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Video Conferencing...What Are The Business Drivers

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By: Rob Gilfillan

President, Cenero

ROI , H.323, H.320, IP, ISDN, SIP, Codec, blah, blah, blah. 

Over the years organizations been inundated with acronyms and geek speak that quite frankly, has done more injustice than good to the potential video conferencing user base. 

Video Conferencing = Less Corporate Travel

I'll never forget my first video conferencing experience with a fortune 1000 company back in the early 1990's.  The executives of this organization outlined a goal to cut travel costs between four national offices. 

The project was then assigned to a local IT director in the Baltimore/Washington area who initiated due diligence with all of the video conferencing industry's major manufacturers such as Tandberg and Polycom

telepresence brochure resized 600Function at its Best

A technical scope of work was developed which outlined all the technical specifications of the proposed system.  System capabilities included 30 FPS video, full duplex audio, 384 kbps ISDN, 36" CRT (remember those things!!), etc. 

After the IT Director spent a few weeks reviewing pertinent information, the company I worked for at the time was selected to help with the system integration.  The total cost was about $100,000 per location for a rather large "portable (not so much) system".

5 Easy Steps  

After the project installation was completed, we setup training with the IT staff to run through the 'system operation'.  This included basics such as

power up the system
place a call
adjust camera
push a scan-converted computer image to a far end site
troubleshoot technical issues, etc. 

I remember trying to reserve some time with the executives, but was told that training would be accomplished internally by the IT department.  When we finished the IT folks had a thorough understanding of the system capabilities and functionality, so I considered our project a raving success.

Classic Mistakes

About 2 months later, I received a call from one of the Executive Assistants to see if I could make some time to visit the site and review the system with the team.  I agreed and expected to be showered with thanks for all the money and time the organization had saved from their 'technology investment'. 

To my amazement, I was greeted by an unhappy executive that felt he had been sold an unsubstantiated ROI and inappropriate bill of goods.  Upon further review, I found that the system functioned as intended, but usage was very low.  I asked why the executive team did not use the system more often and found that it was essentially used as a picture telephone and offered no real tangible value from a basic telephone call. 

What's the lesson here?

 In addition to identifying the technical needs of the organization, it is imperative that the solutions provider help the client understand the key applications that help drive adoption and eventually migration. 

 

Start Leveraging Video Conferencing

The technology will eventually fall in place, but only after an action plan has been developed to help leverage the 'technology' as a productive tool.

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