Unified Communications Definitions 1.0
Over the past month I have been working on directions in UC and have come to a few key conclusions about this transformation.  I thought a series of blog entires around this subject would be interesting. I will probably do three or four fairly quickly, starting with definitions, moving into market opportunity, and closing with how Nortel sees it's role moving forward.
First, UC is not just about communications, but rather is focused to how communications integrates with applications. While we have been talking about this, I think we should stop talking about "unifying" different communications modalities and rather focus on the application integration component. The key reason is that this is the next big evolutions in the value of technology to business, not just having my desk and cell phone ring together (something I have had for 4 years), but how integrating communications into applications will enable us to change business processes. Much as the integration of technology enabled business to change processes in teh 90's, integrating information and interaction together will allow another fundamental shift. Bob Hafner has indicated he believes this to be true, and some analysis indicates it really can transform businesses.
Next post will be on the forms/paths to UC and how they are different.
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July 15th, 2008 at 3:00 pm from Nortel Blog: Enterprise Technology » Blog Archive » UC for Collaboration
[…] UC is not just about communications and it is also overhyped - I totally agree. Up to the point of there’s no such thing as UC. […]
August 11th, 2008 at 6:35 am from VoIP from around the net: July 28, 2008 | VoIP Survivor