Speech Tech and AI in the Enterprise - Am Speaking at Enterprise Connect Next Tuesday

It’s crunch time for Enterprise Connect 2019, and there’s no end to speakers and sponsors touting their appearances at the conference.

Being an indie, I have to wear all the hats, so it’s time again to go into PR mode and make sure you know when and where I’m speaking. I’ve got two speaking spots, and am doing separate posts for each.

This post is for the main one, an update on speech tech and AI in the enterprise. Some of you saw me speak on that topic last year, and the organizers have asked me back from an update, so here I am.

My talk is titled Speech Technologies for the Enterprise: Market Update, and I’ll be at Osceola A at 8 am, Tuesday, March 19.

All the details are here, including a link to add the session to your planning calendar, and a discount for event registration if you haven’t done that already. Hope to see you there!

To get a better sense of what I’ll be talking about, my blog post from last week has links to my No Jitter preview article, and two podcasts - one with No Jitter, and one with BCStrategies.

EC19_Bannner Ad_Im Speaking_1200x630.jpg


Cisco Collaboration Analyst Summit - Our BCStrategies Podcast

Some things happen in real-time, and for others, life just happens and things take a bit longer. Cisco recently hosted an analyst event at their San Jose HQ, and it basically served as our introduction to their new leadership team. There’s a lot to like here - not just the people running this LOB, but their vision, passion and focus to keep Cisco at the front end of the collaboration pack.

BCStrategies was well-represented at the event - see below - and we shared our first-hand impressions, along with a few BC Experts who weren’t there, but still had insights to add. This time around, Blair Pleasant moderated, and here’s the link to give it a listen.

Aside from our collective perspective, some BC Experts have contributed their personal takeaways, and mine was posted recently on my blog, titled Meet the New Boss. As always, comments and sharing are welcome!

Cisco collab_BCS group.jpg

March Newsletter is Out Now

My March Communications and Collaboration Review went out to subscribers on Tuesday, and for everyone else, it recaps a busy February where I travelled to three events, so there were plenty of takeaways. There’s also a preview of what’s coming later this month at Enterprise Connect, along with my latest podcast with Chris Fine. This time around, we explored more future of work themes, based on recent events we have each attended.

If you’d like to get this issue and upcoming newsletters, all you need to do is sign up here. That’s it.

Newsletter image.jpeg

Enterprise Connect 2019 - BC Strategies Speaking Summary

I’ve been providing updates on my participation during Enterprise Connect later this month, but I’m also part of something bigger. I’ll be one of 14 BC Experts speaking during the conference, so BCStrategies folks will be everywhere.

For those of you who follow us, you’ll want to check out our latest podcast where we briefly describe what each of us will be talking about. It’s a lot to keep track of, and our podcast provides the big picture - here’s the link, and we hope to see you there!

BC Strategies logo 2017.png

Next Stop - San Francisco and RingCentral

Travel starts early this month, but it won’t be as hectic as February. Today, I’m flying - again - to San Francisco, this time for RingCentral’s analyst event. They’ve been a client off and on, and they continue to post solid growth in the very competitive UCaaS space. I’ll certainly come away with a better understanding of why they’re successful, along with what’s coming for the rest of 2019. Not much else to say for now, and I’ll share what I can on social while there.

ringcentral_logo.png

Enterprise Connect Preview on No Jitter - My Talk About Speech Tech in the Enterprise

One of the many writing hats I wear is that of a contributor to No Jitter. It’s actually under the BCStrategies banner, where six of us from that group are on a regular rotation to produce weekly posts for No Jitter. This week was my turn, and the timing was right to talk about what I’m going to be talking about at Enterprise Connect 2019 in Orlando a few weeks from now.

Last year, I gave a similar talk at the conference, which had introduced speech technology as a new track. It looks like the results were good, as it continues this year, and they’ve asked me back to give an update on the state of speech tech in the enterprise. Most of the action for speech tech is in the contact center - and there will be plenty of coverage for that during the conference - but there certainly are solid use cases emerging in the workplace.

The intersection of AI and speech is producing some interesting applications, and we’re very much at the beginning of what’s to come here. I’ll be providing several use case examples during my talk, along with my perspectives on bigger picture considerations when bringing these new capabilities into the workplace. If liked my approach to the topic last year, I’m pretty sure you’ll enjoy this one too. My reference points are pretty unconventional, but I have a plan, and I think it’s a good plan.

To prime you even further for my session - it’s on Tuesday, March 19 at 8am - details here - I’ve got two things to share with you that were just posted on No Jitter.

First is the aforementioned article previewing my session, and you can read it here on No Jitter.

Second is a podcast that was recorded yesterday as a companion piece, where I was interviewed by No Jitter’s Beth Schultz., as part of their ongoing On Air podcast series. There’s a link to the podcast in the No Jitter article, and here’s a direct link to where it’s hosted in the Podcasts section of their website (registration required, sorry!).

I hope you check both of these out, and even better if you come see my talk! As always, comments and sharing are welcome, and if you still haven’t registered, there’s a $200 discount offer from No Jitter - details are at the end of my article.

EC19_Bannner Ad_Im Speaking_1200x630.jpg

New Podcast to Share - Future of Work Conference

My newsletter subscribers get an exclusive on our podcasts for a few weeks, and then I share them publicly here and on my social channels. That’s been the plan as of late, and the timing kinda goes with my workload, so it’s not really a fixed schedule.

So, for those who haven’t had a chance to check this out, here’s our current podcast. This was done as a preview for last month’s Future of Work conference that I co-chaired, but it’s still timely if you want to hear more about how digital transformation is impacting the workplace. It’s a topic with a lot of legs, and in fact, we just recorded our next podcast that will explore some new themes - watch for that in my next newsletter.

Enterprise Connect - Early Bird Pricing Ends Tomorrow - Save $500 Here

Gee, this really snuck up on me. By this time a month from now, Enterprise Conenct 2019 will be over, and I’ll be enroute to the airport to fly home.

If you haven’t made plans yet, early bird pricing ends tomorrow, so if I can be of help, use this URL to register by then to save $500. How’s that for a simple message?

Also in that link is another link to my profile, along with the main presentation I’m doing on speech tech in the enterprise. It’s on Tuesday at 8am, and details are here if you want to attend - and once you register, you can easily add it to your Schedule Builder. Hope to see you there!

EC19_Bannner Ad_Im Speaking_1200x630.jpg

Meet the New Boss - Cisco Collaboration Analyst Summit - Takeaways and Pix

I’ll tip my hat to the new constitution

Take a bow for the new revolution

Smile and grin at the change all around…

 You know the rest.

I attend many conferences as an analyst, and have been to vendor events each of the past two weeks. While most vendors in our space are essentially addressing the same problem set for end customers, each has a different story to tell. Many of us heard Alcatel-Lucent Enterprise’s story two weeks ago, and my takeaway from that - Somewhere, over the Rainbow - reflects a particular set of challenges that all incumbent vendors struggle with. Last week, it was Cisco’s turn, and operating under a different set of circumstances, they had their own story to tell.

We heard a lot that was new, but a lot that was familiar as well, so my takeaways here are a bit mixed. Furthermore, quite a bit of the new is under NDA until Enterprise Connect, so you’ll just have to be patient for some of the good stuff. For this post, I’ll talk a bit about the new and the not so new.

What’s new with Cisco Collaboration – 3 Things

1.       The New Boss

The big story was our formal introduction to Amy Chang, who now leads Cisco’s Collaboration Technology Group as SVP and GM. There’s been a lot of management turnover in this group lately, and she brings a fresh start, taking over from Rowan Trollope who is now leading Five9.

For many of us, the above lyrics are hard-wired to our adolescent brains, and the song’s sentiment is anything but aspirational. While it’s too early to tell if Amy will be the same as the old boss, my takeaway is a strong no, and that makes this a good kind of new.

What makes this a good story is that it’s not just Amy, but also her Webex leadership team, which has a lot of new faces. She took time to introduce and celebrate all this talent, making the smile and grin at the change all around very fitting for our group. At one point, she showed a composite photo of the full group of 24, 8 of whom are women (see below). That’s great representation, and as diversity goes in Silicon Valley, it’s a very good sign. Wearing my Canadian colors (oops – colours), it’s also great to see Cisco Fellow Cullen Jennings filling the CTO spot following Jonathan Rosenberg’s recent departure, also to Five9.

Many good things about Amy strike me, especially her focus on listening and attention to detail. Just these qualities alone go a long way to explaining her impressive track record, and why she seems so right for role. First impressions matter, and she started our event with some big-picture talking about three Horizons that shape how the collaboration is going to be run now.

Horizon 1 is the “promises already made to us, our customers and our partners”. I’d say this is the new constitution, and it’s really important to respect what’s already in place. That’s a good way to get off on the right foot, and she correctly noted this is especially important for the 45 million Jabber users who really like the product and have been wondering if it will just get folded into Webex. Later on, Scott Hoffpauir assured us they’re still investing in Jabber, and “we have their backs – there’s no reason to worry”. Let’s hope so.

Horizon 2 is “what’s coming around the corner”, and Horizon 3 is “our moonshot bets”. This would be their focus on short-term and long-term innovation, and what they shared with us is under NDA. So, I need to move on, but some of this will be on display at Enterprise Connect in a few weeks.

2.       The New Revolution

Well, sort of. Amy talked about the oft-cited idea from VC/thought leader Ben Horowitz about peacetime and wartime leadership. I was waiting for the Art of War segue that I’ve heard from Guy Kawasaki, but that didn’t come. That aside, I’m with her on this being the time for Cisco to have wartime leadership in collaboration – the business has been flat at best, and it’s fair to say to previous regime did not operate in this mode.

Her comment about “wartime being growth time” was prescient – or carefully staged – as soon after, we were treated to a pop-up appearance by CEO Chuck Robbins. Our event happened to be on an earnings call day, and guess what – YoY revenues for the Applications LOB (which includes collaboration) were up an impressive 24% (but only 3% from previous Q). Cue the champagne – literally – see photos below.

Since Amy is new to the job, she can’t fairly take full credit for that nice bump, but the ends seem to justify the means in terms of shifting to wartime leadership. She duly noted that peacetime leadership is for a more stable time during a market cycle, and it’s worth considering we may never get back to that mode given how quickly technology changes.

Peace is a necessary condition for prosperity, so that’s a bit worrisome if we never have peace in the collaboration space. We’re already well along the path where there will just be a handful of really big winners in the digital economy, and it’s hard to see that changing short of another type of revolution – likely driven by regulation. Am getting a bit off topic here, but this takes things into 1984 territory where the state is in a constant state of war; not to defeat enemies (competitors), but rather to simply hold on to power. Enough – don’t get me started - so let’s get back to 2019.

3.       “I want collaboration to be magic for me

I totally agree with that sentiment from Amy. She talked about making it feel like everyone is in the same room together when collaborating, and this is part of her mantra to win the “hearts and minds” of customers. Definitely the right idea here, and Javed Khan and Lorrissa Horton provided Webex Meetings updates that showed some magic. One is @Meet, where you just need one button to push to schedule and join a meeting. The idea isn’t that radical, but the magic is how they now make it work uniformly across all Cisco platforms with the same icons and look and feel.

Another cool update is the use of virtual sticky notes. They found this to be an integral part of an in-person meeting experience, and the virtualized version now lets remote users do the same thing. Using the Webex board, anyone can create a sticky note on the fly, then move it around with all the others, whether you’re in the meeting room or offsite. This works on mobile devices too, so it very much caters to digital natives, another important group of hearts and minds for Cisco to capture. As Lorrissa said, “we don’t want to just digitize team collaboration, we want to transform it”. Noted.

On a broader scale, there’s a new term coming in the Cisco lexicon – cognitive collaboration. You’ll be hearing more about this at Enterprise Connect, and basically represents their new approach for integrating AI (artificial intelligence) and ML (machine learning) into all-things collaboration. The same holds for contact center as well – if not more so – and we heard and saw more about that later in the day from Vasili Triant and Zack Taylor.

Magic aside, we got plenty of updates on Webex Teams, Meetings and Calling, along with how the BroadSoft pieces now fit. Their phone business continues to boom, and I suppose you could say that’s a magic trick given how digital natives communicate. I’ll just say that hardware still matters, and it’s great for the channels. It’s also worth noting that their Flex pricing/licensing strategy seems to be working very well, and is making it easier for customers to migrate to the cloud.

What’s not so new

There’s definitely a lot to like here, but analysts strive for balance, so it’s important to note that much of what we heard was familiar from earlier Cisco events, such as:

“What are people telling us? We’re complex – it has to be simpler.”

“We have to interoperate – customers have things in place already and we need to work with that.”

“We’re building bridges, not islands – we work with everyone in the ecosystem.”

“Be cloud first, not cloud only.”

All of this is important and true, but we’ve heard these before, so it’s not exactly new territory for Amy and her team. Also, many of the updates for both collaboration and contact center were similar or only slightly different from before, especially the recent Connections event.

At face value, this might lead you down the same as the old boss narrative, but it really does feel different now. There’s an energy, a focus and a sense of purpose from the new team, and in terms of real innovation, I think that progress will be validated at Enterprise Connect.

As such, I just look at the not so new as being ongoing challenges that aren’t particularly unique to Cisco. On the whole, they didn’t strike any wrong notes at the event – other than going a bit light on their contact center business – so I’ll circle back to the start and wrap up by saying I’ll tip my hat to the new constitution.

A few photos to share:

Row 1 - Amy introducing her team, with Chuck Robbins, the whole team, Lorrissa Horton and digital sticky notes

Row 2 - Webex overview, phone portfolio, a toast to 24% YoY growth

Row 3 - Amy, our BCStrategies contingent, our tour to the Webex data center, dinner and wine tasting at the Testarossa winery - that was great

My Latest White Paper - Leveraging Cloud Communications for SMBs

I write my fair share of white papers, and when combined with a webinar, they can be effective demand generation tools for vendors and providers. My latest one here is with 8x8, where I prepared a white paper focused on how cloud can really help SMBs take advantage of today’s UC offerings.

I did a well-attended webinar with them about this topic in December, and the white paper has now been published. They produce a lot of these, so you might want to review more than just mine. For now, though, my message is to say that my white paper is posted now, and here’s the link to download it from their site.

No doubt, 8x8 would love to hear from you if you’re considering cloud communications, and I’m always here if you want learn more about how I help companies get to market faster.

jon-arnold-thumb_white paper.png

Alcatel-Lucent Enterprise Connex19 Conference Review - Mapping Out the Next 100 Years

Last week was a bit of a blur, but I really was in Monaco for Alcatel-Lucent Enterprise’s Connex19 analyst event. It was actually the tail-end of their week-long sales conference, and being their centenary, all of this was done in fine style. I was very happy to be invited, and it was my first ALE event. Overall, my impressions were good, but I definitely have some concerns about their roadmap and how much CPaaS can really drive sales growth.

That’s my pitch, and to learn more, I invite you to read my takeaways - somewhere over the rainbow - posted now on BCStrategies, where I’m a regular contributor. As always, comments and sharing are welcome.

Rainbow CPaaS slide.png

Next Stop - Cisco and San Jose

Heading into week three of consecutive travel, with Cisco being next up. This is for their Collaboration Analyst Summit, held at their San Jose campus.

Not much I can say in advance, other than this will be our first opportunity to meet Amy Chang, who recently came onboard to take Rowan Trollope’s spot when he depared to Five9. Lots of musical chairs lately at Cisco, so it will be very interesting to what the current team has in store for this business unit for 2019.

Cisco 2014.jpg


January Writing Roundup

Just back from back-to-back events, so a few things have fallen aside til now. Writing continued at a good pace last month, and here’s a digest for what I was seeing and writing about as 2019 gets underway.

So, if you like what you see, and want more, I’d encourage you to sign up for my newsletter - it just takes a moment!

What to say when your CEO asks “why don’t we have AI?”, Jan. 30, BCStrategies

Thinking Horizontally About Collaboration, Jan. 30, Toolbox.com

Spotlight on Phone.com: Small can be Beautiful for Hosted UC - but it’s Big Too, Jan. 21, my blog

Thinking Strategically About DIgital Transformation, Jan. 15, No Jitter

Generation Z is Here - Two Things You Need to Know, Jan. 14, Toolbox.com

How do you build a business case for speech technology applications?, Jan. 14, TechTarget

How the Future of Work Will Change Everything, Jan. 3, TMCnet, Rich Tehrani’s Technology Blog

Collaboration in 2019: Three Things to Watch For, Jan. 1, Toolbox.com

Next Webinar - Tomorrow: 3 Collaboration Trends for 2019

One more shout-out for my next Ziff Davis webinar - it’s tomorrow, Thursday, Feb 7 at 2 ET. The theme will be 3 collaboration trends to watch for 2019, and I hope you can join us. Registration details are here, and if you can’t make it, a replay will be available soon after.

toolbox-logo-tech.png

Newsletter time - February issue is out now

My subscribers already know this of course, but most of my followers aren’t subscribers, so just a quick note to say it’s out, and if you want to get it, you can subscribe here in no time. If you don’t know, my podcast is the main feature for original content there, and this month, the focus is a preview for the Future of Work conference that I’m just finishing up today. It’s still very fresh, and if you sign up now, you’ll get the newsletter within a day or so.

Newsletter image.jpeg

Going Deeper with AI - it's About Holding the Reservation, not Taking the Reservation

Sounds familiar, Jerry?

My latest post on BCStrategies builds on some takeaways from a recent SCTC event I attended and spoke at. In short, it’s about helping IT prepare for the moment when the CEO asks “why don’t we have AI?”.

A lot of expectations come with that, so the answer had better be good. I think there’s some useful guidance here, and if you know your Seinfeld, am sure you’ll agree. As always, sharing and comments are welcome - here’s the link to the post.

seinfeld-reservation.jpg

My Next Webinar - 3 Collaboration Themes for 2019

The new year is well underway now, and I continue keeping busy on all fronts. One of those is doing webinars, and it’s time for my next one with Ziff Davis. If you don’t know, I’ve been writing regularly for them - via their IT Toolbox portal - for many years, and that also gives rise for me to do webinars, usually quarterly. My writing has scaled back with them - for a few years, I was producing three original posts every week - to one post a week, but that still provides plenty of coverage to support my webinars.

It’s still early in the year, and this time around, I’ll help set the stage for by looking at three themes that will drive collaboraiton in 2019. The webinar runs Thursday, Feb. 7, and if that catches your interest, I hope you can join me. Here are the details, and it just takes a minute to register.

Toolbox_Ziff Davis logo.png


Two New BCStrategies Podcasts - Looking Back on 2018 and 2019 Predictions

Been a backlog getting new content posted on BCStrategies, so I have a double-shot update to share here.

Regular followers should know that we try to do a podcast every other week or so, and that I’ve been a long-time contributor to the group. In late December, we usually do a year-in-review themed podcast, along with our outlook for the year ahead, and the stars lined up for both a few weeks back.

These podcasts have now been posted to the BCStrategies portal, and I hope you give them a listen. Here’s our Look Back on 2018 podcast, followed by our 2019 Predictions. As always, comments and sharing are welcome.

BC Strategies logo 2017.png


Future of Work Expo is a Week Away

Time for another shout-out for the Future of Work Expo, starting next Wednesday in Fort Lauderdale. It’s the first iteration of this event, for which I’m the co-chair, and we’ve got a great program ready to go. The event is under the bigger tent of TMCnet’s ITExpo, which is celebrating its 20th year - that’s pretty impressive.

I’ve been providing updates here and on social media, and if you' haven’t seen the Agenda page yet for the program, here it is. Speaking of social media, aside from my ongoing Twitter posts (@arnoldjon), the hashtag for the event is @FOW_Expo

If you haven’t seen this, here’s the Q&A TMCnet’s CEO Rich Tehrani recently did with me, and it serves as a good preview of what to expect next week.

Also, I can extend a 10% discount on any level of registration for ITExpo, including Future of Work. The discount code for that is Jon10, and I hope that helps you get there.

ImSpeaking_FOW2019.jpg