Watch This Space Podcast - Now Featured on BCStrategies

Being an indie analyst, I wear many hats, and one is being a BC Expert with BCStrategies. I’ve been part of this virtual collective for many years, and contribute regularly, mainly in the form of articles. Each BC Expert has a strong body of work, making this portal a great resource for anyone in the collaboration space, and for reference, here’s mine.

Coming back to my main hat - J Arnold & Associates, most of you know I produce a monthly newsletter - JAA’s Communications and Collaboration Review - along with a monthly podcast, Watch This Space. The podcast branding was updated in September, and I’m slowly getting it listed with the commercial podcasting platforms, and hopefully that will be done by year-end.

For those who don’t subscribe to my podcast from one of these platforms, you can now check it out on BCStrategies, so that’s my news for today. And while you’re there, please check out all the other content from fellow BC Experts. I’ll actually have another post running there any day now, and I’ll have a separate blog post about that.

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My Next Webinar with RingCentral - the Case for Cloud Telephony in 2021

Got a new webinar shout-out here - am back with another RingCentral engagement, and it’s on Tuesday, December 8 at 2pm ET.

Heading into the last month of the worst-year-ever, we’re all looking ahead to hopefully better things in 2021. For businesses still going with their premises-based phone systems - the value proposition is weakening, and with many workers happily entrenched at home, it’s going to be difficult to keep supporting them this way in the year ahead.

That’s the gist of the webinar, and I’ll be addressing it at greater length then. I’ll be joined by a RingCentral customer who will tell their story first-hand - and will update you once they’ve been added to the roster. Details are here, and if you want to join us, it just takes a moment to register.

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My Latest for Upstream Works - Pandemic Implications for CX and the Contact Center

I’ve been doing work for Canadian contact center provider Upstream Works for a few years now, and we’ve got a new Insight Series going. Main focus is about the impact of COVID-19 on the contact center as well as how CX is changing as a result.

The first report in this series has been posted now to their website, and the others will be coming over the next few weeks. Registration is required, but it just takes a moment, and I think they’ve done a great job putting the finished product together!

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Next SCTC Fireside Chat on AI - This Wednesday, with Vonage and Journey.ai

Tomorrow is Part 3 in our ongoing series about the AI opportunity for consultants. This time around, I’ll be talking about emerging AI applications. As usual, Steve Leaden will host, and we’ll be joined by speakers from Vonage and Journey.ai.

If you don’t know, these one hour sessions are open to all, with the core audience being SCTC members and consultants who want to learn more about what we have to offer. The session starts at noon, and to get the link, please follow the registration details here.

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My Latest White Paper - Mitel - CX Challenges in Pandemic Times

This white paper has been in the works for some time with Mitel, and has launched today. To support it, they’ve issued a press release, and you can read about the details there. Being long-form content, the white paper is gated on their website, and here’s the registration page to download it.

I’m involved with two other efforts to support the white paper, with the first being a Twitter Chat, today at 11am ET. I’ll be joined by Shameem Smillie and Matthew Clare from Mitel, and to tune in, the hashtag is #MitelChats.

I’ll also be presenting highlights from the white paper on a webinar that will likely be in early January - details to follow.

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A Change is Gonna Come - Takeaways From Zoom, Twilio and Slack on No Jitter

Last month, I had nine virtual events to track (more on that in my newsletter), but three in particular stood out, from Zoom, Twilio and Slack. Three companies that have only been on our UCC radar a few short years, but with three, you have a pattern, and I’m seeing a few here. I’m sure you do too, and if so, I think you’ll enjoy my analysis.

Lots to explore, and the article is running now on No Jitter. As always, comments and sharing are welcome.

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Next SCTC Fireside Chat - This Wednesday, with Genesys and Inference

I’m running a 3-part series on AI for SCTC, and last week’s kickoff session was really well attended. We continue next with a particular focus on the contact center, and there sure is a lot to talk about. I’ll be giving an overview of the trends, and then I’ll be joined by Gordon Sexton of Genesys, and Richard Dumas of Inference Solutions.

Our Fireside Chat sessions have found a nice groove, and even if you’re not an SCTC member, this should be time well-spent - and for consultants who aren’t members, you might think about joining to be part of this community. Details to register are here on the SCTC site, and we start at noon ET.

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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

My Next Webinar with Lifesize - Contact Center Success Strategies in 2021

I’ll be presenting on another webinar soon, this one sponsored by Lifesize and hosted by Channel Partners. Heading into year-end, the focus will be on planning for 2021, and how contact centers need to be thinking about cloud - and video - and why channels are well-positioned.

It’s a big topic, and am looking forward to providing an overview, and then leading a conversation about with Valur Svansson, Lifesize’s Global Sr. Director, Contact Center EX and CX. I can tell you now, it will be an engaging discussion, so I hope you can join us.

The webinar is happening on Thursday, November 12 at 2pm ET, and all the details for registration are here.

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The Hybrid Workplace - New Research and My Latest for BCStrategies

My workload and schedule have both been intense since Labor Day, and that’s cut into my writing output including my regular contributions to BCStrategies, where I’ve long been a BCS Expert.

The stars finally lined up to get a post done, and I based it on a new research study commissioned by Cisco, titled “The Rise of the Hybrid Workplace”. It’s a global study that looks at the impact of COVID-19 on the workplace, and the challenges for both home-based working, along with bringing workers back to the office.

Lots of interesting data, and I’ve distilled the highlights into a few themes that you can digest in a single post. My analysis has been posted now on the BCS portal, and I hope you find it of interest. While you’re there, you’ll find lots of other great content from my peers, including articles, podcasts and interviews with industry leaders. If you follow me, you may know that my Watch This Space podcast has recently been added to the portal, so it’s another way to access my podcasts - fyi.

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New Guest Post with Smarsh - New Value with Voice for FinServ

Since our paths crossed at Enterprise Connect 2020, I’ve been building a rapport with Smarsh, a very interesting company mostly in the financial services space, but also other sectors that are highly regulated. Their forte is helping companies better manage electronic communications in a landscape where the technologies are changing quickly, and the regulations are getting harder to comply with. Lots of challenges there for IT, as well as compliance folks, and it touches on the collaboration space in many ways.

Smarsh provides lots of great resources to help educate the market about these challenges, and I just completed my first guest blog post for them, and it was just published on their Blog a few days ago. I hope you give it a read - here’s the link - and if you like their content, you can subscribe to their Blog. We’re talking about doing more posts, so stay tuned, and I’ll update you when the next one is running.

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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.

Newsletter Time Again - October Issue

Just when I thought August was busy, September was even busier, and already, it’s more of the same for October. Our industry sure is hopping, and am grateful to be involved with so many companies on so many different projects. Every day is different, and if you’re wondering what’s driving all this, you should subscribe to my newsletter, JAA’s Communications and Collaboration Review.

The content is mostly about my activities as an independent tech analyst, but if you’re looking to keep up on the state of this space, I think you'll get plenty of food for thought. My October issue is out now, and if you don’t know, it includes my latest Watch This Space podcast - see thumbnail below for the topic.

Along with my partner Chris Fine, we’re in Season 3 now, and newsletter subscribers will know that last month Watch This Space began a journey of its own, including a dedicated website. I’m in the process of publishing the podcast on all the major platforms, so before long, you’ll be able to subscribe directly to Watch This Space wherever you get your podcasts. More details are in the newsletter, and to get it now, you can subscribe here in about 15 seconds. What could be easier?

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My September Writing Roundup

As with August, my public writing output was light, but I was even busier in September. You’ll have to subscribe to my newsletter for the details, but it’s been a steady diet of virtual events, webinars and speaking opps. Otherwise, I did get some writing done, and here are links.

Keeping Up with Tech - Same as it Ever Was, No Jitter, Sept 29

What are the Challenges of Using Multiple Team Collaboration Apps?, TechTarget, Sept. 14

Building a Strategy for Intercompany Collaboration, TechTarget, Sept. 2

Bringing Canadian Businesses into the World of Digital Communications, Digitcom (registration required), Sept. 1

Keeping Up with Tech - Same as it Ever Was: My Latest on No Jitter

Same as it ever was, same as it ever was.

Any digital immigrant - and hopefully some natives - will know how that song goes, and if it’s now rattling around in your brain, then you’ll want to read my latest No Jitter post. Without giving too much away, I see a lot of parallels in that iconic song to the crazy pace of change with tech, and how hard it is for all of us to keep up.

To conjure up another song I love, is that all there is?, gets me to thinking along these lines after an OTT diet of virtual events, webinars, podcasts and client work over the past few weeks. Somehow, I don’t think I’m alone on this one, and if you’re with me, I think you’ll enjoy my post, running here now on No Jitter. Here comes the twister…

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Hey, I'm #28! Top 100 Unified Comms Influencers

I’ll never be #1 in this world, but I’m #28 in a list of top 100 influencers in the Unified Communications space. It’s always nice to get industry kudos, and while it’s never clear what these lists are actually based on, at least it’s peer-based from people who are in this space.

The list was compiled by Mio Dispatch, and was published earlier this week - just getting around to sharing it here now. With 100 people profiled, it’s a bit of a kitchen sink, with a wide range of analysts, tech experts, social media stars and household name industry execs.

Pretty good company to keep, though, so am happy to be there. Definitely worthwhile to peruse the full list, and I guarantee you’ll come across new people to follow. Thanks to Dominic Kent and the folks at Mio for putting this together, and if I keep at it, maybe I’ll trend closer to the top next time!

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UC Expo 2020 - Am Doing Two Sessions Next Week

Time for another UC Expo 2020 shout-out - this time with some news and an updated visual. This UK-based event was supposed to be in-person back in May, and like everyone else, it’s been retooled for virtual, and now goes by the name of UCX: NOW. The event runs 3 days, starting next Tuesday, during which I’ll be participating in two sessions.

Bright and early at 7am EST that day, there’s a RingCentral session, where I’m in conversation with their CSO, Praful Shah. That’s kinda early for us, especially Praful, so we recorded the video interview earlier this week, and it will be broadcast at noon UK time during the event. As a sneak peek, here’s a screenshot I took during our recording.

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Later on Tuesday at 11am EST - that’s 4pm UK time - I’ll be chairing a live session titled “Adapting the Future Workplace for Gen Y and Gen Z Workers”. This should be fun, and I’ll be joined by speakers - definitely younger than me - from ANZ Bank, Sony and Automation Logic.

That will take things through Day 1, and hopefully you’ll take in other sessions over the next two days. Full agenda details are here, and it just takes a moment to register. If you care to follow things on social, the hash is #UCXNOW.

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Our Latest BCStrategies Podcast - Employee Engagement During COVID-19

Been doing a lot of webinars lately, but am doing plenty more, including podcasts. I’m a regular contributor for BCStrategies, including podcasts. Our most recent podcast took a look at what companies are doing, and how they’re using collaboration technologies to keep employees engaged during the pandemic.

It’s a rich topic, and we had a lot of interesting perspectives to share, all of which was moderated by Blair Pleasant. Here’s the link to give it a listen, and as always, sharing and comments are welcome.

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