Baseline: The right collaboration tools

How many emails does it take to book a meeting? While this sounds like the beginning of a lightbulb joke, for most of us it is no laughing matter. Serial emails is still the most often used collaborative mechanism, and it makes for a poor tool when it comes to doing common tasks such as arranging a meeting, finishing a presentation or report, or working with a colleague in another office.

There are dozens of different collaboration tools available, some new and some old, including wikis, workflow managers, web and video conferencing, and smartphone applications (see table below). Yet it is still more popular to turn to email than to try to employ something more specialized and productive.

Here are some examples from those companies that have gone beyond email, in some cases to become more competitive and increasing their sales in the process.

Probably the simplest, and least expensive, is to make use of Google Apps or some other shared document repository. This is what New York City-based Web software marketing automation firm Pica9 does. “We manage our overall production schedule, support incident log, application test plans and punchlists using Google Apps. It plays an increasingly bigger role in our day-to-day as Google steadily expands and improves the functionality of the suite,” says Ben Hovaness, one of the firm’s developers.

A step up is to use wikis, which are Web sites that can be edited quickly by users inside their Web browsers. ZATZ Publishing uses an open source product called Dokuwiki to keep track of numerous documentation, engineering design notes, and other business documents. David Gewirtz, the publisher, says, “Wikis are a little hard to grasp and some people may not be aware that you can have a private wiki – they think Wikipedia and don’t want to put information in public.” The hardest part of using his wiki has been how to structure the page hierarchies. “People who aren’t pure geeks can find them a bit daunting and can be uncomfortable adding new pages or categories to them.”

The next step up from a wiki is a full-blown document management portal that can contain the main knowledge repository for a corporation. This is the case with Shore Mortgage in Birmingham, Mich. who uses Xerox BlitzDocs electronic mortgage collaboration suite with its 350 employees. As the mortgage business nosedives, the remaining lenders and brokers need all the productivity tools they can find. Shore has latched on to the Xerox software as a way to streamline its operations to achieve a paperless environment that is simpler and faster from application to funding a mortgage. The portal keeps track of the myriad of documents involved in the process, and integrates multiple systems too. “We now have a 24-hour turnaround time on all of our underwriting and we have increased our sales volume about 25% too,” says Pat Hinman, the CIO of the company. As a result, the system has become a competitive advantage to attract new brokers and business.

“About 18 months ago we looked into going to a paperless environment and using images instead of physical documents. Our existing software didn’t provide any ability to do that. With Xerox, we were able to use their Web services to do the integration and have a single location to share and store documents and data from origination through post-closing,” says Hinman.

What helped make the transition to BlitzDocs smoother was the way Shore rolled out the system. “We went in groups of four or five in our underwriting area. We started with our senior underwriters and had them do the beta test. We collected some feedback, tweaked some things, and pulled two more groups the next week. This actually made the new system more desirable because we were holding it back. It turned out to be one of the best migrations that I have done in 18 years.”

Certainly, one of the more popular document management tools is Microsoft’s SharePoint. The non-profit organization Practical Action has 700 staff spread around the world, using appropriate technology to help the world’s poor. “Since sharing knowledge is a very integral part of what we do, we chose SharePoint in 2006 as a means of sharing documents,” says Bryan Scurfield, their International IT Manager for the organization based in Bourton on Dunsmore in the UK. They now have 500,000 documents stored in various servers around the globe and are in the process of using MetaVis Technologies to upgrade to SharePoint 2010 version. “We wouldn’t normally want to be on the bleeding edge but we wanted to develop a project and funding database that needed the newer features such as centrally managed meta data facilities. This is important so we can use the same consistent terms in our metadata columns.”

“It has been difficult to persuade people to do that extra bit of work to save a document to make it readily findable by other people. You are asking people to put some metadata in and that adds to the time. Some of our project staff are contractors and they tend to need persuading that the work they do belongs to the organization. It helps that we require projects before they get funded to be completely documented in SharePoint,” says Scurfield.

Part of any document management system is in understanding the workflows and why, where and when particular documents are needed. This is what Scosche Industries of Oxmard Calif. discovered when they wanted to do a better job with supporting their several thousand aftermarket car audio installers. “We wanted to show someone how to take apart a car door and install a speaker there, and give them the information right at the moment they were doing the installation. Cars are so sophisticated and have so many different trim levels, all with different options too. We wanted to give our dealers an easier way to get information from us,” says Jack DeBiasio, a senior product manager with the company.

Scosche turned to a new application developed with Radish Communications that allows the installer to receive the schematic diagrams while they are on a voice call with the support representative. “Experience has been good so far. One of the things about the iPhone is that you can pinch and zoom into the picture. You can get to where you need to be and see a more detailed view. We see this as a way to differentiate ourselves and distinguish us from our competitors. Radish ChoiceView makes it easy for live agents to share information in real time with our customers.”

One of the hardest parts about collaboration is being able to connect people in different cities that want to work together in real time on a project. A number of “presence aware” applications are available for these purposes, ranging from the free Instant Messaging tools such as AOL IM and Skype to more sophisticated ones that tie into a company’s phone switchboard and email systems.

This is how SmithAmundsen, a medium-sized law firm with headquarters in Chicago, deployed collaboration. They needed to replace their old phone system and wanted to incorporate collaboration tools to help their lawyers be more productive. They went with Cisco IP phones and various other Cisco software tools such as WebEx video and desktop conferencing. They use the presence feature as a way for lawyers looking to find subject matter experts who are in the office and available for quick consultations, as well as being able to help track down a particular attorney when clients call the main switchboard.
Randall Kalik is the CIO for the firm. “The motivation wasn’t to just give them a new pretty telephone, but making our business more efficient in how we support our clients. Attorneys can do three things at once, such as look up a client’s number, engage in a text chat, and be on a conference call. They can transfer in mid-call between their office and cell phones to keep talking and being able to project the image of being in their office when they are on the road or working from home.”

Another aspect of remote collaboration are screen-sharing and desktop video conferencing tools, available from any number of vendors. This is the route that Andrea Prigot, the president of Amicus Consulting in Pelham Manor, NY, took. The firm sells and supports a variety of law office automation products such as a calendar, document and billing systems management tools. “We have to demonstrate and then install and configure these tools and we use Citrix GoTo tools extensively,” she said. Using Citrix cuts down on the number of emails and makes this support easier too.

As you can see, collaboration can pay by tie you more closely together and bring in new business too.

ITworld: NoSQL: Breaking free of structured data

As companies use the Web to build new applications, and as the amount of data generated by them increases, they are reaching the limits of traditional relational databases. A set of alternatives, grouped under the umbrella label NoSQL (for not only SQL), has become more popular and a number of notable use cases, including social networking giants Facebook and Twitter, are leading the way in this arena.

You can read my article over at ITworld here.

Network World: Check Point’s new security blades cut both ways

If you’re in the market for endpoint protection, Check Point’s new R80 Unified Endpoint Security Management product shows promise. The R80 represents the first integration of the Pointsec encryption product line, which Check Point acquired in 2007, and the notion of software blades. The R80 features six separately licensed blades that cover a wide range of endpoint security features. You can read my entire review along with a short slide show of what I liked and didn’t, over on Network World here.

Personal announcement

I have been doing these Web Informant essays since September 1995 on a more or less weekly basis. It has been the single most effective thing that I have done to further my career, keep in touch with you, my loyal readers, and otherwise act as a sounding board for whatever it is that I am working on.

Today, I start a new job, as business channels editor for ReadWriteWeb. It is a challenging position: I supervise four of their enterprise IT sites and several full-time and part-time writers. My bosses are scattered between New Zealand, Pittsburgh, and Portland, Oregon. It has been years since I last had a “real” job, running multiple pubs.

Nevertheless, I am excited about the opportunity, and looking forward to working with a growing company that has a tremendous reputation. This means that I won’t be doing any freelance writing for my usual outlets (Ziff, IDG, TechTarget, and QuinnStreet), although I still will take some consulting (including doing video reviews), speaking, and custom publishing work.

So what should you do if you want to keep up with my work? For the time being, nothing: sit back and see what makes sense for your particular Strom consumption. I will repost something to this list and on my strominator.com Web site after it hits RWW’s sites. If you want to subscribe to the RWW email newsletter or feeds, you can find that information on their main Web page or go to their Feedburner feed here:
feed://feeds.feedburner.com/readwriteweb

(My first post is about what enterprise IT workers can learn from the new Oregon Facebook data center and the massive Sony PlayStation Network outage.)

If you are a PR person or work for a vendor in this space and want to pitch me on a story idea, product or service review, please send me an email and I will take a closer look. Can’t promise anything of course.

If you are in the NYC area, I will be attending the 2Way Summit conference held June 13-14 at Columbia University, and you are welcome to book some time to meet up there.

SearchCloudComputing: Preparing for a hybrid cloud move

The notion of hybrid cloud computing is gaining traction. While the concept isn’t all that new, vendors are constantly adding to the ways IT managers can effectively migrate and manage these mixed environments. And new providers spring up frequently, which makes evaluating them all that much harder. Assuming you’re ready to hop into the cloud, what are the right steps to take with a hybrid offering?

You can read my article on Techtarget’s site here that goes into details about the steps you need to take.

Datamation: Virtualization Software Trends: Hybrid Clouds Mature, Virtual Firewalls Lag

In my last update on virtualization for Datamation last winter, I looked at developments toward the end of 2010 concerning virtual desktops and improvements to virtual infrastructure. The past six months have seen increasing sophistication in both areas, with new products from the major virtualization vendors and some interesting twists, which I’ve noted in my story for them this week here. I review where Microsoft, Xen and VMware have been with recent new products and acquisitions and identify a few trends.

SearchCloudComputing: Shopping around for cloud services

We’ve all heard that cloud computing can be cheaper than paying for your own server. But the dirty little secret is that, because almost everything is priced à la carte, comparison shopping can be akin to prying a final number from your local car dealer.

I found this out recently when I got a monthly bill from Amazon Web Services for $37. My past bills had been only a few pennies a month for some test virtual machines I had placed on their servers; how could I run up $37 worth of services? The culprit ended up being the virtual private network  I had forgotten to turn off when my tests were complete. Oops.

And therein lies the challenge for any IT manager on the hunt for cloud savings: to read the fine print and understand what is billable and when the meter starts — or in my case, stops — running. You can get more in my story that ran on SearchCloudComputing this week here. 

ITWorld: Make open source mapping tools work for you

The online mapping world is an exciting place to watch these days, thanks to a combination of open source tools, the rise of hyperlocal search, and ubiquitous and cheap GPS devices. There are applications galore, including some recent innovations that corporate IT managers should pay attention to.

I explain these trends further and go into more details, and you can read the entire story on ITworld here.

SearchEnterpriseDesktop: Basics of social media in the enterprise

Many companies only recently established corporate email and blogging policies, and now they have to revise those rules to reflect social media. And with sites like Facebook and Twitter increasingly being used for business purposes, it’s difficult to block access to these tools in the enterprise.

Before you craft (or revise) your own social media policy, I have put together a series of tips for enterprise users. You can read the entire article here on SearchEnterpriseDesktop.