Next Speaking Gig - Five9 CX Summit Canada, Dec. 8

Last month I did the lock note in person at our SCTC conference, and this month I’m presenting at Five9’s CX Summit Canada. This one will be virtual, which is too bad since there are so few industry events in Canada, and otherwise, this one would likely have been right in my back yard.

A gig is a gig, though, and I’m more than happy to share my perspectives on trends and opportunities shaping the contact center. There’s a lot to talk about, and I think attendees will get some good takeaways.

The upside to being a virtual event is that attendance is free, and is open to all. Their target audience of course will be customers, prospects and partners, but others are welcome, and registration is here.

The event is this Wednesday, December 8, and starts at 10:30 ET - and my talk is at 12:10 pm - maybe I’ll “see” you there!

Newsletter Time - December Issue Out Now, Podcast Too

Am trying to keep on time, publishing the first week of each month, for both my newsletter and podcast - JAA’s Communications and Collaboration Review, and Watch This Space, respectively. Subscribers continue to grow, and listenership is picking up across the major podcast platforms, so the following is slowly building.

If any or all of this is news to you, a few clicks to my website will tell the story. You can find the newsletter archive here (updates are coming), and you can subscribe to it here. The Watch This Space podcast has its own space - you can access earlier episodes here, as well as here - including the December episode, which you can listen to right now.

Copper Sunset - Was Guest on Channel Futures Podcast - Coffee with Craig and James

One more item to share before Thanksgiving. I was a guest on this long-running Channel Futures podcast - Coffee with Craig and James - Craig Galbraith and James Anderson. The topic was a current one for me - Copper Sunset - talking about the implications for when copper telephony networks are finally decommissioned.

I was interviewed by Edward Gately, and our conversation begins at the 8 minute mark. I hope you enjoy it, and for more on this topic, you can check out the current episode of my Watch This Space podcast.

Why the New Age of Voice Will Create New Business Value - my Latest on No Jitter

It’s been a busy month, and this is my third writeup for No Jitter during November. Well, if it’s working, keep on doing it, right? This time around, I’m writing about a central theme of mine - The New Voice - which also goes by NAOV - New Age of Voice.

Whatever you want to call it, there’s no doubt - in my mind at least - that as voice takes new forms - thanks in large part to AI - it brings new value to businesses. Telephony isn’t going away , but in this bigger world, it’s just one application for voice, rather than being the application. I’d better stop now, otherwise you won’t have a reason to read my writeup - it’s posted now, and you can read it here.

UCaaS and CCaaS: Better Together for Cloud Migration - my Latest on No Jitter

This is a great topic, and while there’s a good case still for best-of-breed, the rationale for putting these together is solid for lots of use cases. My latest No Jitter post is another take of mine on the topic, especially about the importance of picking the right type of partner.

Integrating UCaaS and CCaaS is harder to do than it looks, and vendors are all over the map in terms of having the right capabilities. With enough effort, they can all do a good job, but it’s fair to say this is easier to do when all the pieces are native to your platform. I suspect we’ll see more vendors and cloud providers try to go down this road in 2022, but in terms of who’s doing it now, Intermedia is a good example. They actually just announced an update about this, and you can read about it here.

Start Saying Goodbye to the Contact Center - My Latest on No Jitter

It’s time for my next No Jitter post - wearing my BCStrategies hat - and I based it on takeaways from three recent industry events - NICE, Genesys and Twilio. Each is doing different things around the space we currently call the contact center, but just like we don’t make a lot of phone calls on our smart phone, customers now engage with businesses in many ways - not just via the contact center.

This space is ripe for reinvention, and my post talks about a few ways that this is happening now. You can read it here, and would love to hear your thoughts.

Spotlight on SIPPIO - Q&A with Dawn-Marie Elder and Voice-Enabling UCaaS

We're living in a cloud-based world in which there's a lot of change, as well as opportunities. There's room here for newer companies, innovation, and we're seeing lots of it from all ends of the value chain.

For this blog post, I want to put a spotlight on that and bring in SIPPIO. It's a company I've been following for some time and which I've written about on multiple occasions. SIPPIO is a good example of the kind of innovation driving digital transformations.

SIPPIO offers technologies that make life better for carriers and channel partners trying to bring efficiency and scale to their customers. Recently, SIPPIO introduced Partner Portal, a partner-centric application that provides carriers, managed service providers (MSPs), telco resellers, and system integrators with a single portal to sell, deploy, manage, and support their entire global customer portfolio while growing a sustainable, healthy voice practice.

Partner Portal automates the entire quote to cash process to increase revenue, maximize profits per user and offer cross-sell/upsell opportunity by reducing sales admin, operations, and support overhead.

I recently spoke with SIPPIO Chief Operating Officer, Dawn-Marie Elder about Partner Portal and how the company is helping carriers, resellers, MSPs, and integrators capitalize on demand for solutions that support hybrid working.

Jon Arnold:
Dawn-Marie, one of the reasons I’m keen to talk with you today is to hear about the traction you’re seeing in the channel community. It's a really good story that highlights opportunities many people may not realize are out there. In addition to hearing your take on the wave of companies transitioning from prem to cloud for telephony, can you touch on what I believe is the biggest change: organizations migrating and adopting technologies that aren't just about voice and phone systems, but the whole collaboration space? What are you seeing in the market as companies try to make that transition?

Dawn-Marie Elder:
Thanks Jon! First, I think it's interesting to note how the telecom and unified communications worlds are merging. With the continuing adoption of different collaboration platforms in hybrid work environments, these once disparate ecosystems have now converged. For us, the past two years have been an explosion of growth; partners and carriers have an appetite for solutions that let them help customers derive maximum value from their collaboration applications.

One of the most significant features is voice-enablement. As companies develop their strategy for going back to work and hybrid environments, we're seeing people leave legacy telco behind in favor of voice-enabled Microsoft Teams or Zoom. Some implementations have been in place for decades. They're not only dated, but also need continuous upgrades or are beyond the scope of maintenance agreements.

 So, as partners look to help customers get more value out of their collaboration solutions, we're seeing very strong demand for native voice capabilities. Businesses need their employees to use a single platform for making outbound calls with people outside of their organization and for internal collaboration, chat, video meetings, etc.

Jon Arnold:
I'm with you on that. Just to add what I see out there, it's very easy to think one can just deploy UCaaS and have all bases covered. We've become so video-centric that it's almost like we've forgotten about telephony. But the reality is that voice is still the most important mode for communicating and getting things done. Would you agree?

Dawn-Marie Elder:
Absolutely. Video fatigue is real. Most people try to multitask, which when you're on video, is pretty apparent. I believe that just being able to, "pick up a phone," and call somebody for a quick, one-on-one conversation is still the desired modality for business communications.

Jon Arnold:
Agreed. There are different models of working and different use cases where you absolutely need voice, either on its own or with complementary features. People can't just forget about telephony, as it’s a critical part of the UCaaS story. While that's a challenge for some, it’s also an opportunity for others. That's where SIPPIO has taken a leadership role. I see Partner Portal as a bridge that connects the telco and UC worlds, and lets partners solve a lot of headaches for businesses. Seems like a big opportunity for the channel.

Dawn-Marie Elder:
Partner Portal enables carriers and channel partners to successfully manage and grow their voice practices from a single “pane-of-glass.” We’ve made it simple and efficient for partners to provide quotes to customers, place orders, and then collect on new streams of monthly recurring revenue. Partner Portal is designed so that any level or role within an organization has access to the things that matter to them.

For example, an executive might want to see a summary view of all the opportunities that they have quoted to examine the difference between quotes and activations. There's also an opportunity for sales folks to utilize Partner Portal in their quoting operations, and for project managers to keep track of what’s happening within their customers’ environments. Certainly payables, looking at your credits and your receivables in terms of getting money in the door and improving your AR. Also, the full functionality of automated activation is a tremendous value-add.

Jon Arnold:
That strengthens partners’ sales pitch, doesn't it, because now they can offer a complete solution. I'm sure it's very easy for a partner to just provide telephony, but you can't make a living doing that anymore. So, while UCaaS is what you must run with, most services aren’t built with all those pieces natively. In such a competitive marketplace, how does this help them bring a complete offering to the end customers?

Dawn-Marie Elder:
It's really about increasing their own productivity so that they can keep their margins at a level that makes sense. Because when you have everything that you need to support customers in one place, it’s only natural that you’d be more productive. For partners, this is a distinct competitive advantage.

As you stated, many partners aren't situated to deploy this model, and they lack the means and knowledge to manage a monthly recurring business. Partner Portal removes the guesswork from bringing voice into their business, as well as managing the cut-over. SIPPIO help partners ensure a seamless transition for end customers.

Jon Arnold:
I want to pick up on something you mentioned earlier - about tapping into pent-up demand. As companies go to cloud, they start to realize that it's just not that easy to bring telephony along if you have a premise or a legacy-based system. How are your partners addressing demand?

Dawn-Marie Elder:
Many opportunities that come in the door are initiated by customers – not partners. Subsequently, resellers with traditional telephony backgrounds start to panic, raising their hand and asking for help because their customer is now telling them, "We're going to retire what we were doing with you and we're going to go down this path now."

However, many of our partners are quite successful because they understand the benefits of combining cloud communications with their collaboration platform. Knowing that value proposition and being able to talk about specific business outcomes, and the benefits for customers, sets those partners apart in a very crowded marketplace.

Carriers and partners that proactively market voice-enablement and initiate those conversations reduce time to sale from six months to 30 days. Leveraging automation, SIPPIO empowers partners to provision, onboard and activate users in a matter of minutes.

Jon Arnold:
And I assume the value that you're bringing in this case is to make that all kind of seamless and transparent for them, right? They have the answers and can bring the time to market, right?

Dawn-Marie Elder:
You are correct. This is an area where I counsel partners on how to guide the customer down the migration path, showing them how quick and easy it can be to activate voice in Zoom and Microsoft Teams. The quicker they can deploy, the faster their customers will realize the benefits of modernizing their business communications. Customers benefit from consolidating communications onto a single platform and from having a single partner that handles everything.

Voice can be a very profitable practice and SIPPIO has made it easy for carriers and partners to get into the voice business.

Jon Arnold:
That’s a good example of how Partner Portal makes life better for the end customer.  Further, it also lets partners manage and grow voice practices while establishing themselves as a trusted partner.

 Dawn-Marie Elder:
That’s exactly right. If you can make the hard stuff easier, that affords you an opportunity to focus on the fun stuff that might be little bit more lucrative and provide more value.

It's Newsletter Time - Podcast Too

First Tuesday of the month is when these go out, and that’s what happened yesterday. If you’re a subscriber to JAA’s Communications and Collaboration Review, you’ll have the newsletter now, and otherwise, you can subscribe here. Same for my Watch This Space podcast - thumb for latest episode is below, and here’s the link if you want to give it a listen.

An Enterprise-Wide Approach to Connected Customer Experiences - My Latest White Paper for Cisco

Sometimes my thought leadership outputs are publicly shared right away, sometimes never at all, and yet other times only after a delay in time. This last scenario applies to my latest white paper, and most recent white paper done for Cisco.

The topic speaks to the growing need for businesses to think about CX in broader terms than the contact center. Things are changing quickly in this space and this white paper is a good example of how vendors are trying to educate the market in terms of how to respond.

My white paper was published back in April this year, but was only used internally by Cisco, and wasn’t promoted to other circles. That has recently changed, however, and during last week’s high-profile Webex One event, Cisco included the white paper in their set of resources for channels and end customers.

If you attended the event, you can access the white paper by logging in and going to the Resources section. The white paper is listed there, along with a public link where no further registration is required.

For everyone else - or those who can’t be bothered to log in again to Webex One - here’s a direct public link to the white paper. If you give it a read, I’d love to hear your thoughts, as I believe the contact center is on the verge of some major transformation, and this is an example of what’s coming.

October Writing Roundup

Only one public, bylined writeup for October, but there’s plenty else in the works. Nothing else to say on the writing roundup front, but if you follow my blog or newsletter, you’ll know I’ve been doing things with other forms of media as well.

Return to Office Challenges - What Workers Want, No Jitter, Oct. 5

On the Set in NYC - Twitter Live Event with Huawei USA

It’s one thing to do a livestream event from the comfort of home at your desk, but it’s something else doing it in a studio with a full production crew. That’s where I was yesterday in New York, doing a Twitter Live event, and while the finished product looks seamless, there was a lot of makeup involved, and all the magic happens behind the camera.

In terms of our topic, the focus was on cybersecurity, and the pressing need for a global, standards-based effort to mitigate the risks we all face with any form of online activity. I led the discussion along with Andy Purdy, CSO for Huawei Technologies USA, and we’re pictured below just before going live with our host, Kimberlee Bradshaw, also with Huawei USA.

The Twitterverse traffic was healthy, and I think everyone was pleased with the result. If you’d like to check out the replay, here’s the link - it runs about 30 minutes.

Next Stop - NYC, then San Diego - SCTC Conference and SIPtones Time!

When was the last time I did a “Next Stop” post? Wow - probably February 2020 for Future of Work Expo - that was the last in-person event for me once Covid hit. My blogging has gone dark for too long as well - sorry about that. It’s more the case that I’ve been too busy to post than having nothing to talk about.

Been tracking several really good events recently, but just haven’t had time to post about them - at least yet. Now, though, I’m in the moment with my first bit of travel in ages.

Tomorrow, I’m flying the NYC for some client work, and details about that will come in different forms - that’s all I can say for now. After that, I’m going coastal to San Diego for the SCTC annual conference. As mentioned, this will be my first live event of any kind during this crazy time, and it’s going to take some getting used to.

Definitely looking forward, though, not just because I’m doing the locknote talk on Thursday at 11:30, but for another SIPtones gig. We’re so looking forward to playing, and if you’re attending, dancing WILL be required.

Otherwise, once the video from our gig has been processed, I’ll have some new clips to add to the My Music section of my website. There’s plenty of clips there now, so if you’ve never seen or heard us, that’s where you should go next. That aside, I’ll share what I can on social during my travels, both on Twitter and Linkedin.

Newsletter Time - Podcast Too - More on The Great Resignation

First week of the month is when these usually go out - JAA’s Communications and Collaboration Review, and Watch This Space. If you don’t know either, a good starting point would be here for the newsletter, and here for the podcast. There’s no cost to subscribe to either, and for a taste, here’s the link to give our latest podcast a listen. As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts, and sharing is appreciated.

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The Great Resignation, and Other Hybrid Work Challenges - My Latest on No Jitter

Sure is a big topic, and I shared my views on this and The Great Wait - two forces that are posing challenges to the hybrid work model, along with how the collaboration vendors can provide real value. I’ll have more to say about this in future posts and podcasts, but for now, you can give this a read here on No Jitter.

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Today is CX Day 2021 - Details Here, Along with Analyst Perspectives

This was new to me - CXPA - the Customer Experience Professionals Association, and today is their big event, CX Day 2021. For those in the CX space - and that seems to be just about everyone lately - this is a highly focused event celebrating the best in both CX and EX - customer experience and employee experience. It’s a global event, by the way, so there’s content and activity specific for various geographies.

Genesys is one of the sponsors, and they engaged myself and some other thought leaders to share our views on CX and DX. They summarized all that in a blog post that ran a few days ago in support of CX Day 2021, and you can read that here. Following that, you should hop over to CX Day here, and check out what’s on offer.

Reflections on Enterprise Connect - Our BCStrategies Podcast

Last week’s Enterprise Connect event was a great showcase for the state of collaboration and contact center technology, despite being scaled back to all-virtual. The messaging remains the same, and there’s lots to keep up on - and this is still be the best event for doing that in our space.

While the buzz is still on, BCStrategies did its regular event recap podcast, and it’s out now. Lot of perspectives to share, and this episode was moderated by Blair Pleasant - good as always. You won’t find a better collective recap of the event anywhere else, and I hope you give it a listen.

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September Writing Roundup

Not a lot to report on the writing front last month, but it sure was busy with virtual events and client work - more about that in my October newsletter, which goes out to subscribers on Tuesday.

In fact, public writing was so light, I have nothing to post here. How often does that ever happen? As a quiet FYI, I also do some ghost writing where I have no byline. I did have a couple of those run last month, but obviously I can’t share that here. :-)

October will be a different story for writing for sure - until then, this might a good time to check out some of our Watch This Space podcasts, and perhaps subscribe to my newsletter.

Thoughts on Zoomtopia - Our Latest BCStrategies Podcast

Fall industry events are well underway now, and a big one from last week was Zoomtopia. Always lots to talk about with their event, as they keep pushing out on many fronts. Maybe too many if you ask me, but that’s the nature of the tech space these days, as there are no barriers with cloud, and Zoom is in a hurry to keep growing.

If that’s of interest, then you’ll want to check out our latest BCStrategies podcast, this time led by Blair Pleasant. Here’s the link, and as always, comments are welcome.

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Enterprise Connect - Preview of My Speech Tech Update on BCStrategies

Before you know it, Enterprise Connect 2021 will be here, and I’m back for my 4th annual update on the state of speech tech in the enterprise. This is just one of many things being transformed by AI, and this time around, I’ll be taking a future-forward look at what’s coming. The building blocks are in place for some cool applications, but bigger things are emerging, and collaboration might look very different once the ranks of digital immigrants thin out.

As much as I’d love to be there, I’ve made the difficult decision to not travel, and sure hope next year will be different. That said, my live session is still on the calendar, and while the presentation will be pre-recorded, I’ll be on hand via video for Q&A. That session runs Monday, Sept. 27 at 11am ET. Since this is a hybrid event, there will also be a second time slot for my talk for those only attending the event virtually - Tues. at 2pm. Again, I’ll be on hand live via video for that one, and will handle Q&A in real time.

If you don’t know, one of my hats is that of a BC Expert, where I’ve had a long affiliation with BCStrategies, and I’ll be one of many BC Experts speaking at Enterprise Connect. This link provides a summary for all of our speaking spots at the event, and this link showcases all the video previews each of us has done to promote our talks. It’s a great way to get a flavor for what each of us will be talking about, and mine is embedded below, so just click to view it if you like.

For more detail, here’s the registration page for my session, and if you sign up there for the event, you’ll save $400! Also, here’s an article I wrote recently on No Jitter about what to expect at my talk - hope you’ll check it out, along with all the other great sessions from my colleagues at BCStrategies.