Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 23) “After observation over the last 10 years, we noticed that the problem we were having promoting webcasting internally had to do with how much material our production teams could create,” says Kahan. “Also, it had a lot to do with whether our infrastructure could support this format versus that format, if the desktop could provide certain players, and so forth. The executives wanted to use webcasting, but we had to pull in production teams in order to make that happen. “So we went back to grass roots and said, in order to take this up a notch, what does our next system need to look like? And we knew the system needed to be some sort of self-service, because we were dependent on the size of our production teams, dependent on the location of those production facilities, dependent on the overall cost of all that equipment and manpower,” Kahan says. “So we started building the system to try to lower those costs and to enhance something that we already knew was a good technology [webcasting]. And we knew the empowerment needed to go back to individuals.” The six-month pilot program involved about 100 content creators. “I didn’t want it to get too large, because I wanted to make sure that various areas of the business were using it, and so we could collect really good information to see if this was something we should invest in,” says Kahan. The "back-end" of the IBM system, according to Kahan, featured 5,000–6,000 registered users (or you could call them content consumers). “The folks that were selected to start producing content for the pilot ranged from senior executives (VPs, GMs) all the way down to architects,” says Kahan. “They were selected for their various areas of communications within the company. We were looking at how the system would aid us in our daily activities to communicate across the board, not just across one department or one division. In fact, since we are a global company, we have folks all over the globe who are building content and posting that content for global usage.” Surprising Results At the beginning of the pilot, Kahan conducted a survey asking his 5,000–6,000 users a few questions, including their purposes for using webcasting. This resulted in four main categories: general information flow, training, support, and effective meetings. At the end of the pilot, he conducted the survey again. Among the changes that most surprised Kahan was the number of people who were using IVT Studio to improve their meetings. He found that large numbers of IBMers were creating and distributing on-demand pre-meeting presentations that contained preliminary information related to upcoming meetings. This information helped all participants to be better prepared for the live face-to-face meetings when they arrived. And consequently, the meetings were a lot smoother and, perhaps more importantly, faster. Nobody likes being stuck for hours at a time in a meeting room, and IVT Studio helped to streamline IBM meetings, according to Kahan. This surprised Kahan, because he expected training to be the primary category of IVT Studio usage. Indeed, the initial survey had revealed that 31% of users expected to use the tool for that purpose. But at the end of the pilot, those two categories (training and effective meetings) had flip-flopped: Training usage went down to about 25%, while effective meetings usage shot up to an amazing 35%, making it the highest usage category. Kahan was also a bit surprised by how few support personnel were using the system to create user support presentations—only 15% at the end of the pilot. He talked with his support people and they said they’d use the tool more if it offered screen capture or application capture capabilities. Kahan raised the subject with IVT and IVT built capture into the tool. Kahan reports that today, six months after the completion of the pilot, many more IBM support staffers are using IVT Studio due to the capture enhancement. Another surprise to Kahan was how quickly “C-level executives” took to the tool. One such satisfied customer: IBM’s CIO, Brian Truskowski, who, according to Pulier, “fell in love” with Studio. “The CIO there at IBM sat down and created a presentation, and he came back the next day and checked his stats and saw that 1,500 people had watched his presentation,” says Pulier. “He was very excited. He had a sort of ‘a-ha’ moment, when he realized, ‘Wow, I can reach out to thousands of people very rapidly and see who watched and how long they watched and what questions they asked. I didn’t have to get everyone’s schedule coordinated and I could get statistics and reporting.’” While Kahan isn’t willing to say that his CIO fell head over heels for IVT Studio, “he definitely got infatuated,” he concedes. “Brian enjoyed it enough that he used it regularly,” says Kahan about his CIO. “The first set of presentations he did was in an auditorium situation, but then he started to get a lot more relaxed and said, ‘Hey, I don’t have to do it in that environment.’ Then he started posting them out of his office in more of an informal scenario. And the feedback seemed to indicate that the audience really appreciated that. It made them feel like it was more like a one-to-one situation, like he was speaking directly to them.” Another surprising thing about IVT-powered webcasts was that the Studio tool increased attendance at live webcasts. “In the past, for big live meetings where there WWW.STREAMINGMEDIA.COM 23 http://WWW.STREAMINGMEDIA.COM
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Streaming Media - August/September 2007 Table of Contents Sweet Sixteen Letters to the Editor Technology and Business Trends IBM Takes Webcasting to the Desktop ROI in the EDU Bank Serves Espresso, Enterprise Video Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss MLB’s Foul Bawl A Crash Course in Flash Video Newspapers in Multimedia Metamorphosis Webcasting Large Entertainment Events: Seeing Through the Hype Webcasting With Windows Media Can’t Start A Fire . . . A WiMAX Primer Mobile Video at Last Telestream Episode Pro Grass Valley ProCoder 3 Silverlight Is No Flash Killer Streaming Media - August/September 2007 Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page Cover1) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page Cover2) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 1) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 2) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 3) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 4) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 5) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 6) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 7) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 8) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - (Page 9) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Table of Contents (Page 10) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Table of Contents (Page 11) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Sweet Sixteen (Page 12) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Sweet Sixteen (Page 13) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Letters to the Editor (Page 14) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Letters to the Editor (Page 15) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Letters to the Editor (Page 16) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Letters to the Editor (Page 17) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Letters to the Editor (Page 18) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Letters to the Editor (Page 19) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Technology and Business Trends (Page 20) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Technology and Business Trends (Page 21) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - IBM Takes Webcasting to the Desktop (Page 22) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - IBM Takes Webcasting to the Desktop (Page 23) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - IBM Takes Webcasting to the Desktop (Page 24) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - IBM Takes Webcasting to the Desktop (Page 25) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - IBM Takes Webcasting to the Desktop (Page 26) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - ROI in the EDU (Page 27) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Bank Serves Espresso, Enterprise Video (Page 28) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Bank Serves Espresso, Enterprise Video (Page 29) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Bank Serves Espresso, Enterprise Video (Page 30) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Bank Serves Espresso, Enterprise Video (Page 31) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 32) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 33) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 34) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 35) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 36) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 37) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 38) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 39) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 40) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Online Video Advertising: Hit or Miss (Page 41) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - MLB’s Foul Bawl (Page 42) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - MLB’s Foul Bawl (Page 43) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 44) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 45) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 46) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 47) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 48) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 49) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 50) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 51) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 52) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 53) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 54) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 55) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 56) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A Crash Course in Flash Video (Page 57) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Newspapers in Multimedia Metamorphosis (Page 58) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Newspapers in Multimedia Metamorphosis (Page 59) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Newspapers in Multimedia Metamorphosis (Page 60) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Newspapers in Multimedia Metamorphosis (Page 61) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Newspapers in Multimedia Metamorphosis (Page 62) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Newspapers in Multimedia Metamorphosis (Page 63) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Newspapers in Multimedia Metamorphosis (Page 64) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Newspapers in Multimedia Metamorphosis (Page 65) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting Large Entertainment Events: Seeing Through the Hype (Page 66) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting Large Entertainment Events: Seeing Through the Hype (Page 67) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting Large Entertainment Events: Seeing Through the Hype (Page 68) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting Large Entertainment Events: Seeing Through the Hype (Page 69) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting Large Entertainment Events: Seeing Through the Hype (Page 70) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting Large Entertainment Events: Seeing Through the Hype (Page 71) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting With Windows Media (Page 72) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting With Windows Media (Page 73) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting With Windows Media (Page 74) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting With Windows Media (Page 75) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting With Windows Media (Page 76) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting With Windows Media (Page 77) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting With Windows Media (Page 78) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Webcasting With Windows Media (Page 79) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Can’t Start A Fire . . . (Page 80) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Can’t Start A Fire . . . (Page 81) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A WiMAX Primer (Page 82) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A WiMAX Primer (Page 83) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A WiMAX Primer (Page 84) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - A WiMAX Primer (Page 85) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Mobile Video at Last (Page 86) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Mobile Video at Last (Page 87) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Mobile Video at Last (Page 88) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Mobile Video at Last (Page 89) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Telestream Episode Pro (Page 90) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Telestream Episode Pro (Page 91) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Telestream Episode Pro (Page 92) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Telestream Episode Pro (Page 93) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Telestream Episode Pro (Page 94) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Telestream Episode Pro (Page 95) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Telestream Episode Pro (Page 96) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Telestream Episode Pro (Page 97) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Grass Valley ProCoder 3 (Page 98) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Grass Valley ProCoder 3 (Page 99) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Grass Valley ProCoder 3 (Page 100) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Grass Valley ProCoder 3 (Page 101) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Grass Valley ProCoder 3 (Page 102) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Silverlight Is No Flash Killer (Page 103) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Silverlight Is No Flash Killer (Page 104) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Silverlight Is No Flash Killer (Page Cover3) Streaming Media - August/September 2007 - Silverlight Is No Flash Killer (Page Cover4)
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