Posts Tagged 'collaboration'



KM and Collaboration User Forum – Sep 8

When you start getting questions from colleagues and customers about a user forum that we publicized using facebook alone, you begin to understand the power of this new media. In our FB event page there are 61 confirmed participants and additional 40 in maybe attending status – and there’s still a month to go. Here are the official details on our KM and Collaboration User Forum – Customer Talk, set for Monday, Sep. 8th, at IBM Israel.

Intro:
Many organizations are looking for easy solutions to manage (and deploy) knowledge management and sharing technologies, which also leverage existing infrastructure investments. Success stories and best practices are always needed, and our WebSphere Portal solution has some 6,000 customers worldwide. In this upcoming user forum I will speak very little. The portion I do speak will be to narrate the demo we have planned at the last slot. We are leaving the stage to our customers, that include leading local and international companies such as Bank Hapoalim, TEVA, Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Foriegh Affairs, Minsitry of Transportation, Amidar Housing, Standards Institutue of Israel, TARO, Meuhedet Health Company, RAD, Bank Leumi, Discount Bank, NESHER Cement, Nirlat, OPAL Future Technologies, Pelephone Communications, Israel Securities Authority and others.

Target Audience:
Social managers, knowledge management specialists, marcom, team leaders, HR people, IT staff, consultants and analysts, procurement – basically anyone who wants to share knowledge internally or externally and looking for a solution.

Agenda:
15:30 – Networking and (light) food
16:00 – Welcome – Dvir Reznik and Alex Balk, SWG, IBM
16:15 – Customer talk: Unified Messaging Platform for a Paperless Office – Sharon Ben Haim, CIO, Ministry of Finance
16:45 – Customer talk: The Portal as a Workspace – Gabi Shoval, CIO, Menora Insurance
17:15 – Customer talk: TBD
17:45 – Leveraging Web 2.0 solutions for sharing knowledge, the IBM Story – Dvir Reznik
18:30 – Panel and Q&A with speakers – Sharon Ben Haim, Gabi Shoval, Dvir Reznik, Alex Balk

Registration:
There are several ways to register, you can choose one or many:

Coolest Lotus video

I know, Ed has already written about this, but I just saw it and had to complement my creative Lotus colleagues in the UK for making this a very cool video !

A simple scenario, with a simpler solution – Lotus Collaboration.

Speaking of collaboration, our event page at FB is up and running, KM and Collaboration User Forum. It’s a month and something away, but better be safe (and RSVP now) than sorry.
Speakers list (not final, so don’t blame me for changes):
Bank Hapoalim, Israel Securities Authority, Ministry of Finance, Menora Insurance, TEVA and Standards Institute of Israel.

Links:
Lotus on Youtube – Everyone Collaborate, Ed Brill
IBM Lotus Blackout – youtube video
KM and Collaboration User Forum
Lotus Collaboration Solutions

I freed myself from e-mails – Luis Suarez

My friend and colleagues Luis Suarez wrote an article for the NYTimes about his very public project: giving up on work emails. Luis is a social software evangelist and community builder with IBM Software Group, which basically means he explores new and innovative ways of collaboration. He’s also a great public speaker, if you need someone to talk about social media.
Not sure what triggered his experiment (now entering week 21), but the ripples are still visible.

The leading internet news site in Israel, ynet.co.il, also picked up the story, translated it, added some personal commentary and link to the original article of course. Reading the Hebrew article, I realized I wasn’t the only one struggling to come up with an Hebrew word for ‘Evangelist‘. The author simply wrote evangelist, only in Hebrew.. 🙂

Links:
I Freed Myself from E-mail’s Grip – NYTimes.com
Your inbox is a catalyst for productivity – Ed Brill


Implementing E2.0 @ IBM – BNHP workshop

Earlier this week I had the pleasure of speaking at a management workshop of Bank Hapoalim about Enterprise 2.0 and IBM’s experience with implementing such tools and solutions.

I made some changes to my slides after the presentation, and posted at slideshare.net/dvirreznik.
Love to hear comments and feedback.

Investing in collaboration & messaging

Selling Lotus Notes in Israel is not an easy task, and that’s probably the hardest part of my job, since taking this position 11 months ago.

Although personally I don’t use Outlook at home, I’m familiar with Microsoft’s stronghold in the local messaging market, respect them as a competitor and value their selling tactics. From the feedback I hear (friends, family, customers), it seems as if Microsoft is perfect. THE messaging solution we all crave for in our dreams. But is it really the case?

When it comes to messaging platforms, IBM and Microsoft hold the majority of the market, with 42% and 47%, respectively. Both offer roughly the same functionality, in terms of email, calendar and address book, but holds a different approach – IBM is selling an extensible messaging platform whilst Microsoft is selling a messaging application. And there is a difference.

A platform means you embrace composite applications, and enable your user to custom-built his/her workspace, thus becoming more productive. It’s like a web-portal, only in a client-server mode (Lotus Expeditor anyone?). And a platform also means you’re open (client and server) to other vendors, who might compete with you, but offer functionality you can’t (or won’t) provide.

Over the last 2-3 weeks I heard several Lotus customers saying they’re ‘looking into other messaging options‘. That’s cool, and I respect that, it’s an open market.
When I ask why, the reasons vary:

  • It’s too expensive to maintain
  • Hebrew
  • Not a strong UI (user interface)
  • Missing functionality
  • All my colleagues are using Microsoft
  • Our CEO likes Outlook better

I write down all the reasons (to answer afterwards), and then I ask them:
Why won’t you invest your budget in new collaboration and communication technologies?
There are so many new and innovative solutions out there, already mature enough for the corporate marketplace (Enterprise 2.0), that are worth looking at, and maybe even adopting in a small scale: instant messaging, location awareness (twitter), social computing, social bookmarking, building internal communities, team collaboration, web-portals, etc.
Why replace one messaging solution for another?

Here’s a comparison chart I found, that outlines the major differences in Lotus Notes and Domino 8 vs. Microsoft Outlook and Exchange 2007. Highlights:

  • Supported platform: IBM supports Windows 2003, IBM AIX, Linux (on Intel), Linux (System Z), IBM i5/OS, IBM z/OS, and Sun Solaris. Microsoft only supports 64-bit Windows Platform in production.
  • Virtualization: IBM supports both Hardware and Software virtualization. Microsoft doesn’t support virtualization.
  • Clustering type: IBM – application level (more flexible). Microsoft – OS level.
  • Encryption: IBM offers up to 4096 bit RSA encryption keys and 128 bits symmetric keys. Microsoft offer some type of encryption, but optional.

The full chart is available at the website.

Bottom line:
Both solutions have their strengthens and weaknesses, that any customer will evaluate prior to making a purchase decision. But, when you already implemented a messaging solution, why not explore new collaboration solutions? that empower your workforce?

Almost forgot, my answers:

  • It’s too expensive to maintain – when you buy an IBM software, you receive a life license to use the software. Each year you can (not must) renew your Subscription and Support, which entitles you to get free updates for your software and support from IBM specialists. Have you looked at Microsoft’s costs? do you get a life license or need to pay the full cost every year?
  • Hebrew – IBM has been putting a lot of emphasis on Hebrew over the past 3-4 years, and all Lotus solutions are available in Hebrew (input text and user interface). We have a local translation center in Israel, working with the various development teams, and Hebrew is released 2-3 months after the official announcement of the software.
  • Not a strong UI (user interface) – Lotus Notes and Domino 8 was born out of user group feedback – you. The customers told us what they wanted to see, and our dev team’s blog got over 20k hits per month. You can’t get a perfect interface, but hey, we’re here, listening.
  • Missing functionality – There’s always something missing. We are getting the feedback from customers and trying to incorporate some in future releases. Lotus development cycles are relatively short, and we announce new versions 3-4 times a year.
  • All my colleagues are using Microsoft😉
  • Our CEO likes Microsoft🙂

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Mobile & Media Consultant. I help startup companies launch products to the consumer market. Reach out: dvir.reznik [at] gmail.com
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This is my personal blog. The postings here do not represent the thoughts, intentions, plans or strategies of my past employers or of my clients. It is solely my opinion.