Future of Work Event, During ITEXpo - June 23-25

Am back for Year 3 as Chair of this event, which runs under the much larger ITExpo banner, which is TMCnet’s flagship event. This is the first in-person event I’ve been involved with during the pandemic, and it’s difficult to say what the turnout will be. Being in Canada, travel is off the table for now, so I’ll be running some of the sessions virtually, while colleague Phil Edholm will be doing others in person.

Details about the program are here, and as we get closer to go-time, updates will be coming with new speakers. No doubt lots of people are keen to travel again, and it’s hard to complain about going to Miami as a destination. I’ll have more updates as the show approaches, and am still keeping the door open for new speakers, so don’t be shy to ask.

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UCX: Now - May 19-20, Next Speaking Opp

Next week is the 2021 edition of UCX: Now, and am on the program again. This time, I’ll be speaking on a panel led by colleague Kevin Kieller, and we’ll be exploring how enterprises can manage all the data that’s now being captured in the workplace, thanks to AI and cloud. Big issues to explore, and we hope you can join us. Details for the session and registering for the event are here - if you can attend our session, it’s at 11am ET on Wednesday, May 19.

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My Microsoft Ignite Takeaways on BCStrategies - Their Vision for a Post-PC World

I managed to take in some sessions during last week’s Microsoft Ignite, including the main event - their annnouncement about Mesh, a mixed reality platform that brings the physical and virtual worlds together in ways that most of us have never seen or imagined before. Gamers may rule in this world, but yes, there will be applications in the collaboration space, and Teams is part of the story.

Longer-term, this could well be Microsoft’s big play for a post-PC world, so it’s a good strategy to establish themselves before that time comes. Lots to discuss, and I’m just scatching the surface in this post I put together last week for BCStrategies. It’s running now on their portal, and if you give it a read, I’d love to hear your thoughts.

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My Next Webinar with Huawei - 5G for Enterprise Digital Transformation

It’s a busy month for webinars, and here’s the next one - Wednesday, March 10 at 2pm ET.

Am back for another webinar hosted by Huawei, and it’s about the promise of 5G for carriers to help enterprises with digital transformation. This is a pretty broad topic, and I’ll be joined by two other panelists - Will Townsend of Moor Insights and Strategy, and Tony Rutkowski of Netmagic Associates - along with Sean Kinney of RCR Wireless News as moderator.

Should be interesting, and I hope you can join us - details are here to register.

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Oracle Startup Idol - Am Judging Again

This one kinda crept up on me, as the event is at noon ET today, and am back serving to judge another round of startup pitches from the Oracle for Startups program. This time around, we’ll be hearing from ATLAS, Cognicor, HEARTio, Reengen, SmartHint and Tracifier.

These are all new companies to me, and there’s a lot of AI, healthcare and sustainability in the mix, along with a bit of blockchain. All very in-the-moment, and looking forward to be a part of this again.

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The Accelerated Need for Digital CX in 2021 - My Latest for Upstream Works

Sure has been busy lately. This is the 6th piece of original, new content I’ve shared this week - writeups, webinars and video - plus I contributed to a podcast yesterday that will air next week; and my December newsletter and podcast went out last Friday. Yes, I’m glad it’s Friday!

I’ve just finished up a 3-part Strategic Insights series for Upstream Works, and Part 2 has been posted now on their website. It’s gated content, so it just takes a minute to fill out the registration form. However, if you want an analyst’s perspective on why digital CX is so important for contact centers, I’ll think you’ll find this a good read.

Part 1 can also be downloaded from their site, and I just finished writing Part 3, and it should be posted in the next week or so. As always, comments are welcome, and I’m sure the folks at Upstream Works would love to hear from you!

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A Better Way to Do AI - My Latest on No Jitter

Sure has been busy lately with a constant stream of virtual industry events, writing, podcasts and webinars. I’m a regular contributor to No Jitter, and my latest was inspired by a talk from Dr. Michio Kaku during a recent NEC event. Sometimes, it takes the perspective from a physicist to reframe how we think about AI in the communications and collaboration space.

That sure stuck with me, and I’ve tied those threads together in this post, which has been posted now on No Jitter. There’s MUCH more to talk about, but that’s a separate conversation, and for now, I just hope this post broadens your thinking about AI.

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What Contact Centers Can Learn from the Tampa Bay Rays

How’s that for a catchy title?

It’s exactly what it sounds like, and it’s all about analytics. Baseball fans know about Moneyball, and based on research I’ve been doing on contact center reporting, my view is that there’s too much focus on reporting and not enough on analytics. The latter approach seems to be working pretty well for teams like the Rays, who were certainly competitive in this year’s World Series, against a far more talented and expensive LA Dodger juggernaut.

If you’re just meh about the topic, then don’t bother reading my latest article, but if I’ve piqued your interest - and maybe hit on a pain point (no pun intended) - then I hope you check it out. There’s a lot more to talk about, but the article is running now in Customer Magazine, and if you give it a read, I’d love to hear your thoughts.

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Newsletter Time Again - November Issue - Podcast Too

A bit later than usual, but my November newsletter - JAA’s Communications and Collaboration Review - went out to subscribers yesterday. October was probably my busiest month ever, so there’s lots to share, including photos of notable speakers and performers from the various virtual events I attended.

If you’re not a subscriber, and want to become one, it’s really easy to sign up.

Newsletter content aside, it’s also time for the latest episode of my podcast, Watch This Space - see thumbnail below. I hope you give that a listen, and would love to get your feedback!

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SCTC Fireside Chat Tomorrow - the AI Opportunity for Consultants

Tomorrow, I kick off the first of a three-part series on AI and how consultants can apply to it bring new value to their customers. This a webinar format, under the moniker of Fireside Chats that the SCTC has been running weekly for a while - this one is #32.

We do these on Wednesdays from 12-1 EST, and for this one, I’ll be joined by Tracy Fleming of Avaya. The audience will primarily be consultants, but all are welcome, and to join us, just follow the details here.

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My October Writing Roundup

I thought September was busy, but October was even busier. Grateful to be busy, but with so many virtual events to follow, it didn’t leave much time for writing. Not a whole lot to share from October, but here’s what I was writing about the past few weeks. For a broader look at what kept me busy last month, check out my newsletter, JAA’s Communications and Collaboration Review. The November edition goes out tomorrow, and if you want to subscribe, just sign up here.

The Hybrid Workplace - Dual Set of Challenges for Driving Collaboration, BC Strategies, Oct. 27

DRaaS - a Better Way to Enable Telephony in Microsoft Teams?, UC Today, Oct. 23

Speech Recognition Use Cases Enable Touchless Collaboration, TechTarget, Oct. 19

Webinar Preview: What Contact Centers Really Need - Big Analytics, not Big Data, JAA blog, Oct. 16

Why Voice Has Extended Value in Financial Services, Smarsh Blog, Oct. 15

SIP Trunking vs. VoIP - What’s the Difference?, TechTarget, Oct. 7

Webinar Preview: What Contact Centers Really Need - Big Analytics, not Big Data

Next Tuesday, I’ll be speaking on a webinar about the “data deluge” that contact centers need to manage, especially for improving the all-important CX – customer experience. Details are here, and I’ll be joined by Heather Barrow of Eventus, as she shares highlights from her recent white paper about this topic – it’s quite good, and you should give it a read.

This is a rich topic, and as my researcher curiosity takes its unpredictable path, things keep getting more interesting. What began as an exploration of contact center reporting, soon became a bigger exercise in the ever-expanding world of Big Data, and that has inevitably taken me into the adjacent galaxy of BI – business intelligence. Clearly CX involves many moving parts, and it’s not hard to see why contact centers are getting overwhelmed with this data deluge.

So, this post is a primer on what I’m seeing here, and I’ll just touch on a few things during the webinar. There’s more research to be done, and I’ll have more to say later, but hopefully my thoughts here will set the stage for you to join us on Tuesday.

Back when the contact center was the call center, almost all customer engagement was over the phone. This was a single-channel world, and the process of providing customer service was relatively simple. There were lots of shortcomings based on the technology of the day, but the pace of business was slower and customer expectations were lower.

Nobody called this “Little Data”, since there really was nothing to compare things against then, but from today’s perspective that’s what it was. Telephony was still largely analog and call recording capabilities were limited, so there wasn’t much in the way of metrics. As technology advanced, and other channels came along, customer service extended beyond telephony, and the call center became the contact center.

More channels meant more sets of data, but with little integration across them, the task of managing all the data was within the realm of human capabilities. KPIs and metrics became more sophisticated, and existing reporting tools provided good visibility into daily operations. Traffic volumes were growing, as were data sets about customers, but things could largely be managed onsite, even as hardware-based systems were morphing into software.

The cloud has changed everything, and that brings us to Big Data. This term applies to every vertical and line of business now, but it’s particularly challenging for contact centers. Not only are the volumes of data much bigger now - and growing faster than most contact centers can manage - but the variety is orders of magnitude greater than what call centers had to deal with.

Consider just a few basic types - structured vs. unstructured, real time vs. non-real time, analog vs. digital sources, internal vs. external sources, live interaction vs. recorded, multiple communications modes and channels, etc. Each and every one of these has distinct characteristics, not just for capturing, but for processing, integrating, analyzing, and ultimately driving business decisions. The mind boggles.

That’s the point actually, and the reason why Big Data has become so daunting. There is simply too much information for humans to comprehend and derive any business value from. This matters not just for the contact center, but the broader organization around it. In 2020, the contact center may be all about CX, but CX is about more than the contact center.

Contact center leaders have lots of great data at their disposal to make better operational decisions, but leaders elsewhere in the organization need that data for other types of decisions, and increasingly, they must work together to serve common goals for the good of the business, especially improving CX. Metrics that come from within the contact center are essential for CX, but they don’t tell the whole story, and this gives rise to a familiar challenge - how to work across silos to access all the relevant data for a holistic view of the customer.

Within the contact center, decision makers have learned to manage their own Big Data by going beyond reporting and adopting analytics. That’s an important step, because providing a good CX is far more challenging than in analog times - it’s not enough to understand the what; you need to understand the how and the why. The discipline of analytics takes reporting to another level, especially with the scale and speed of the cloud. Mining data from the wealth of today’s sources with today’s tools can yield insights beyond human capabilities, and can make all the difference between a good and a great CX.

This takes us to the realm of business intelligence – BI – which is somewhat of a parallel universe to what goes on in the contact center. As an analyst, it seems clear to me that providing a great CX goes beyond what contact center reporting and analytics can provide. There’s a reason why the worlds of UCaaS and CCaaS are converging, and it’s the same story here. A proper, holistic view of the customer requires pulling data from across the organization, whether it’s CRM, HR, Marketing, Billing, Shipping, Logistics, etc.

Contact centers are coming to that realization, and as they do, they’re seeing the limitations of their existing technologies and solutions from the various vendors they work with. That’s a topic for a separate analysis, and I’m going to wrap here by saying what’s even more important is how they’re thinking about the problem. Legacy thinking still looms large in this world, and that means too much focus on operational metrics and reporting that focuses on contact center performance.

For businesses that have pivoted to being customer-centric, CX is now the driver, and everything works backwards from there. In this scenario, analytics is more important than reporting, and that’s the first step to viewing things through the lens of Big Data. To harness all that raw data – and the deluge is only getting bigger – the contact center needs more of many things, and that will present a major challenge if you don’t know which way to turn. If that’s you, then next week’s webinar will be time well-spent. Check it out, read the white paper, and circle back here in a couple of weeks – there’s more to come.

My Next Webinar with Eventus - Managing the Contact Center Data Deluge

That title should be self-explanatory, so if you’re wondering about how contact centers can get a handle on the exponential growth of data from endless sources - and actually get business value - this is the webinar for you. Eventus is a really interesting company, and they have a pretty distinct take on how to do this.

Aside from learning about that, I’ll share my own analyst perspective based on what I’m seeing in both the contact center and business intelligence worlds. Joining me will be Heather Barrow of Eventus, and long-time industry colleague Erik Linask for the moderating. More to come, and registration details are here. We’ll be doing the webinar with TMC, on Tuesday, October 20, at 12:30pm ET.

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Talkdesk Opentalk18 - Two Sets of Takeaways

Am just back from Talkdesk’s event in San Francisco, so it’s been a busy week. Lots to like - and learn - about what they’re doing, and I summarized that in two posts, both of which have been published now on GetVoIP.com.

If you haven’t seen them yet, the links are here and here. As always, comments and sharing are welcome.

Otherwise, here are a few of my photos from the event, and with that, we’re on to Miami, and BroadSoft Connections on Monday!


My Latest Podcast - Adopting Collaboration in the Digital Workplace

Subscribers to my newsletter have already seen and/or heard this podcast, but for just about everyone else, this will be new. I produce a monthly newsletter updating my activities and sharing industry insights, including a podcast that I produce with colleague Chris Fine. Each month we talk about a current topic, or hot trend, or a recent industry event we’ve attended.

My newsletter content is exclusive to subscribers, and am happy to say that my base is steadily growing. We put a fair bit of effort into our podcast, though, and to give that particular form of content more exposure, I’m now going to share each one here, roughly a month after appearing in the newsletter. I think that’s fair, and am happy to share our perspectives with a broader audience.

That said, the rest of my newsletter content remains exclusive, so hopefully that’s enough to keeps things interesting for subscribers. If you want to become a subscriber - there’s no cost (and why wouldn’t you?) - sign-up forms are on my website, or you can just follow this link here.

If you just want to listen to our podcast from last month’s newsletter, here’s the story. The topic was a recent study produced by Aruba Networks about the digital workplace. I wrote two posts about it here and here, and the podcast gave Chris and I more runway to take a deeper dive. We hope you like it - feel free to comment, share, or suggest future podcast topics for us to cover. Thanks!

Sidebar #1 - my November newsletter will be going out next week, and the podcast topic for that issue will be a review of last month’s Twilio conference, SIGNAL 2018. Stay tuned, subscribers!

Sidebar #2 - I’ll soon be adding a section to my website to archive our earlier podcasts, so if you like this one, there will be others you may want to check out.

Twilio SIGNAL - Day 1 Pix

Been a fast-paced event so far, with a firehose of updates and announcements. For now, I’ll just steer you to some press releases, but will have more to say later after the conference. Namely: Autopilot for develping bots that can be deployed across multiple platforms, Flex contact center platform going GA, and acquiring SendGrid to integrate email into their platform.

Just too much going on, so that will have to wait for a quieter time. Otherwise, here’s a flavor of what I’m seeing so far. Co-founder/CEO Jeff - great energy and a passionate vision. Same from Al Cook annoucing GA for Flex, putting the call center space on notice. And, Rahma Javed from Deliveroo - diversity definitely spoken here! More coming about all these themes, so stay tuned.

Cybercrime and Collaboration on Collision Course? My Latest on No Jitter

If you can say that title three times fast, maybe it will make more sense. Cybercrime touches just about everything these days, but it’s usually not top of the list for collaboration. It really should be, and that’s what this post is about.

At the recent SCTC conference, there was a great keynote about the state of cybercrime, and I've filtered that through the lens for collaboration. Even if that doesn’t resonate, am sure the issues on a broader, global scale will, and you can read the post here on No Jitter.

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Looking for Blockchain or Cryptocurrency Developers?

Here's my question - do you need an experienced, scalable development team for blockchain or cryptocurrency projects?

I don't often do things like this, but my followers will know that I've recently been exploring this space - here and here - both for applications to the collaboration space, but also the broader blockchain opportunity.

Along those lines, I’m partnering with a boutique software development house with a long track record and a global team of programmers and engineers. For blockchain, they can take on both private and public projects, such as Ethereum, Hyperledger Fabric and Quorum.

Expertise for cryptocurrency includes Open Source wallet solutions, ATM solutions, with support across major exchanges such as CoinExchange.io, GDAX and Poloniex. They also can develop for a wide range of ICO projects, including landing pages, KYC for IaaS providers, smart contracts, and the full spectrum of processing for payments and conversions.

For more information, please contact me directly, thanks.

Blockchain Futurist Conference, Toronto - Pix, Thoughts and Larry King

Kinda thought that last part would get your attention. What in the world does Larry King have to do with blockchain?

No matter what your answer, it's correct. Yes, he really was there, and in a bizarre way, his voice-of-authority presence kinda provided a veneer of validation to all the goings-on. I have no doubt that's part of why he actually does represent Gear Blockchain as an Advisor; although in yet another bizarre angle to the blockchain/crypto tsunami, they share a common passion to combat climate change. I can explain later.

Lots to unpack there, and I'm saving that for a longer post, so stay tuned. In short, yesterday I attended Day 1 of of the Blockchain Futurist Conference - basic details here - partly to invest a day of my time to immerse myself in the space, but also to see where there might be applications in the communications and/or customer care spaces. Am still a bit fuzzy on the latter, but give me a day or two, and things will become clearer.

Overall, there was lots of energy in the crowd, and while the show producers fell short in many areas, they sure packed the place with big names, and the venue had the right mix of exciting new technology and a Gen Y/Z party vibe. I'm on the wrong side of the age curve for what MIllennials can relate to, but I still find it hard to take speakers seriously when dressed in sneakers, skinnny jeans, hipster beards and black t-shirts. Ya gotta get past that though, as there were some very smart people who know what's happening, and really, it's their future, and I'm just living in it.

Sure, there's lots of hype, and it's hard to say how many of these companies are going to make it, but the potential sure is fascinating - and yes, it is happening. For those of us who went through VoIP's growing pains, it's certainly 2004 redux, and the whole trajectory of this space feels eerily familiar. I'll have more to say about that in my upcoming post, so for now, I'll share a few photos. I'm not giving you much here, but your thoughts, questions or first impressions are most welcome!

Great view of our skyline from the back patio - CN Tower and all - cool, huh?

Great view of our skyline from the back patio - CN Tower and all - cool, huh?

Future of Blockchain panel - including Jeff Pulver - not surprisingly, I think his comments resonated with the audience by far better than anyone else I saw speaking.

Future of Blockchain panel - including Jeff Pulver - not surprisingly, I think his comments resonated with the audience by far better than anyone else I saw speaking.

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Venue sure had some interesting spaces for the speakers - not always easy to hear them, and the mikes cut out from time to time, but they made good use of the space.

Venue sure had some interesting spaces for the speakers - not always easy to hear them, and the mikes cut out from time to time, but they made good use of the space.

Old school journalism never gets old. Larry King's opening comment - "I'm the oldest guy here in the room". Yup, but nobody  minded, and in the end, he asked THE right question that made all of this real for the audience - watch for that in my …

Old school journalism never gets old. Larry King's opening comment - "I'm the oldest guy here in the room". Yup, but nobody  minded, and in the end, he asked THE right question that made all of this real for the audience - watch for that in my next post!

Next Up - Blockchain Futurist Conference, Toronto

Am very happy to have pretty much no business travel for the summer, but I do have a local event coming up next week. My newsletter subscribers will know that I'm exploring blockchain a bit - who isn't? - and with the Blockchain Futurist Conference here in my back yard, I'll be there. Details are here, in the Event Calendar section of my website.

Not really sure what to expect, but the lineup is solid, and am sure it will be a firehose of pitches and hype. Reminds me a lot of the early days of VoIP - same trajectory, just a different technology. Anyhow, I have no doubt I'll learn some things and meet lots of interesting people - and I'll definitely be writing about it soon after.

Speaking of conferences, things are quietly ramping up for the fall, and I've been getting things in place for a few, namely Slack, two Cisco events and SCTC. Details coming on these soon.

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