘telecom or ICT’ space. The last 18 months has shaken up the market, marked by mergers, acquisitions and bankruptcies.

Debt-free with a very strong balance sheet (and a parent company with a $1 billion+ market cap), Enghouse Interactive offers customers stability in these volatile times.

Our customers, as well as the marketplace at-large, are demanding greater flexibility to meet the continuously evolving needs of consumers - in real time. Unfortunately, many companies feel trapped. They want choice and control from a vendor they can trust to deliver. That is what Enghouse Interactive offers.

I believe that change breeds opportunity and the organizations that can execute effectively will be able to capitalize on disruption.

Speaking of go to market, let’s shift now to your partner ecosystem. With so much change in the market, how do Enghouse’s partners need to adapt, and what do you need to see from them to have continued success? Conversely, what do they need from Enghouse, and how are your partner programs evolving to ensure Enghouse stays top of mind with them?

With so much change it is very easy to just follow the pack, to become a “me too” in search of revenue. Perhaps we are seeing that with a few partners.

Our partners have had success – and will continue to have success because each of them brings a unique value proposition to the market. Choice and control with great technology.

Unlike so many vendors, we do not have an appetite to compete with our partners. We believe in “win/win” partnerships that go beyond chasing revenue at all costs.

Continuous improvement is a sign of a good organization, and our commitment to partner enablement and education has never been stronger. We will provide comprehensive “air cover” to partners sales teams digitally, and with those who influence buying decisions. Central to this task is concise messaging and communications, which manifests into value for our partners every day.   

To close out here, working back a bit, you gained solid experience with Avaya. What best practices and lessons learned have you brought over to Enghouse?

I learned many things at my time with Nortel and Avaya – those were invaluable experiences. One of many best practices is the important foundation of a partner ecosystem. And that’s why enabling and engaging our partners is a priority in 2017.

As with the contact center space, the S&M space is evolving, especially in the use of analytics to better engage and address core business challenges. In that regard, what new best practices do you expect to add in 2017?

To reiterate my earlier point, I would say that precision messaging and communications are essential.

Sales and marketing teams work best with prescriptive structure and discipline. Everyone knows and plays their position, working together towards a common goal. Each of us is accountable and sales and marketing success will be measured quantitatively.

May Writing Roundup

If you follow me, you'll know the whole month has been non-stop, but aside from all the travel to conferences and speaking spots, I managed to keep a pretty full slate of writing going - mostly for clients, but also for my own blogging. Here's a digest of my activity, and that will give you a sense of the trends I'm seeing in the collaboration and customer care spaces right now.

Tech Leader Talk - Digital and Customer Experience: Are We There Yet? - Facebook link to live-streamed video, May 30, Schulich School of Business, Global Alumni Network 

NEC and Frank Viola - "Raising a Family" - My Q&A on Frank's Retirement, May 30, my blog

How Can Near Real-Time Communication Modes Offer Context?, May 25, TechTarget

CX17 - Genesys and ININ - Quick Take, May 25, my blog

Thinking Clearly About the Cloud for Collaboration, May 23, Toolbox.com

Our Drivers of the Digital Economy Event - Thanks for Coming all!, May 17, my blog

Messaging, Slack and Facebook - It's Complicated, May 15, Internet Telephony Magazine (am also cited in three other articles in their Q2 edition - links are here)

Vertical Market Collaboration Scenarios - Healthcare, May 12, Toolbox.com

NEC Advantage 2017 - Quick Update, May 12, my blog

Takeaways from Cisco's Customer Care Analyst Event, May 10, UCStrategies

Assessing the Total Impact of Digital Transformation, May 8, Toolbox.com

How the Customer Journey Drives CX, May 2, Toolbox.com

Messaging, Chatbots, AI - Finding the Enterprise Opportunity, May 2, No Jitter

CX17 - Genesys and ININ - Quick Take

This my third U.S. conference this month, and I'm speaking at two others back home in Toronto, so am now at that saturation point where everything is a big blur. However, I got to the airport early, found a quiet spot, and wanted to get a quick post out while I'm still in the moment.

I just want to share some high level thoughts here, and will have a more considered analysis next week, and hopefully you'll stay with me for that. First off, having been to several Interactions events in Indy, not having Don Brown  here to share his vision was a big sign of how much has changed in a year. Those are big shoes to fill, and  given how much integration has been done by Genesys in a short period of time, kudos are due to CEO Paul Segre and his team.

The contact center space is going through unprecedented - but expected - disruption, so much so, I don't think that term will be in use much longer. End users and vendors alike are going through an existential crisis with all this new technology, and from what I saw, Genesys gets that in spades. I didn't attend the technical breakout sessions, but I hardly heard any references to IVR, ACD, call recording, etc. - the stock in trade of most contact centers.

Today, it's all about omnichannel, CX and customer journey, and the new vernacular is about AI, machine learning, automation, chatbots, conversational interfaces, journey visualization, biometrics, and of course, AR/VR. Digital transformation is definitely happening here, and Genesys has a pretty good handle not just on what is happening, but how their customers need to adapt.

Genesys, too, needs to adapt, and I really liked the overall tone of their messaging, mainly around their G-NINE framework, along with how they've branded their three core offerings - PureCloud, PureConnect and PureEngage - into a complete product family - the Genesys Customer Experience Platform.

All of this needs unpacking, and I'll get to that in an upcoming post. Until then, here are two key takeaways that stuck with me, along with a few photos for posterity. I really hope we get back to Indy at some point, but this may well have been the last one now that ININ is fully in the Genesys fold.

1.  Meet Kate - that's their new chatbot, but there's much more to the story. Gender politics aside - yes, that's a thing - what stuck with me was how they call this "blended AI".  The language for our brave new digital world is still evolving, and since nobody really owns it, we can call these new things whatever we want. For now, that term seems to work, with the idea being that Kate strives to leverage micro-services/applications efficiently when interfacing with machines (for lack of a better word - that's definitely a holdover from pre-digital times that will surely fade away), but also with empathy and a personal touch when dealing with people - both customers and employees.

2. Branding update. So, the "big reveal" at the end of the general sessions was ably handled by CMO Merijn te Booijj. This initiative was done thoughtfully and with purpose, and he did a great job explaining it. Given all the integration with ININ, and their future-forward vision for CX, there's a lot of ground to cover when coming up with new branding that's going to hit the mark. Being a marketing guy, I really admire good branding, and I'd say they've succeeded. The new logo is a bit amorphous - almost like mutating cells - but hey, isn't that what's really been happening with Genesys, evolving into a higher life form, so to speak? Maybe. More on that later, and if you haven't seen the new logo/tagline yet, it's in the gallery below.

Not quite the Indy 500 starting line, but my timing was good here.

Genesys CEO Paul Segre

Not quite the iconic monolith slab from Kubrick's 2001 Space Odyssey, but at least here, the message is easier to understand - "moments connected" - I hope!  :-)

I got to play again with the SIPtones here on Tuesday night, and it was a lot of fun. If you were there, I'd love to hear from you or see your pix!

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 Speaking Event: The Digital Experience - Are We There Yet?

If you follow me, you'll know May is an unusually busy month - 3 out of town industry events, 2 local speaking events, and 1 music gig with the SIPtones in Indianapolis next Tuesday.

Tonight, I'm speaking at Jeff Pulver's networking event here in Toronto about chatbots, AI and enterprise messaging, and we're expecting a big crowd. It's not too late to join us, however, if you're free.

Next up on the local front, I'm leading a panel session on May 30. Also downtown, it's with my MBA alma mater - Schulich - at their Tech Alumni Group. They do quarterly events, and I'm hosting the panel for the next one, focused on the impact of digital transformation on both the employee experience and the customer experience. 

We have a great lineup, and joining me will be speakers from Cisco Canada, Sears Canada, the Compass Group, and Couch & Associates. I'll be socializing this more as the date nears, but we're ready to promote it now, and if you register before May 26,  the registration fee is only $20. If you're local, hope you can join us!

Takeaways from Cisco's Customer Care Analyst Event

Last week, I was in Montreal for this event, and wearing my UC Expert hat, I wrote up my thoughts for UCStrategies. The post is running now on the portal, and I hope you find it a good read. As always, sharing and comments are welcome.

Go Time for May - First Stop, Montreal and Cisco

I'm in Montreal about to start Day 2 for Cisco's 2017 Customer Care Analyst event. Been really good so far, and more to come today. I'll be writing about this shortly, so stay tuned.

After this, I'm in Phoenix for NEC's event next week, then I'm speaking in Toronto for a networking event hosted by Jeff Pulver about the chatbot/AI space. Week after that, I'm in Indy for the Genesys/ININ event, plus am playing piano there as part of the SIPtones - that should be fun. Following that, I'm speaking again in Toronto at a networking event hosted by my MBA alma mater, Schulich, running a roundtable discussion about digital transformation. 

Something different every week this month, so never dull, that's for sure. Somehow, I'll get my regular set of writing done, along with finishing off two white papers and prepping for a webinar I'm doing later this month. It's go time, and the Cisco folks are ready to start here - out for now, back soon.

Outbound Communication and Taking Contact Centers to the Next Level

That's the title of my latest guest post to the RingCentral blog. There's a good chance you don't follow it, and I'm just one of many third party contributors, so it's good resource for current trends in UC and customer care. I hope you give my post a read, and from there, I'm sure you'll find other posts of interest as well.

CafeX Analyst Event - "an Innovator, not a Disruptor"

Most industry events I attend are with larger companies, and it's great to see how smaller players go to market, especially those who are fairly new and not that well-known. That's what was on tap last week at the CafeX event in San Antonio.

Contact center has been their core focus since starting up in late 2013, and while that remains core, they are doing a strong pivot to video-based collaboration. This move follows recent rounds of Series B and Series C funding, from which Vayyoo was acquired. They've also used that money to build out their partner and channel ecosystems, most notably with Microsoft for Dynamics, and on the distribution front, agreements with Rakuten and Itochu.

CEO Rami Musallam walked us through their progress report, and it's great to see what young companies do at this stage of their growth cycle. The technology seems solid and they're certainly trying to push the envelope to become the "collaboration core" that covers workflows, productivity, CRM and customer engagement.

They're chasing a big slice of the pie - or several pies - for collaboration/communication, and they have the requisite sense of clear purpose and confidence to win. I could definitely feel that vibe in the room, and as is often the case, success will depend less on technology, and more on go-to-market execution and building up mindshare.

Of course, that's why we were there, and Rami updated us on an impressive roster of both customers and partners - not to be shared - along with solid YoY growth rates and gross margins. So traction is happening, and they're getting their share of industry recognition/awards.

Now, they just need to get better known, so much of 2016 was spent on branding CafeX, and more recently, ramping up their collaboration suite that has come out of Vayyoo, Chime.  While we didn't get a breakdown on revenues by lines of business, it's pretty clear that much is expected from Chime. We got an extensive briefing on the three flavors, Chime Spaces, Chime Meetings and justchimein.com - respectively for "objective-driven collaboration", "pervasive collaboration", and "cloud-based meetings for anyone".

I wasn't alone in wondering about the difference between "objective-driven" and "pervasive" collaboration, and we had some spirited discussion about that. Let's just say if we can't figure out, then the market won't either, and it was conceded they have some work to do here. They don't have the luxury of walking before running, and I would cite this as a typical example of a tech-heavy company that hasn't quite refined the value proposition, along with the core marketing messaging. We saw some very compelling use cases, so they know the problems, and seem to have the right solutions, but as you know, this sure is a crowded space.

That's really my main takeaway, because at a high level, we don't really hear much different with Cisco Spark, Skype for Business, and the barrage of updates from the recent Avaya Engage event. To varying degrees, they all do similar things, and while Chime does have some points of difference - especially in working across all browser environments - it's going to be an ongoing challenge to break through.

Speaking of breaking through, nothing underscores the challenges of a small company trying to make its mark more than a much bigger one stepping on their toes. "That AWS thing" cast a shadow over the event, as Amazon had just launched their collaboration suite, also called Chime. Hmm. While CafeX seems confident that their legal response will carry the day - and really, it should - the timing isn't good.

We may never know how this came to be, and whether AWS is just imposing its will - even though CafeX clearly has a better offering. Perhaps AWS will cease and desist, but maybe not and this will become a war of attrition that CafeX can never win. Or maybe AWS just buys CafeX and makes the problem go away. It's too early to tell if this helps or hurts CafeX's cause, but it's out there, and as Rami told us, they want to be "an innovator, not a disruptor". They've got my vote as an innovator, and if things go their way with AWS, they may well end up being a disruptor too. Amazon is usually the one doing the disrupting, and I'll be closely watching to see if they end up being disrupted by "the other" Chime.

Next Stop - San Antonio and CafeX

Been doing a lot of travel lately, and thankfully, this is a short trip. Tomorrow I'll be flying to San Antonio to attend CafeX's analyst event. They've been doing some interesting things lately, including their Supervisor Assist application becoming compliant with Avaya Aura. This allows contact center supervisors to have greater real time capabilities to monitor and support agents while on calls.

Another development of note is their recent acquisition of local startup Vayoo. I've known the people behind Vayoo for years, and having long pivoted away from supporting BlackBerry, they've found a long term home being part of CafeX. Am hoping to catch up with them at the event.

Avaya Engage - My Post-Chapter 11 Takeaways on UCStrategies

Just through a run of back-to-back conferences, with the most recent being Avaya's Engage event in Las Vegas. There was lots to see, hear and learn about, and it was time very well spent. They put on a first-rate conference, and were very attentive in updating us analysts, along with consultants and the media.

I posted some photos of the event the other day, and have now got my thoughts in order. Given Avaya's core strengths, my analysis has been done wearing my UC Expert hat, and the writeup has been posted now to our UCStrategies portal. I hope you like it, and with so much industry attention focused on Avaya's future, I'd love to get your thoughts, and any sharing would be great.

Telus Sourcing Solutions - How Carriers Can Succeed With Hosted Contact Center

I write regularly about the contact center, and cloud-based platforms have emerged as a key trend that’s re-shaping the landscape. On the vendor side, the accelerated push down this path has led to some fallout and consolidation, and it remains to be seen how successful these players will ultimately be. However, in the right hands, contact center as a service – CCaaS – can be a great opportunity, and service providers are one such example.

This is not their native forte, but much like how telephony is a Greenfield business for cable operators, so is the contact center for service providers. The key lies in having the right technology partner, but once that’s in place, as with other add-on hosted services, telcos have a natural entrée with business customers who are struggling in this area.

To illustrate, I had a briefing recently with one of Canada’s leading incumbents, Telus, and they’re a great example of taking a strategic approach to leverage the cloud for developing new business. More specifically, they have a division called Telus Sourcing Solutions, which provides BPO capabilities – business process outsourcing – primarily to mid-market enterprise customers.

BPO is a business unto itself, and while I don’t follow that space, it was very interesting to learn how contact center came into that orbit, along with how well it’s working out for Telus. Cloud is really just the latest iteration of the broader outsourcing trend that’s been running for ages, as IT departments face major challenges trying to manage everything in-house.

Telus has been offering cloud-based services for 12 years, so not only do they know what works for customers, but they also have a lot of cloud customers. Over the course of managing those relationships, Telus has recognized the contact center opportunity that many other service providers have seen globally. Most businesses are still using legacy technology and premise-based systems, and given how the expectations of today’s tech-savvy customers are changing, that model simply cannot keep pace. Aside from having limited multichannel capability, these systems lack deep integration with business-level platforms, are costly to support, and cannot be upgraded sufficiently for what’s needed now.

To address this, they have developed Elements, an end-to-end portfolio for a hosted – outsourced, really – contact center. Depending on the need, business customers can partner with Telus for any/all aspects of a contact center solution, not just for the technology, but also for providing agent staffing. Not quite offshoring, but this is a more complete form of outsourcing than you might associate as coming from a service provider.

This actually speaks to the strength of outsourcing, especially since the underlying technology is so flexible once it’s in the cloud. By partnering with a contact center vendor for the platform, Telus can draw from their broad BPO capabilities to provide the staffing if needed, and tie the offering together by hosting the solution in their data centers. In this regard, service providers are uniquely positioned to enter the CCaaS space, especially with a built-in pool of customers. So long as they have trusted partner status, it’s not a big leap for them to offer contact center.

As noted earlier, the key here is having the right technology partner, and Telus has this in Enghouse Interactive, a Canadian company, I might add. Details about this partnership were announced last month, and I’m just going to touch on three things here.

1.       Contact center is Enghouse Interactive’s core business, and what stood out for Telus is the rich feature set, strong reporting, and ease of use for agents. While these are table stakes for contact center, they’re especially important when offering a turnkey solution from the cloud.

2.       Multitenant platform provides Telus with great flexibility in terms of serving the broader market, especially mid-market and higher. Not only does this allow them to customize offerings for specific customers, but also support smaller line of business contact centers within an enterprise. The latter is a powerful option enabled by the cloud, and gives businesses new options for becoming customer-centric. This is where the value of outsourcing really shines, as businesses have limited means to do this internally, and even if they could, it would take much longer, so there’s a time-to-market issue that represents more value-add. Another benefit is the Opex model, as LOBs will be hard-pressed to get budget for a premise-based contact center, and the multitenant platform can scale to any size of need. Not only that, but it will enable a small LOB operation with the same feature set as an enterprise-scale contact center – again, something that a premise-based system cannot do.

3.       Related to the last point above is extensive third party integration. Prime examples include CRM platforms such as Salesforce.com and Oracle CX, along with Skype for Business, WFM, PCI compliance, speech analytics, outbound notifications and social media platforms. This allows Telus to provide not just a turnkey contact center solution, but a tightly-integrated business solution that brings strategic value to their customers. Given how widely these applications are used, an outsourcing approach can be very attractive for businesses that know how difficult this would be to do on their own. Not only that, but with constant innovation, more applications are coming, so Telus offers a way to future-proof their investment with an always current contact center.

Of course, Telus brings a lot to the table, especially in terms of hosting this in their geographically redundant data centers. This matters in Canada given our large public sector, where Telus is very strong. Government agencies, hospitals, schools and municipalities, for example, are all spread thin across a vast geography, and with national coverage, Telus keeps all that data in-country, so data sovereignty is not an issue. With our small population, many of these operations will be small in scale, making them ideal candidates for CCaaS.

As these entities come to understand what’s possible here, the business case becomes stronger. Not only is the public sector under pressure to be more efficient, but also to be more “customer facing”. This means providing more channels to engage with the public, be more responsive, and deliver more services.

One such scenario would be rolling out mission-critical services like 311, along with being able to support it around the clock. Another would be responding to crisis situations, such as the wild fires that devastated Fort McMurray last year. Working with Telus, local agencies were able to respond quickly with contact center support for fire relief efforts.

This may not be the first thing that comes to mind when looking at opportunities for BPO, but with Telus Sourcing Solutions, it’s a natural fit. In my view, the key to success is a combination of having a vision for how hosted contact center will bring value to business customers, along with the right approach for choosing a CCaaS partner. This post serves to illustrate why I think Telus has succeeded on both counts, and how they represent a model for other service providers to follow.

Avaya Engage - Quick Thoughts

Most of our time here has been in analyst briefing sessions, and our walkabout for the exhibitor showcase was a private tour when the hall was closed to general traffic. So, we've mostly been amongst ourselves and the Avaya team, but that's been plenty in terms of getting up to speed on their offerings and game plan during Chapter 11.  

I'll have more to say about that in a separate writeup, and for now I just wanted to share a few pix of the general vibe here, and overall, it's definitely been good.

CMO Morag Lucey

CMO Morag Lucey

Mark Castleman, VP Corporate Strategy

Mark Castleman, VP Corporate Strategy

Here Jimmy - that's the name of this band (I think!) - very cool. WAY better than having canned music - at 8am, it's a bit early for rocking out and not really the time for dancing, but you know it would be fun if we all just decided to do that.

Here Jimmy - that's the name of this band (I think!) - very cool. WAY better than having canned music - at 8am, it's a bit early for rocking out and not really the time for dancing, but you know it would be fun if we all just decided to do that.

A few shots from the showcase and the Avaya pavilion

A few shots from the showcase and the Avaya pavilion

IMG-20170214-04459.jpg
One of the cool launches at the event - Surge - a new approach to network security, and this is the ONA - Open Network Adapter - its works on any network, not just Avaya's.

One of the cool launches at the event - Surge - a new approach to network security, and this is the ONA - Open Network Adapter - its works on any network, not just Avaya's.

Next Stop - Avaya Engage, Las Vegas

Well, actually, I'm here, and am through Day 1. Was going to post earlier, but had major connectivity issues that kept me offline almost all day. Pretty intensive roadmap sessions for analysts and consultants, and it will take a bit of time to digest things. Lots more to come over the next two days, and soon after, I'll have some takeaways to share. Of course, Avaya is going through some major challenges right now, but there is absolutely a lot happening as they re-work their offerings for the world of digital transformation.

Unconventional view from my room, but if you've been to Vegas, you'll know where I am!

Unconventional view from my room, but if you've been to Vegas, you'll know where I am!