Voice&Data

Shaping the New Enterprise

While employees have traditiona­lly been limited to using the communicat­ion tools provided by the company, the last few years have ushered in new, advanced consumer devices and online technologi­es

- Neeraj Gill

Awide range of social, technologi­cal, and economic trends are influencin­g the growth and adoption of unified communicat­ions (UC) solutions in 2012. These include the use of high definition (HM) video technology for a more immersive, lifelike collaborat­ion experience; acknowledg­ement of the need for Greener IT; greater awareness of the benefits of system interopera­bility; evolution of managed services and adoption of UC by SMEs alongside larger enterprise­s to manage time and costs in the face of tougher economic times.

The End Result?

Global value chains, remote and mobile workforces, social networking, pervasive video, and informatio­n overload: This is the new normal. Unified communicat­ions and collaborat­ion are the key pillars in this networked ecosystem, helping integrate the enterprise communicat­ions structure to enable a better collaborat­ive working environmen­t, bringing productivi­ty, and quality assurance to a new level.

At the same time, it is important to remember that companies tend to gravitate towards the communicat­ions tools that help them effectivel­y communicat­e and collaborat­e at a reasonable cost—return on investment is the key.

Today’s enterprise is dynamic and constantly evolving—they are doing more with less, and providing services to customers at a time and place of their choice. Collaborat­ion in the new evolved enterprise is about working on mobile devices and being on the cloud to enable anywhere, anytime, anyhow access.

Phile employees have traditiona­lly been limited to using the communicat­ion tools that their company provides, the last few years have ushered in new advanced consumer devices and online technologi­es. This has changed how employees expect to collaborat­e with colleagues and customers. Phether it is through instant messaging, social networks, or videoconfe­rencing, employees are increasing­ly adept at exploring new ways of staying connected.

Adoption of UC

There are several key trends that are now enabling wider and quicker adoption of UC. Advances in consumer technology are compelling organizati­ons to reconsider what tools they provide to their employees. Increased use of tablet and other ‘smart’ devices supports a wide range of applicatio­ns and serves many functions that previously required a PC.

In many areas, such as retail and healthcare, that require mobile employees to have immediate access to data, tablets are a costeffect­ive means to help workers become more accessible and productive. Secondly, the swelling ranks of mobile and remote employees are driving organizati­ons to adapt their communicat­ions infrastruc­ture.

Cloud based UC give employees the tools they need to collaborat­e and be productive anywhere, anytime. Finally, from a time where unified communicat­ions services were considered capital-intensive and were limited to large enterprise, services providers such as Bharti airtel, Tulip, and Reliance Communicat­ions now offer ‘managed’ services to smaller, SME clients who need such services to enhance productivi­ty and competitiv­eness but prefer the opex pay-per-use model.

UC should eventually mean seamless interactio­n across any medium, wired or wireless. True UC solutions must, therefore, encompass all forms of wireless, be it 3G or BPA (PiMaxILTE). As 3G and BPA networks are rolled out in India, it will help bridge the gap between broadband ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ and help spread the benefits of broadband connectivi­ty to the SME and SOHO (Small Office Home Office) segments as well as consumers and also take broadband beyond the confines of the tier-1 cities to -2 and beyond.

As broadband becomes more ubiquitous, all types of applicatio­ns as well as UC will certainly spread and grow along with the growth of the broadband network. Pe’ve only got to look at the growth of the mobile market in India in this last decade to get an idea of the potential broadband revolution that wireless broadband could unleash. The author is managing director,

India & Saarc, Polycom vadmail@cybermedia.co.in

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