September Writing Roundup

September was fairly quiet on the writing front, but I was plenty busy working on client projects, lining up a busy October for conferences and speaking at events, and more fine tuning for my updated website. That's largely under control now, and I'll have a broader writing digest to share next month.

What are Practical Applications of Contact Center Analytics? - TechTarget, Sept. 28

What Businesses Can Learn from the TacoBot - Toolbox.com, Sept. 28

Apple Business Chat - Tough to Beat on Messaging, Mobility and Brand - No Jitter, Sept. 26

How Device as a Service Makes it Easier to Have the Latest IP Phones - Toolbox.com, Sept. 20

Three Ways How Collaboration Solutions are Disruptive - Toolbox.com, Sept. 11

Habitat Soundscaping - a Fresh Take on Collaboration - Toolbox.com, Sept. 8

 

Market Analysis - How Mobility and Messaging are Transforming CX

Disruption is an understatement to describe the current state of the contact center space, and it goes well beyond Avaya’s Chapter 11 struggles, or the big move by Genesys to acquire Interactive Intelligence. These developments are relatively easy to understand, but as the frame of reference shifts from the “contact center” to “customer care”, other disruptive forces are emerging. Aside from being less easy to understand, they represent new channels of customer engagement that can potentially bypass the existing contact center model altogether.

In the course of my ongoing research, some of these disruptive forces have reached a point where there’s a broader story to tell, and I’ll summarize that in this post. There’s more disruption coming, and I’ll speak to that in due course, either here on my blog, or via one of the media channels I partner with.

Two disruption drivers – mobility and messaging

In my view, much of this disruption is due to the confluence of two major trends in customer care that happen to complement each other very nicely – mobility and messaging. To illustrate, this slide from Mary Meeker’s latest Kleiner Perkins Internet Trends report provides two important takeaways.

First, our engagement with digital media is steadily growing, hitting 5.6 hours per day in 2016. Aside from this being a big part of our day, it also means people are spending less time on the phone, and to provide good customer service, you need to use what they’re using. Secondly, within the digital realm, mobile devices caught up to the PC in 2013, and while PC usage has stagnated, mobility usage has grown 35% since then.

Mobile growth_KP report.png

The rise of messaging goes hand-in-hand with mobility, and this presents some fundamental challenges for contact centers since they remain largely voice-centric. Messaging has been widely adopted in the consumer world, not just for its convenience, but also for economics, especially compared to telephony. These drivers aren’t as strong in the enterprise, so the adoption of messaging applications isn’t as common. Not only that, but most forms of enterprise messaging are automated – such as reminders - not person-to-person. The modes of messaging customers want to use to engage with agents aren’t native to the contact center, so there’s a gap here.   

Furthermore, with customers showing an increasing preference for self-service and using messaging over voice, contact centers are struggling to keep pace. The above mobility trend seems likely to continue, and if this is where they are when customer service is needed, then messaging will become an important channel of engagement for the contact center.

Enter the new players – another form of disruption

Everything happens for a reason, and both mobility and messaging are impacting the contact center value proposition. While the existing vendors will continue to dominate the landscape – namely Avaya, Cisco and Genesys, but also the leading CRM players – their offerings are not built around these drivers. They’re definitely moving in that direction, but existing platforms and operating environments are well entrenched, making it difficult to adapt at the speed the market is moving.

This isn’t to say that all forms of contact will become messaging-based, or that all forms of customer service will occur on mobile devices, but these modes – these preferences – are too big to ignore or underestimate. With customer experience – CX – being a top strategic mantra, management is going to back the horses that do the best job, regardless of how it’s been done until now.

These shifts – and opportunities – haven’t been lost on other players, who are leveraging them to enter this space with a clean slate and a nextgen approach to customer care. In particular, I’m talking about Amazon, Apple and Facebook – all outsiders to the contact center world, but when viewed through the lens of mobility and messaging, it’s not hard to understand why they’re here. So far, these companies are only having a nominal impact on the status quo, but consider four ways in which they can be disruptive:

1.       As outsiders, they can create a new and different CX, built from the ground-up based on today’s needs, wants, preferences, expectations, etc. Like everything else in tech, customer service is becoming increasingly user-driven, and when the tools – and rules – of engagement are in the customer’s hands, that’s what defines CX.

2.       With that shift in the balance of power, CX becomes consumer-driven rather than company-driven. Understanding consumer behavior now becomes paramount, and can you think of any companies in tech better suited for this than Amazon, Apple and Facebook? To varying degrees, today’s CX plays to their strengths in ways that the contact center vendors cannot match. Of course, the converse is also true, but I’m focused on where the market is going, not where it’s been.

3.       Not only do these companies have the scale to compete against anybody, their footprint and strength as consumer brands translates into incredible market power that can change the game if successful. That said, it’s equally true that if they don’t get enough traction, they can – and will - exit the CX space and move on to other things. These companies all have track records of success and failure, and are more likely to take bold risks to reinvent CX than the established contact center vendors. They have everything to gain and little to lose, and there’s a lot at stake given how hard it is to provide a great CX.

4.       Each in their own way is capable of delivering an end-to-end CX that bypasses the contact center altogether. This may be the biggest form of disruption, because they can bring a new value chain to market that is fully within their control and provides an alternative to engage with a company’s contact center operation. I’m not saying this will make the contact center obsolete – not at all. However, they do represent new channels of engagement that may not happen otherwise, and not all forms of CX require dealing with a contact center.

To clarify, here’s a very brief summary of what these companies are doing in the CX space. Each one needs a detailed analysis, but that will be for another time.

Amazon  

Their initial entry with Connect was more of a direct form of competition in the contact center space, and while it’s far from complete, they have the market power to jump right in. They know their limitations – or maybe not – and one improvement they just made was to message-enable Connect. This allows agents in real time to identify if an incoming call supports SMS or Facebook Messenger. If so, the session can shift to being messaging-based, including with a Lex chatbot that can easily be escalated to a live agent, and there are lots of scenarios where that would provide a better CX.

Most contact centers aren’t able to manage inbound messaging inquiries, so this is a big step forward to use this channel in cases where customers prefer that. This can also help agents be more productive, since voice calls can only be handled one at a time, but with messaging, they can manage multiple sessions concurrently.

Other features are no doubt coming that will make Connect more messaging-centric, and better able to support more CX. Not only are they motivated to succeed because the enterprise is an attractive growth opportunity, engaging with customers via Connect provides another touchpoint into the broader Amazon universe. In this regard, they’re not competing against Cisco or Avaya – it’s Facebook and Apple they’re trying to keep pace with for consumer engagement.

Apple  

This represents something very different, but as with Amazon, Business Chat is part of Apple’s broader plan to play in the enterprise market. Business Chat is tied to their new iOS 11, and for this post, the interesting part is how iMessage allows communication with a business from any touchpoint in the Apple ecosystem, such as Safari, Maps, or even Siri. Now, iPhone users can use messaging to directly engage with a business, or do so via the contact center. The latter is certainly not Apple’s forte, and for that, they have done integrations with the likes of Genesys and Saleforce.com.

Now, add Apple Pay to the equation, and iMessage can facilitate a mobile, end-to-end CX, right through to making a purchase and completing the transaction. Not a word need be spoken, and no need to disrupt the session by fumbling around for your wallet. This doesn’t hold for all customer service scenarios, but it all seems pretty intuitive for Apple users, and that’s the point. Why risk the aggravation of a contact center when you can do all this from the palm of your hand while walking about or even driving? As a sidebar, it’s worth noting that AR/VR with iPhone 8 could, at some point, have a role to play in creating a new, Apple-centric CX.

Facebook  

The CX story here is less clear, but there are important parallels to both Amazon and Apple. On the messaging front, Messenger represents a new CX channel, not only due to its large footprint, but with their Payments application, this becomes a massive e-commerce play. The success of WeChat in China validates the mobile payments opportunity, so it’s not hard to see why CX fits into the Facebook angle.

This is also relevant because Facebook is addressing a global market, and they have an advantage over mobile carriers competing for a slice of the payments pie. In many markets, SMS is costly, but being free, Messenger can capture some of that traffic, bringing customers into Facebook’s CX value chain. To counter that, of course, concerns about privacy have dogged Facebook for years, so a lot has to go right to become a trusted CX channel. Even now, however, I think they’re an important part of this changing landscape.

My main takeaways

While it’s clear how mobility is transforming CX, the impact of messaging is less evident at this point. However, we all know that contact centers are trying to shift the workload from voice to text to keep costs down, manage call volumes, and engage using tools preferred by customers. We also know that there are many contact center scenarios that don’t require voice at all, and this points to the growing need to become more messaging-centric. That’s certainly the common thread with Amazon, Apple and Facebook, and their momentum will continue regardless of how the contact center vendors respond.

On the messaging front, contact center vendors will continue evolving, but probably not as quickly as these disruptors, and their progress needs to be closely followed. Another factor in all this is the way these vendors have evolved. They all have messaging-centric platforms as part of their CPaaS story, but these are independent of their contact center platforms. Those worlds are coming together, but at present, their messaging APIs are generic, and don’t integrate specifically with their contact center platforms, or anyone else’s for that matter.

The missing piece is having vendor-specific APIs, where the messaging platform integrates directly with the contact center platform – that’s what’s needed to fully support this emerging nextgen CX. CPaaS offerings like Fuze and Twilio are going in that direction, but it’s not their core business, and probably will never be. To my knowledge, the only pureplay messaging vendor focused on CX – both for the contact center and these disruptors – is WebText. They’re the partner for Amazon’s new messaging capability, and I suspect more is coming.

If you’re trying to follow where the puck is going, they’re an important company to follow. I’ve seen this happen before, where pureplays have brought the innovation needed to take a market to the next level, such as with Acme Packet with SBCs, or Convedia with media servers. It’s too soon to tell how things will unfold with WebText or the CPaaS players, but I’m pretty sure messaging is going to give voice a good run for its money as CX moves along this path.

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

Reimagining Voice in the Age of AI

That's the title of my latest post as a UC Expert with UCStrategies. AI takes many forms, and in the collaboration space, voice is particularly interesting now that devices like Amazon Echo are becoming mainstream. Business applications are emerging now for these devices, and there's lots more to come.

To read more, here's the link to my post, and your comments are welcome, as would be any sharing. I should add that the BC Summit is about a month away, and if you're attending, I'll be speaking more about this topic there.

ucstrategies_logo_redbg.png

My Digital Transformation Series - Part 3: Driving Agility with Collaboration

This is the third post in a series I've been doing for RingCentral about digital transformation, and the response has been strong enough to warrant more analysis, so watch for that soon. During this series, I've examined three specific business-level benefits of digital collaboration, and the role collaboration can play to support them.

For this post, my focus is on business agility, and it's running now on the RingCentral blog page. The other two posts addressed improving workflows and the customer experience - you can read those, along with the other posts I've been writing for RingCentral, here on my profile page.

RingCentra_Jon-Arnold-Digital-Transformation-blog-part-3_Agility.jpg

3 Takeaways from Genband Perspectives17

Following my first-take post about Genband's Perspectives17 event the other day, I've put together my more considered thoughts, and that writeup is running now on the UCStrategies portal.

There 's a lot to like about Genband, and it sure will be interesting to see where things go once the Sonus merger is done. That said, I found their messaging uneven and at times hard to follow, and I'm not the only analyst who feels this way. So, I've tried to present a balanced perspective in my writeup, and whether you were there or not, I'd love to hear your thoughts.

Next Stop - LA and Genband

If I play my cards right, this will be the last industry event for me til fall. Am definitely looking forward to Genband's event next week, but have also been on a continuous run of events since May, and I hear summer might actually start soon.

As always, Genband puts on a great conference, and I'll be flying to LA on Sunday to be there. For a change, I'm just attending the event, but I've got my share of meetings lined up, and given their recent merger with Sonus, and partnership with Five9, there will be lots to catch up on.

For a quick overview of the conference, check out this press release. I'll be blogging and tweeting as time allows, and you can follow the twitter buzz at #GBP17.

June Writing Roundup

Sure was a busy month, and capped off a roughly two-month run of continuous events I either attended or spoke at. Somehow, I got my regular fill of writing done, along with a podcast, a webinar, and the launch of one of my current white papers.

Finally had a chance to exhale, put this digest together for my June writing, and gear up again for what hopes to be a quieter month. Something tells me things won't stay quiet for long, so gotta get back to work now.

Is the Enterprise MoNage-Ready?, UCStrategies, June 29

My New White Paper - Real-Time Collaboration and Proactive Customer Service, my blog, June 28

What UC is Really About in 2017, Toolbox.com, June 27

MY Q&A with David Crook, Enghouse Interactive, my blog, June 23

Mid-Year Pause, 6 Weeks, 7 Events and the State of Collaboration, No Jitter, June 20

What Businesses can Learn from Millennials about Collaboration, Toolbox.com, June 14

New Kudo - Top 10 Telecom Experts to Follow, my blog, June 14

Cloud-Based UC Cost Factors - Network Operations, Toolbox.com, June 12

Why is the Cloud an Essential Component of Your Agile Business?, Enterprise Management 360, Q2 2017 edition, pp. 34-35, June 9

The Five UC Apps You Need, TechTarget, June 6

Canadian Telecom Summit, Quick Take, my blog, June 6

When the Push from Management Becomes the Rationale for the Cloud, Toolbox.com, June 1

Is the Enterprise MoNage-Ready?

That's the title of my current contribution to the UCStrategies portal, where I've been a UC Expert since 2013. I publish monthly there, plus I participate in our Industry Buzz podcasts regularly. All told, it's the best resource out there for the collaboration space, and after reading my post, I encourage you to explore what else we have on offer.

So, my reference to MoNage is a tech conference run by Jeff Pulver that I've been speaking at a few times recently. The event is rapidly evolving, and is doing a great job staying on the leading edge of chatbots, AI and messaging.

I've also been active with several other industry events lately, and based on all this, my message is about how enterprises should be looking at these technologies, especially for how they can enhance collaboration. Lots of implications across the whole collab ecosystem, and I'd love to hear your thoughts after reading my post.

Next Webinar - IP Phones are Hot - Who Knew?

Another month, another webinar. My busy-ness continues, and I've got another Ziff Davis webinar coming up. The date is Tuesday, June 27, and based on the title above, the topic should be self-explanatory.

It's easy to say we're in a post-PBX world, and if you've moved on to other things, you might be surprised to see that innovation is alive and well with desk phones. That's what I'll be addressing during the webinar, and with interest already strong, thought I'd start getting the word out now from my end. For more detail and how to register, here's the link, and I hope you can join us.

Next Stop - Boston - Speaking at MoNage Networking Event

Well, Waltham actually - just west of Boston.

Been socializing this for a while, and am finally getting a chance to post here. Next Tuesday, I'll be joining Jeff Pulver and Chris Fine, as we reprise the networking event we held here in Toronto last month. Aside from that link, all the details for our Waltham event, including the Eventbrite registration form, can be found in the Event Calendar section of my website.

The event is free, and if you're in the area and can join us, we'd love to see you there!

 

 

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

Next Stop - Here - Canadian Telecom Summit

There are SO few industry events in Canada, although lately I've been speaking at a couple, but they're pretty small, at least compared to what I usually attend in the U.S.

Well, we do have one big conference - the Canadian Telecom Summit - and it's been running 16 years now. It's here in Toronto, and I'll be attending over the course of its run next week from Monday to Wednesday. For more details, please see the Event Calendar section of my site.

I'll be tweeting as time allows - #CTS17 - and will post some highlights here in due course.

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!

Next Up - Speaking at Jeff Pulver's MoNage Networking Event in Toronto

For a change, I don't have to travel to speak, and this is actually the first of three events I'll be speaking at over the next few weeks, all in Toronto. That's never happened before, and around this, I have three industry conferences to attend in the US, so I'm a moving target right now.

Busy is good, and I'm happy to support Jeff Pulver as he works to grow his MoNage event - Messaging on the Net - and build community around the emerging space populated by chatbots, AI, machine learning and enterprise messaging.

I spoke at the last MoNage in March (and wrote about it here), and am helping Jeff organize this free event here in Toronto next Tuesday, May 16. I'll be reprising the talk I gave in San Jose along with my colleague Chris Fine, and then Jeff will share his vision for the space and what he's got planned for the next MoNage this October in Boston.

Jeff and I have been promoting the event privately for a while, and registrations have been strong. The space is fairly limited, and hopefully we won't top out, so to make sure you can make it, please register ASAP. All the details are here, including the Eventbrite registration form. Hope to see you there!

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.

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.

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.

My 2016 - By The Numbers

Happy 2017 all! I meant to get this done before the break, but it just didn't happen. Am back from a 10 day hiatus from work, and now there's a lot to do. Before getting to the new stuff, I wanted to  tally a quick recap of my output during 2016. 

I don't think - or expect - that most of my followers would have a broad sense of all the things I do, and that you probably only follow me selectively. That's fine, but I do cover a lot of ground, and a good way to show that is with a simple tally of what kept me busy last year. Being an indie analyst, I have to tout my horn every once in a while, so here goes.

185:    

Original, published articles and thought leadership pieces - primarily with Ziff Davis, TechTarget, UCStrategies, Internet Telephony Magazine and EM 360 Magazine

11:  

Guest blog posts/articles - primarily with UCStrategies and GetVoIP

20:   

Ghost-written articles and case studies

114:  

Posts written on my own blog

3:   

White papers/e-books

3:   

Video interviews

17:   

Podcasts participated in - primarily with UCStrategies and EM 360

8:   

Webinar presentations - primarily with Ziff Davis

18:   

Conferences/industry events attended, and/or moderated/presented at - Cisco Canada, Cisco US, Unify, ITExpo, Vertical Communications, Channel Partners, Dell, NEC, Energy Thought Summit, Interactive Intelligence, Metaswitch Canada, Monage, Genesys, SCTC, BC Summit, Nextiva, ShoreTel, Schulich Tech Talk Leaders

2:   

SIPtone music gigs  :-)

Also, in the smart grid space:

11:   

Original thought leadership pieces and executive interviews

2017 is shaping up to be just as busy, so it's time to get back to work. Feel free to inquire about specific examples from the above list - I can provide links or soft copies for anything except the ghost writing.