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| Home > Unified Communications News > Cisco eyes unified communications, competition | |
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SearchVoIP.com recently spoke to Rick Moran, vice president of Cisco's unified communications group. Moran discussed the competition, emerging unified communications technologies and why users need them, and Cisco's ultimate vision. He also noted that being smack in the middle of the bustling unified communications space is a darn fun place to be. What is Cisco's unified communications roadmap right now? I often talk about the fact that we as people have become human middleware gluing together our multiple productivity devices. Unified communications should help us integrate those elements significantly better. What will be the reaction from customers and the user community to all of that integration and tying together? What do you see as Cisco's next big step in the unified communications space? Where is this all going? Microsoft's been making some plays in the unified communications space recently, announcing that it's pairing with Nortel and announcing a roadmap for the future. How is Cisco going to keep itself on customers' radar screens, especially when there are so many Microsoft loyalists out there?
So our opportunity here is enormous, which is continuing to help our customers move forward, which they're doing at a rapid pace. Are any parts of Microsoft's recent push seen as threatening what Cisco is trying to accomplish? I personally think this kind of validates the objective, [namely], it's an application. I'm sure there are areas where we're going to have products that are competitive, and there are also a lot of places where we can work complementarily. And what about that head-to-head competition? Do you foresee anything specific that Cisco and Microsoft would be competing on -- the two powerhouses going head to head? You mentioned before that the IP PBX is an application. Which is better for customers: a hardware IP PBX or a software call control solution? What are customers really demanding? What do they want to see when they're starting to consider some kind of unified communications solution? What are they really looking for? A lot of customers are looking for IP to be able to provide them with a level of business resiliency that they didn't have before. Because it's an application in the network, they've architected their network to be extensible so they can put call center agents wherever they need to, for example. Or they can make the Call Manager servers redundant in the network so that, in addition to disaster recovery, even something like a snow day doesn't have to stop their business. It's very easy for them to just draw the resources from anywhere else within the network. And then, last but not least, is the integration with other pieces. We see a lot of people very interested in the desktop-to-desktop video piece as well. For example, I'm using the Cisco Unified Personal Communicator. It ties together my voice messaging, my meeting place sessions for the collaboration element; it ties together directory, so I can cut and paste. It means that I can actually make my telephone -- which I'm using as the phone part -- and my desktop work together like a team rather than competing against each other. So I didn't have to dial the phone number. I just double-clicked on it and it automatically initiated the phone session. That kind of stuff people get pretty excited about. Aside from integration, what's ultimately going to be the deciding factor among customers who are considering these technologies? Is it going to be the features or the cost? What do you say to companies that aren't yet considering going forward with unified communications? How is Cisco, as a company, going to convince them that it is something that really should be considered now? Or, in the government case, where competition's not quite the same, what additional services and capabilities can they use to optimize the fixed dollars they have in their revenue stream? What are the key services and capabilities that Cisco offers right now?
On the messaging and collaboration side, we see a lot of people very excited about being able to integrate all of their messaging into one platform. We've seen customers through our community product, our messaging product, be able to compress literally hundreds of standalone voicemail systems into a few networked systems that support all the different locations. At the end of the day, this helps them reduce their total cost of ownership. And at the same time, the users get all of the functionality they had before, plus something else. For example, in the networked voicemail side, it is all networked, so it's easy for users … to send messages back and forth around the company and make multiple locations look like one big location, which is much like the way email works, too. You mentioned a few times that a lot of these solutions are really good from a business continuity standpoint. Do you see a lot of customers turning to unified communications for their disaster recovery planning or for planning for the event of the avian flu, or something along those lines? Do you see that as a driver bringing them into unified communications? Is there anything else you'd like to share with our readers? Look a couple years down the road, and this just keeps getting more exciting.
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