Two New BCStrategies Podcasts - Looking Back on 2018 and 2019 Predictions

Been a backlog getting new content posted on BCStrategies, so I have a double-shot update to share here.

Regular followers should know that we try to do a podcast every other week or so, and that I’ve been a long-time contributor to the group. In late December, we usually do a year-in-review themed podcast, along with our outlook for the year ahead, and the stars lined up for both a few weeks back.

These podcasts have now been posted to the BCStrategies portal, and I hope you give them a listen. Here’s our Look Back on 2018 podcast, followed by our 2019 Predictions. As always, comments and sharing are welcome.

BC Strategies logo 2017.png


Spotlight on Phone.com: Small Can be Beautiful for Hosted UC - but it's Big Too

It’s easy to understand why the only way to go is up for providers in the hosted UC space. By nature, cloud is a business of scale, and the upsell opportunities are far greater as the size of end customer gets larger. Many hosted providers are big to begin with; while others start as small players, but out of necessity they need to go upmarket to support their growth plans. This pattern certainly mirrors what the incumbent telcos have been doing for years, as their high operating costs make the lower end of the business market less attractive to support.

Not much more needs to be said about why hosted providers want to chase bigger customers, and nothing is going to change that for now. Of course, the Tier 1s are already there, so the competition is bigger too. Some newer players will do well, and capture new customers, but the Tier 1s will generally remain dominant, so while the opportunity is undeniable, the returns may not be so great.

Going upmarket certainly makes good business sense, but there’s no denying the size of the SMB opportunity. In telecom terms, this generally means 100 lines/employees or less, but that tends to oversimplify things. The upper end of that range gets businesses close to PBX territory, but as you go smaller, phone systems are more basic – but the communications needs are no different. As such, these businesses are looking for good value, and beyond that maybe some features from the UC stack, but generally not a full-scale collaboration platform.

So, is this a small market or a big market?

I’ll stop talking for a moment, and let the numbers tell the story. Based on the most current U.S. Census Bureau statistics (as of December 2018), in 2016 there was just shy of 6 million firms, with total employment of 126.8 million. In terms of business entities – firms - 88% of that 6 million had fewer than 20 employees – roughly 5.3 million businesses. Within that group, the vast majority – 70% - had fewer than 5 employees.

While the number of U.S. firms skews heavily to the low end here, the mirror opposite, not surprisingly, holds for employment. Of those 126.8 million employees, 83% are in 20+ sized firms, with the largest concentration at the top end – 500+ firms. This segment alone accounts for some 67 million employees, and that represents 53% of the total U.S. employment market.

In short, the bottom end of the SMB market – under 20 – accounts for 88% of all firms, but only 17% of all employees. First and foremost, hosted providers define their market in terms of how many businesses they can sell to, and after that, how many lines or subscribers this represents. On the first count, the under 20 market is clearly a very big target, and that’s where providers like Phone.com do very well. While this only represents 17% of employees, in absolute terms, that’s roughly 21 million workers, subscribers and endpoints. Quick math – at $20 monthly per subscriber, that makes this a $5 billion opportunity. That’s what the numbers tell me – so SMB is both small and big. Let’s get back to the analysis.

I’d be oversimplifying things by saying that hosted providers are abandoning the SMB market, but for the most part, they’d rather be elsewhere all things considered. A key reason is the high cost of customer acquisition, and it’s not unusual for hosted providers to spend 30% of revenues on this line item, and often quite a bit more. Compounding this is churn, a risk factor that never goes away given how hosted services don’t lock businesses in with long-term contracts. That’s the downside of the SaaS model, but it sure keeps providers honest since businesses are free to switch any time.

Given all these factors, plus the fact that most hosted providers are under pressure from investors and/or shareholders to sustain unsustainable double-digit growth rates, it’s no wonder why SMBs represent more risk than reward. In terms of checking all the right boxes, a handful of enterprise wins goes a lot further for them than a few dozen or hundred new SMB customers.

So, what’s a Tier 2 or 3 hosted provider to do?

Those who cannot successfully move upmarket are likely looking for a rollup exit, and with consolidation being an ongoing trend, the solid providers will find their takeout partners in due time. Others will continue for as long as the customer base can support them, and then look for a partner of some kind. Still others will smartly pivot and find more lucrative offerings for their customers, or enter new spaces altogether. Following that, many will move on due to attrition, mainly when the business is no longer financially viable. Nothing unusual here given that the barriers to entry are low, making it relatively easy to leave when market conditions are just too difficult.

Then we have hosted providers like Phone.com. Technology has always been Darwinian by nature, and the above scenarios are not inclusive for all providers who fish in this particular pond. Generally speaking, the strong do survive, but you don’t have to be the biggest. A more valuable trait is adaptability, and when it comes to supporting SMBs, Phone.com does this better than pretty much any hosted provider I know of.

For me, the starting point is focus – knowing your market, and having a vision for serving it. Once you start serving the market, you need to keep adapting the offerings to keep the value proposition fresh and to retain your customers. In spite of all the risks touched on above, Phone.com has done these things, and done them well enough to survive and even thrive. I’ve followed the company and known the leadership team since inception, so I can attest to this first-hand. Without going into detail, just consider the following touch points about the company, and consider how this contrasts with what I’ve been talking about so far.

·         Company is profitable – need to start there given how many providers – including much bigger ones – are not making money

·         Continuous growth – for nine straight years, and six on the Inc. 500 for growth – this is a sustainable business

·         Stable management team – they know the market and are committed to the business – founders still run the business and are pioneers from VoIP’s earliest days

·         Financially stable – no debt, and almost entirely self-funded – not beholden to outsiders

·         Great name for branding – this is no small thing in today’s web-centric digital economy, especially having a name that describes your core business and is understood by everyone – can you think of a better one?

·         Critical mass – over 30,000 customers and 400+ channel partners

·         Happy customers – loyalty is hard to come by in this space, and I’ll take their word about churn being low, and that very few customers port their numbers to a competitor

·         Clear value proposition – easy to use and affordable for SMBs – plain and simple

·         Low cost for customer acquisition – most customers sign-up online - the company does have a network of over 400 channel partners to accelerate growth, but only a small portion of new business comes from indirect selling

·         Service is very reliable – this has long been the knock against cloud services, but they partner with AWS, and haven’t had a service outage in three years

Going down this checklist, you see a picture that’s very different from how I’ve outlined the broader SMB marketplace above. When you add it all up, this is a pretty good profile of how to be successful serving this space with hosted services. Of course, it’s not an easy business – otherwise, all those other players would stay – and the challenges are familiar. First off, SMBs are price-driven, not that tech-savvy, and don’t show much loyalty when a better offer comes along. Phone.com itself is a small business, they understand that in spades – and that’s actually helped them in knowing how keep these customers happy.

As such, the business grows slowly and steadily. Growth is mostly organic, as it’s not easy to raise money to expand the portfolio or make acquisitions. On the other hand, Phone.com knows what the market will buy, and the cloud allows them to partner with AWS just like all the Tier 1 players, putting them on an even playing field for hosting.

Why Phone.com has the right stuff for this market

That brings me to the core element – what exactly are they selling? Their namesake is reasonably accurate, and when Phone.com started out in 2007, hosted telephony was the business. Back then, there were plenty of VoIP providers, and it was still a growth market. The cloud has effectively commoditized voice, so you need more now, and most providers have added UC, which has now become UCaaS.

Phone.com is now a UCaaS provider, but it’s not as full-featured as what most others offer. This isn’t to say it’s a lesser service – rather, it’s the right amount of service that smaller SMBs need and are willing to pay for. Again, this comes from knowing their market. Most of the core features are there – video, messaging, mobile apps, CRM integration, and lots of voice features like call recording, VM transcription and 1-800 numbers. Customers can easily self-provision features, add devices, create an IVR, set call handling rules, etc.

There are plenty of value-added features and applications here for SMBs, especially since many are still telephony-centric, and mainly interested in a less expensive phone service. That said, even these businesses will need richer capabilities at some point, and building on a solid track record and a strong value proposition, Phone.com is well-positioned to take them there. Riding with AWS, scale isn’t a problem, and with a team of developers, they can quickly bring new features to market. They have embraced the API model for driving innovation, bringing programmability to their offering, and now offer over 50 customizable features and integrations.

As long as they keep the price point attractive, and make it easy to extend beyond VoIP to collaboration and customer support, they should continue retaining their base, growing share of wallet, widening their margins, and giving customers less reason to go to bigger, better-known competitors. Phone.com may not be a threat to the big OTT players like Vonage, or even the BroadSoft universe, but at this end of the SMB market, they can more than hold their own. There are many models for success in this space, and if you’re looking for one that’s a bit under the radar, you’d be hard-pressed to find a better on than Phone.com.

Being Strategic with Digital Transformation - My Latest on No Jitter

Digital transformation covers a lot of ground - it’s hard to know where to start, and even harder to know when the work is done. We all have a basic idea of the concept, but it’s pretty malleable, and that makes things difficult for IT when trying to lead a digital transformation initiative.

Last week, I attended and spoke at the SCTC’s CRG event here in Toronto - our Canadian Regional Group. The members are primarily consultants, and they see first-hand how their clients are dealing with change from things like digital transformation.

There were many good takeaways from the event, and I’ll cover them in due course, starting with this one. As a regular contributor to No Jitter, my current post focuses on a talk from Mitel’s CIO, Jamshid Rezaei. He provided a great overview of the challenges his organization faced around digital transformation, along with the approaches that worked best. I distilled that into a set of four lessons learned that should resonate for any IT decision-maker. Here’s the link to my post, and as always, comments and sharing are welcome.

NoJitter.jpg





Another Q&A on Future of Work with me - by Rich Tehrani

Our Future of Work conference is getting closer by the day, and it’s good to see host TMCnet giving it strong editorial support. This time around, I was interviewed by their CEO, Rich Tehrani, and the Q&A was posted yesterday. I’ve been working with Rich and his team for ages, and this will be a special time, as their flagship event, ITExpo, celebrates it's 20th year - very impressive.

If you haven’t seen the Q&A yet, here’s the link, and if you want more on this topic, this post will take you to the two-part Q&A Paula Bernier did with me earlier.

After digesting all that, and you’re ready to make plans to join us in Fort Lauderdale, feel free to use this code - Jon10 - to get a 10% discount on your registration. Hope to see you there!

ImSpeaking_FOW2019.jpg

Another Podcast to Share - "I Demand the Cone of Silence!"

Happy 2019 all!

I know I’m dating myself here, but the Cone of Silence from Get Smart is pretty relevant for today’s workplace. It’s even less practical than the shoephone - naturally, it never worked - but the underlying need for a private conversation to discuss sensitive topics is becoming a real challenge with so much pervasive - and invasive - technology around us 24/7.

That’s the teaser for my most recent podcast that my newsletter subscribers receive. As I’ve been explaining with earlier newsletters, I’m keeping that particular content exclusive for subscribers for a few weeks, then it will be shared here to a broader audience.

I was remiss last month in doing that, so blog readers here are getting a double-shot of podcasts. Last week, I posted our podcast from the previous issue - talking about Twilio, including their SIGNAL conference - and I’m pleasantly surprised by how much traffic it’s drawing. Now I’m doing the same for last month’s newsletter, and you can listen by clicking on the embedded link down below.

Even if you’re too young to remember Get Smart , I think you’ll find our discussion of interest, and it goes well beyond the Cone of Silence. If you check it out, I’d love to hear your thoughts, along with suggestions for future podcast topics. And, of course, if you find this to be must-have content - and why wouldn’t you? - just sign up for the newsletter so you have it hot off the press. My January issue is going out this week, so there’s a brand new podcast just waiting to be heard!

December Writing Roundup

As 2018 closes out, my writing output has eased up a bit, but things will certainly be picking up in January. Here’s a digest of my December writing, and if you like what you see, I’d enjoy hearing from you. There will be plenty more to write about in 2019, so I hope you keep following me here.

Two Key Use Cases of Blockchain in Communications, TechTarget, Dec. 26

What are Speech Technology Applications Beyond Contact Centers?, TechTarget, Dec. 19

The Bigger Picture for Cloud and the Contact Center - Part 1 of 3, Toolbox.com, Dec. 12

Vonage Analyst Day - Showing a Strong Hand, my blog, Dec. 10

Death of the PBX, Part 2 - Why Move to IP Telephony?, Toolbox.com, Dec. 5

Should Collaboration Apps be Standalone or Integrated?, TechTarget, Dec. 3

Sharing my Latest Podcast - Spotlight on Twilio

If you subscribe to my newsletter, you likely would have taken in this podcast by now, but for everyone else, this is being shared for the first time.

I meant to post this a few weeks back, but it didn’t happen, and since the podcast was mainly built around my takeaways from their SIGNAL conference, it’s not super-timely. However, Chris and I do speak more broadly about Twilio’s momentum and what makes them disruptive to us.

If you’re not a regular here, let me explain. Our podcasts are exclusive to subscribers, but I recently decided to cap that period to a couple of weeks, after which I would share it here to reach a broader audience. So, the benefit for subscribers is getting the podcast ahead of the pack, plus all the regular content that always remains just for that audience.

I realize that this approach isn’t ideal for podcasts that cover timely topics like conference recaps. However, if you’re new to the space or the company hosting the conference, the podcast will definitely have value. That said, our podcasts aren’t always tied to specific events, and I’ll do my best to get them shared on a more timely basis.

Perhaps if/when I start attracting big-time sponsors, I’ll find a better way, but for now, all I can do is put it out there, and get back to working on the new stuff! So, here you go, and if you like it, let me know - and feel free to suggest topics you’d like to see us cover.

Twilio_banner.jpg



Vonage Analyst Day - Showing a Strong Hand

“I like our poker hand.”

Me too.

VG_Alan.jpg

That’s the main message Vonage’s CEO Alan Masarek conveyed to our tribe last week at their first-ever analyst event. For a change, this was an analyst-only gathering, and you can’t beat that for listening and learning from each other. Maybe 20 analysts and Vonage’s brain trust going over their roadmap and vision for the road ahead. Some analysts there also took in a bit of the massive AWS re:Invent event that overlapped Vonage, and I have no doubt it was a very different experience. I couldn’t manage to attend both, but in terms of spending quality time with the right people, I’m happy with my choice.

I’ll explain here why I agree with Alan – along with some points of caution to keep it real – but there’s more to explore to understand why Vonage is well-positioned in a very crowded and messy market. Much of our time in Scottsdale was spent getting updates on how their three major pieces fit together – both in terms of the offerings and the entities that came via recent acquisitions.

In a nutshell, that’s Vonage Business Cloud (VBC) for UCaaS, CPaaS – driven by Nexmo, and CCaaS – driven mainly by NewVoiceMedia. There’s more to it, but the main idea is that their portfolio has three distinct pieces, with One Vonage being the roadmap to tie them all together. That ground – and beyond - has been covered very well (and faster than me!) by colleagues Blair Pleasant and Dave Michels, and I would encourage you to check out their reviews here and here.

So, forget about the details for now. Based on last week’s event, I’m seeing two basic things that Vonage has done very well – at least so far – that lead me to like their poker hand as well. Simple things, but they go a long way sustained success – pivot and acquire. Let me explain.

Pivot – from whoo hoo to workflows and CX

Remember those goofy ads when Jeff Citron was running the show? I go back to Vonage’s early days, mainly through the other Jeff – Pulver – one of the company’s co-founders, whose VON conferences were the epicenter of VoIP when it was truly disruptive and dangerous to the status quo. That’s ancient history, and while Vonage didn’t kill off AT&T (it almost did, but that’s for another time), they knew residential VoIP was a race to zero. Their pivot to the business market began in 2013 via acquisition, first with Vocalocity, followed by Telesphere in 2014.

Of course, what’s interesting is how Vonage kept going with residential, and that has served them very well. Most people in our circle gave up home phone service ages ago, but there’s still a big market out there, and by virtue of Vonage’s strong brand, they remain a strong player. One comparable is 8x8, who has a similar early-days pedigree to Vonage, and while they started out in residential, they pivoted entirely to business some time ago. They never had Vonage’s name recognition in VoIP, so that was probably the right move for them.

And then there’s magicJack, perhaps the greatest gadget play in VoIP lore. To this day, I’ve never understood how they’ve managed to survive, and I’m sure Vonage is thankful they don’t have to compete at the end of the market.

Anyone can pivot, but it’s all about timing and execution. Vonage certainly pivoted at the right time for business, as cloud was maturing to the point where OTTs could offer much more than VoIP. First-generation UC was premises-based, and limited the playing field basically to the telco vendors. Cloud gave rise to hosted options, and now those vendors can’t migrate there fast enough. Being cloud-native, OTTs could move faster, and now the race is fully on for anyone with a platform.

That’s where execution comes in, and we got a good sense of that at the event for how they’ve parlayed many moves into a successful portfolio both for SMBs and enterprises. The proof is in the pudding, and this slide below from Alan’s presentation says it all. Within four years of entering the business market, those revenues have caught up to residential - $499M and $503M respectively in 2017. Clearly, residential is a sunset business, but it’s highly profitable, and that margin subsidizes their push into business.

I can’t think of anyone else who has this luxury, and as pivots go, it’s a pretty good game plan. As mentioned, 8x8 exited residential early, and their other main OTT competitor – RingCentral – was never in the residential market. It’s also worth noting that this pivot is paying off on the top line. As the slide shows, combined residential and business revenues now make Vonage a billion-dollar sales machine. That’s impressive in its own right, but also in competitive terms. RingCentral and 8x8 are their main OTT rivals, and Vonage’s revenues are roughly the equivalent of these two companies combined. That’s a strong poker hand.

Alan preso_slide 12.png

Acquire – the right pieces for the right reasons

I have less to say here, but with Mitel just going private – again – it made think differently about Vonage’s moves. For a while now, CEO Rich McBee has positioned Mitel as a consolidator, acquiring both competitors and complementary pieces. That strategy makes sense given their market standing. Mitel will never become a Tier 1 player like MSFT, Cisco and Avaya, but could certainly become the leading Tier 2 player, and acquisitions were the way to do that. There were plenty of other Tier 2 competitors to choose from, along with an ocean of Tier 3 trying to hold their own.

Mitel has had a rocky history being both public and private – not just themselves, but also via the companies they’ve acquired. Going private again with Searchlight feels a bit like Avaya going private to restructure and later go public again, but it’s more about financial maneuvering than responding to changes in the marketplace. Nobody is perfect, but they needed two tries to take arch-rival ShoreTel, and going for Polycom seemed like punching above their weight. Mavenir never made sense, and there isn’t a desk phone vendor out there they didn’t like. Don’t get me wrong – Mitel is a major player with a solid cloud portfolio, but there sure is a lot of hardware in their asset mix.

Most people think of Mitel when talking about consolidators in our space, but it seems to me that Vonage has done a better job with acquisitions. Everything happens faster with cloud now, and it’s almost impossible to have sustained success now just with organic growth. Under Alan’s vision, all their moves make sense, especially for the trifecta he talked about and Blair covered in her post. For UCaaS, they have mix of customers on BroadWorks and VBC, their proprietary platform. With BroadSoft in Cisco’s tent now, that’s going to present some challenges, but they plan to keep supporting both indefinitely. However, the future will be VBC, and as Alan explained, this is part of their “own the stack” strategy.

For the other two parts of the trifecta, they smartly acquired Nexmo, the next biggest CPaaS player after Twilio, and then NewVoiceMedia to take their CCaaS play to the next level, namely beyond their partnership with inContact. It might be enough to view these as standalone pieces, but the real end game is One Vonage, where the entire portfolio is integrated, with a heavy emphasis on programmable communications via APIs.

As Alan noted, over half their pipeline is for combined UCaaS and CCaaS, so there’s a strong rationale for this end game. More importantly, it’s been driven by market forces, not financial forces, and that’s why I think Vonage is holding the hot hand right now for being a consolidator. I say that in particular because Vonage’s moves haven’t been to consolidate the supply side by acquiring competitors. Rather, it’s been to acquire pieces that consolidate a value proposition that the market is buying now. I’ll take that scenario over the challenges Cisco will face with BroadSoft, or even Genesys and their play with Interactive Intelligence. Every scenario is different, but Vonage looks to be moving and executing with purpose.

3 things that could go wrong

I concur with Blair and Dave – and others at the event – that the candid nature of the Vonage team gave us a close look at what they have, and it was hard to come away not feeling good about their chances. They seem to have the right mix of technology, innovation, culture, leadership and financial strength to stay in the game for years to come. Many new players won’t make it, and others will be acquired or exit as the barriers to entry get higher and the remaining competitors get stronger. I believe Vonage will hang with whoever’s left, and as Alan says, at this point it’s all about execution. That said, I’ll balance things out with three wildcards that could make things much harder if they don’t execute to plan.

  1. Costly S&M and branding

 While residential VoIP is a race to the bottom, cloud offerings for the business market are an expensive undertaking. Currently, Vonage is spending 30% of revenues on S&M – Sales and Marketing. That may seem really high, but OTTs don’t have an installed base – those new customers have to be taken from someone else. Getting customers and keeping customers are two different things, and with Vonage telling us about their low churn numbers, they’re holding their own on the latter. The same actually applies to the former when considering S&M for their OTT competitors. RingCentral currently stands at 44%, and 8x8 is a whopping 60%. Alan noted that in dollar terms, their M&S spend is comparable to RingCentral, but that’s not being reflected in name recognition, so there’s room to improve there.

2. Losing the golden goose

Another risk factor would be golden goose from residential that frees up cashflow to maintain that spend level for S&M. Their business revenues may be growing at a faster rate than the YoY declines in residential revenues, but clearly that free money will be harder to come by. If Vonage wants to stay in both lines of business, at some point, they’ll need to up their investment to keep the residential business going. I’m sure they’ve thought this through, and the implication would be the need to complete their trifecta One Vonage integration ASAP. If that somehow gets bogged down with technology issues, GTM execution or culture clashes, the pressure will be on to somehow keep the business growth coming on its own merits.

3. What everyone else is doing

State of the competition. CPaaS is central to Vonage’s API-driven value proposition, so Twilio is the main target there. Having recently attended their SIGNAL event, I understand why their momentum is so strong, but it remains to be seen how deeply developers can take them into enterprises. I agree with Alan that Vonage is better equipped end-to-end to serve enterprise customers, but Twilio is hitting its stride now, and they want to succeed as badly as Vonage. For better or worse, I’ve long said that Vonage is the Kleenex of VoIP, and I would say the same about Twilio for APIs. They have great brand recognition, and Vonage is still trying to migrate upstream to enterprises, so the road won’t be easy. Finally, there are those pesky Tier 1s to worry about. If Cisco gets it right with BroadSoft, they’ll be even stronger, and Microsoft has its mojo back in enterprise. Trust goes a long way when picking a cloud partner, and Vonage will have to earn that to grow at the expense of those players. If they’re holding a full house, they’ll be fine, but if just two pairs, they’ll have to play the game more carefully.

Following Clues for Collaboration Success with Millennials - my Latest for No Jitter

Told you it was going to be busy today, but this will do it for now - more coming tomorrow.

My followers will know that I’m a regular contributor to No Jitter, and my latest builds on a talk from BroadSoft’s recent Connections conference. Anyone attending will remember Jason Dorsey’s animiated talk about our generational differences, and here’s my take through the lens of collaboration. Been meaning to post this, but my queue from last week is long, and if you haven’t come across this yet, I think you’ll enjoy it.

NoJitter.jpg

My Q&A, Interviewed by 8x8

As my catch-up day progresses, here’s my next post, and it’s a follow-on from the shout-out earlier today about tomorrow’s webinar with 8x8.

To support that, they did a Q&A with me, mostly about the state of collaboration, and what to look for in our upcoming webinar. If you haven’t seen that yet, here it is, and from there, I hope you make plans to join us tomorrow.

Webinar Shout-Out with 8x8 - Tomorrow - Leveraging the Cloud for Collaboration

Time sure flies, and after three events last month, I’ve got a backlog of blog posts to get done. Here’s the most pressing one - my webinar tomorrow at 2 ET. The webinar is based on my about-to-be-published white paper for 8x8, and I’ll be joined by one of their customers for some first-hand insights about how the cloud is helping SMBs collaborate more effectively. Details are here, and I hope you can join us.

TMC's Future of Work Expo - My Thoughts via Q&A, Part 2

Been meaning to get this out sooner, but I’ve been away at back-to-back conferences. It’s the busy season for events, but there’s more to come, including this one later in January. Along with Paula Bernier, I’ll be co-chairing the Future of Work Expo, and we have a great program in place now. A few more speakers will no doubt be added, but even in its current state, we’re hoping you’ll find enough reasons to join us.

To support that, Paula recently interviewed me on what I’m seeing in the workspace, especially around collaboration technologies, AI, and the impact of changing demographics. I shared some thoughts as well for what to expect in Ft. Lauderdale and what I’ll be doing there. There was a lot of ground to cover, and I posted earlier about Part 1 from our interview. Part 2 has been published now, and you can read it here. As always, your comments are welcome, and perhaps I’ll see you at the Expo!

ImSpeaking_FOW2019.jpg

My Next Webinar - with 8x8: How SMBs Can Leverage Cloud for Collaboration

Here’s my first shout-out for this webinar, happening on Tuesday, Dec. 4. It’s based on a white paper I just completed for 8x8, focused on educating SMBs about how the cloud can take them much further than just replacing premise-based telephony.

There are many stories to be told, and I’ve addressed a few of them here following some industry-based research. The white paper will be available for download soon from 8x8, but the webinar is free for all. More details are here, along with the registration form - I hope you can join us.

8x8.jpg

BroadSoft Connections - Day 1 Quick Take and Photos

As I usually do, here’s a quick first take post about a pretty important conference from some pretty important players. Day 1 of these events is usually a firehose of updates, and a lot of frantic note-taking, photo-taking, tweeting and running around. No time for reflection, but while it’s still happening, I like to get something out for readers to chew on. I’ll have one or two more thoughtful posts coming over the next few days, so watch for those.

While I’m still in the moment, here are some quick first impressions of BroadSoft Connections, followed by a few photos for the vibe here.

  • Cloud is definitely the story here - that was made clear from the very start, with the message being “how do you accelerate your move to the cloud?”. No surprise here, but for service providers selling either BroadSoft of Cisco to businesses, this is the end game. Yes, they will continue to support premise-based deployments and hybrid models, but that’s not where the growth is.

  • Speaking of “they”, things certainly started off being about BroadSoft, especially to mark their 20th anniversary - and that’s pretty cool - but as the day went on, it was more and more about Cisco. Again, no surprise, and that’s just how this is going to roll going forward.

  • Yes, it’s complicated. A lot of time spent by the speakers about how the integration is going, both for the businesses and offerings. The deeper the dives, the more intricate things become, and despite all the talk about wanting to simplify things for customers, this is going to take time. Hopefully not too long, as that could undermine some very good technology here.

  • We learned more about why Cisco bought BroadSoft, and part of it is validation for how important voice and calling still is for carriers. Yes, it’s all about data these days, but this is still core to their business - and identity - and that’s a big part of what BroadSoft brings to Cisco. Plus, it’s easy to overlook that voice - especially on a large scale - is harder to do than it looks - and that tends to get lost in all the nextgen buzz around messaging, video, mobility, etc.

  • All that said, as BroadSoft gets folded deeper into Cisco, they clearly do have a strong end-to-end cloud story for carriers. With all the focus on cloud and software, Cisco still sells plenty of hardware - even headphones now - and that makes it a complete solution to make life easier for IT, and more attractive for carriers to sell.

  • Finally, we were treated to a fun but thought-provoking keynote from Jason Dorsey. His company does a ton of research on demographics, and it was cool to get some glimpses of what defines all of us in the room - Gen Z, Millennials, Gen X and yes, us Boomers. Some great takeaways to help carriers understand how this impacts technology buying decisions, and I sure hope they were listening.

Enough for now - Day 2 is starting now. Check back in a few days for my longer analysis and takeaways for Connections. Time for some photos…

Below - BroadSoft…Cisco… BroadSoft - you get the idea - lots of messaging from both. We’re at the Diplomat Resort in Hollywood, FL. Sure is nice here - not a cloud in the sky, but inside, a very different story.

Below - Mike Tessler… Chuck Robbins… Scott Hoffpauir - back and forth, yet again. And, just to break up the pattern - keynoter Jason Dorsey - more about him later!

Collaboration - The Next Generation - My Latest with BCStrategies

The main contributions I make to BCStrategies are monthly thought leadership pieces, and participating on podcasts when the stars line up. While this content reflects our ongoing insights into the collaboration space, we also produce sponsored content from time to time. This particular post is part of a series sponsored by AT&T, and while it went through extensive review at their end, the focus has remained entirely vendor/carrier neutral.

Of course, your opinion is what realy matters, but I think you’ll agree, it’s a pretty arms-length overview of where collaboration is heading. I hope you find it a good read - here’s the link - and as always your feedback is welcome.

BC Strategies logo 2017.png

Next Stop - Miami and BroadSoft Connections

Well, Hollywood, FL to be more precise. Miami certainly sounds more glamorous, and I am flying there, but it’s a beachfront hotel, so it’s all good. Anyhow, a quick update on my travels - this is conference 2 of 3 for November, and am looking forward to another iteration of BroadSoft Connections.

Yes, it’s really a Cisco event now; and am very interested in the updates on how this acquisition is working out. Will be blogging at some point, but for more timely updates, you can follow my tweets - @arnoldjon - and the event hash is #BSFTConnections. More details here on the Event Calendar page of my website.

BSFT Connections 2018.jpg

My Latest Podcast - Adopting Collaboration in the Digital Workplace

Subscribers to my newsletter have already seen and/or heard this podcast, but for just about everyone else, this will be new. I produce a monthly newsletter updating my activities and sharing industry insights, including a podcast that I produce with colleague Chris Fine. Each month we talk about a current topic, or hot trend, or a recent industry event we’ve attended.

My newsletter content is exclusive to subscribers, and am happy to say that my base is steadily growing. We put a fair bit of effort into our podcast, though, and to give that particular form of content more exposure, I’m now going to share each one here, roughly a month after appearing in the newsletter. I think that’s fair, and am happy to share our perspectives with a broader audience.

That said, the rest of my newsletter content remains exclusive, so hopefully that’s enough to keeps things interesting for subscribers. If you want to become a subscriber - there’s no cost (and why wouldn’t you?) - sign-up forms are on my website, or you can just follow this link here.

If you just want to listen to our podcast from last month’s newsletter, here’s the story. The topic was a recent study produced by Aruba Networks about the digital workplace. I wrote two posts about it here and here, and the podcast gave Chris and I more runway to take a deeper dive. We hope you like it - feel free to comment, share, or suggest future podcast topics for us to cover. Thanks!

Sidebar #1 - my November newsletter will be going out next week, and the podcast topic for that issue will be a review of last month’s Twilio conference, SIGNAL 2018. Stay tuned, subscribers!

Sidebar #2 - I’ll soon be adding a section to my website to archive our earlier podcasts, so if you like this one, there will be others you may want to check out.

Next Stop - San Francisco for Twilio

Following my last blog post, this is “next stop” #2 for the week. I was in Dallas - still am, actually, about to board an early flight to SFO - for Mavenir’s analyst day, and now I’m heading to Twilio’s SIGNAL event in San Francisco. If the flight is on time and my Uber ride goes to plan, I should be there in time for the opening keynote at 10am.

More details are here on the Event Calendar section of my website, and I’ll be happy to be home Friday night. That’s enough excitement for me this week, but I’ll keep writing and posting about the event as time allows.

Next Stop - Dallas for Mavenir

This is “next stop” post #1 for the week. Am at the airport now, flying shortly to Dallas for Mavenir’s Analyst Day event. I’ve had this on the calendar for a while, and it’s my first time attending one of their events. Mobility comes and goes in my coverage, but this will be a good opportunity for a deep dive on the state of 5G and how carriers are embracing the cloud. Even more interesting is how they’re bringing AI to market, and leveraging the cloud for future-forward revenue streams built around RCS and messaging.

More details are here on my Events Calendar, where you’ll also see info about “next stop” #2 right after Mavenir. Watch for another post about that next day or so.