Messaging News - February 2009 - (Page 25) Mobile access to collaborative systems is another major theme. We have talked previously in this magazine about how access to email, tasks, calendar and contacts have been well catered to by a plethora of vendors, but that as other collaborative systems are introduced and used for more and more of the daily work, mobile access to those will need to improve. IBM has signaled its understanding of this dynamic, with full access to Lotus Connections coming to the BlackBerry in second quarter of 2009, and access to Lotus Quickr from the BlackBerry coming in the second half of 2009. With many customers seeking iPhone support for Notes and Domino, IBM bit the bullet and announced the licensing of Microsoft’s ActiveSync protocol to support such integration. This means that any end user with a Palm, Windows Mobile, Apple or Nokia device (among others), will be able to connect seamlessly with Lotus Domino without having to buy or install anything special from IBM. That’s a big win for end users, and a new market opportunity for IBM. A third theme that IBM is just starting to address is the area of coherence between its multiplicities of products. One of the concerns I have in my analysis of the IBM portfolio of products and services is the many different places that a team could start working—in a Notes Teamroom, in a Quickr place, in a Connections Activity, in a Connections Discussion, and more. As the number of different places to start team work increases, the corresponding complexity of the vendor solution increases in the eyes of the end user. With little overlap between these different tools, and the non-existence of a seamless way of switching between different modalities, the IBM offering becomes relegated to the “too-hard” basket. I plan to explore this concern in a future report. A fourth strategic theme was the presence and promotion of real customers doing real business through IBM’s products and being willing to talk about it. In a world that often lambastes IBM for poor marketing, having known business names such as Coca-Cola, NetJets and HSBC talk about and advocate the use of IBM technologies was significant social proof that IBM’s product line is actually alive and well. Microsoft tries to paint the opposite view— that “Notes is dead”—but with real customers being willing to go on record about the centrality of such offerings to their business operation, one doesn’t get that sense from the empirical data. It will be interesting to see whether Microsoft steps up its customer acquisition and Exchange/ SharePoint migration efforts within these specific customers over the next year. Finally, tighter partnerships that make sense for IBM customers were a key aspect of Lotusphere 2009. This happened at both ends of the spectrum. First, it happened at the traditional heavy-iron end of things, such as the Alloy product announcement that delivers tight integration between SAP Business Suite and IBM Lotus Notes, as well as the enhanced integration between the RIM BlackBerry and IBM’s products. But it also happened at the end user point of the spectrum, such as the integration between Skype for simplified calling, or with LinkedIn for enhanced contact information. And then to top it off, IBM announced SmartMarket, a place to aggregate and classify IBM business partner offerings to streamline discovery by customers. Moves such as these embed IBM within a confluence of partner ecosystems, more closely tying the success of one to the success of the many. Confusion and Opportunities Some confusion remains, however. Unlike the announcement of the ActiveSync licensing deal—which appears to have been planned for a while—purchasing Outblaze on the Friday before Lotusphere, and then announcing that the Outblaze technology would form part of the LotusLive cloud service appears as a grasping at straws. Why would such an important part of the cloud services strategy be left to the last moment? Such reactionary moves don’t engender confidence in IBM’s strategic abilities. A specific response to SharePoint was lacking. While IBM has a plethora of technology capabilities that can address many of the same value points that SharePoint does, it’s not clear whether IBM is intentionally ignoring an integration strategy with SharePoint, in the hope that SharePoint customers will migrate to IBM’s offerings, or that they do not see it as being important. With the market momentum that SharePoint has gained over the past five years, and the ascendancy that Microsoft is gaining in the perception of IT strategists and analysts, surely IBM needs something more in its weapons array that merely a migration request. Final Thoughts With the revitalization of Apple over the past seven years, it has become the renowned maestro at staging big events at which products are both announced and released. This raises the bar for all companies. Although there are some major differences between the dynamics of the consumer and end user market that Apple plays in as compared to the dynamics of the enterprise software market that IBM plays in, Lotusphere was heavy on promises and extremely thin on actual deliverables. What could you have immediately while at Lotusphere, apart from a major sleep deficit? Yes, you can have the rebranded LotusLive Meetings and Events services, but everything else was merely an “announcement” or “intention” of things that are coming soon or sometime in 2009. IBM can do better than this, and needs to make much better use of the year until the next Lotusphere, and thus make Lotusphere 2010 more than a place to sling ideas at the wall and see what resonates with the customer base. Perhaps there should be a one month release timeframe for all announcements at Lotusphere—now that would shake up some of the apathy in the market about what IBM can and cannot do. MS/TMP FOR YOUR REFERENCE Messaging News writer Michael Sampson advises organizations on improving the performance of distributed teams. He writes at www.michaelsampson. net and can be reached at michael@michaelsampson.net messagingnews.com 25 http://www.michaelsampson.net http://www.michaelsampson.net http://www.messagingnews.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Messaging News - February 2009 Messaging News - February 2009 Contents Editor’s Note Short Takes Options Grow for Virtualized Environments Messaging Predictions for 2009 Moving Into the Cloud IBM Comes Out Swinging Next in Messaging News Learning to Do More with Less: An RSA Conference 2009 Preview “On Message” with Ben Gross The Web Has Shifted. Is Your Network Ready? Making the Case Learn More Messaging News - February 2009 Messaging News - February 2009 - Messaging News - February 2009 (Page Cover1) Messaging News - February 2009 - Contents (Page Cover2) Messaging News - February 2009 - Contents (Page 3) Messaging News - February 2009 - Editor’s Note (Page 4) Messaging News - February 2009 - Editor’s Note (Page 5) Messaging News - February 2009 - Short Takes (Page 6) Messaging News - February 2009 - Short Takes (Page 7) Messaging News - February 2009 - Options Grow for Virtualized Environments (Page 8) Messaging News - February 2009 - Options Grow for Virtualized Environments (Page 9) Messaging News - February 2009 - Options Grow for Virtualized Environments (Page 10) Messaging News - February 2009 - Options Grow for Virtualized Environments (Page 11) Messaging News - February 2009 - Options Grow for Virtualized Environments (Page 12) Messaging News - February 2009 - Options Grow for Virtualized Environments (Page 13) Messaging News - February 2009 - Messaging Predictions for 2009 (Page 14) Messaging News - February 2009 - Messaging Predictions for 2009 (Page 15) Messaging News - February 2009 - Messaging Predictions for 2009 (Page 16) Messaging News - February 2009 - Messaging Predictions for 2009 (Page 17) Messaging News - February 2009 - Moving Into the Cloud (Page 18) Messaging News - February 2009 - Moving Into the Cloud (Page 19) Messaging News - February 2009 - Moving Into the Cloud (Page 20) Messaging News - February 2009 - Moving Into the Cloud (Page 21) Messaging News - February 2009 - Moving Into the Cloud (Page 22) Messaging News - February 2009 - Moving Into the Cloud (Page 23) Messaging News - February 2009 - IBM Comes Out Swinging (Page 24) Messaging News - February 2009 - IBM Comes Out Swinging (Page 25) Messaging News - February 2009 - Next in Messaging News (Page 26) Messaging News - February 2009 - Learning to Do More with Less: An RSA Conference 2009 Preview (Page 27) Messaging News - February 2009 - “On Message” with Ben Gross (Page 28) Messaging News - February 2009 - “On Message” with Ben Gross (Page 29) Messaging News - February 2009 - “On Message” with Ben Gross (Page 30) Messaging News - February 2009 - The Web Has Shifted. Is Your Network Ready? (Page 31) Messaging News - February 2009 - Making the Case (Page 32) Messaging News - February 2009 - Making the Case (Page 33) Messaging News - February 2009 - Learn More (Page 34) Messaging News - February 2009 - Learn More (Page Cover3) Messaging News - February 2009 - Learn More (Page Cover4)
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