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Ted Schadler serves CIOs. See the full Analyst bio.
Visit Forrester.com to learn how we make CIOs successful every day.
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Posted by Ted Schadler on September 25, 2008
Following on to Rob's great analyses of Cisco's Jabber and PostPath acquisitions, here are some additional things that Information & Knowledge Management Professionals should tune into regarding Cisco as the new collaboration kid on the block:
Cisco has work to do, of course, particularly around building the partner channel. But this solutions on the way up, and it's time to tune into it.
Now what about business transformation? Well, that's the B2B thing. We need to improve the collaboration of distributed teams and especially multicompany teams. Today's collaboration tools are designed for internal teams, and it's almost impossible to bring partners or customers into the collaboration toolkit. See our recent report on real-time collaboration for more on this.
Disagree? Please let me know.
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Comments
re: Cisco's Stepping Up To Collaboration As Business Transforma
Hi Ted, great note. Just one comment, when you write "Today's collaboration tools are designed for internal teams, and it's almost impossible to bring partners or customers into the collaboration toolkit."I would like to ensure you know that is exactly what Cisco is providing, the collaborative tools to provide intracompany and intercompany collaboration.
re: Cisco's Stepping Up To Collaboration As Business Transforma
Niki:Oops, I forgot to complete the original thought. The rest of the thought is that the incumbents -- Microsoft and IBM -- don't have an architecture that makes it easy for them to serve the B2B team scenario. Email works, sure, but to establish presence or calendars across companies requires a gateway, which is not an extensible solution.Cisco's cloud-based, and invitation-oriented architecture (borne of WebEx) is a better approach to B2B teams. That means that Cisco has a great opportunity to establish a foothold in these business-transformational B2B scenarios. Of course, Microsoft and IBM are not standing still, and Lotus Bluehouse and Microsoft's online services will provide some similar capabilities.But in the end, information & knowledge management professionals and the information workers they serve will benefit from Cisco's innovation.