what is unified communications?
By
Terri Butler
Senior Consultant
A Google search will return more than three million hits for the term
“unified communications.” At first glance, you’ll see firms such as
Avaya, Aspect, Nortel, and Cisco and probably conclude that the term has
something to do with telephony. But on closer inspection, you also see
IBM, Microsoft, and a host of other players. So what exactly is unified
communications?
Unified communications (UC) is the integration of various communication
media with business process management (BPM) and workflow. It provides
users with a continuous “connected experience” to move voice, data, and
other knowledge content across a variety of communication verticals.
Services such as instant messaging, video conferencing, e-mail, Web
chat, voicemail, fax, and text messaging can be seamlessly integrated
into workflow and made available in real time when the user needs them.
Workflow efficiencies traditionally isolated to contact centers, such as
call distribution and intelligent routing, can now be deployed across
the enterprise.
With the advent of the IP telephone, voice has converged with data to
become one more packet of information moving along your network. When
voice became digital content, opportunities to deliver voice at
different points within a work stream to different applications and in
conjunction with other information were now available in ways not
possible with traditional PBX phone systems.
UC solutions don’t just focus on delivering voice; they also focus on
providing “presence” information to identify a person’s status as
away, available, in a meeting, etc. This feature is similar to the
agent status in a traditional contact center where software indicators
define the call state of the agents. Presence can significantly reduce
time spent on inefficient communication activities, such as leaving
voicemails and sending messages. If a presence indicator shows the
intended person is away, you don’t waste time dialing the number.
Reducing the latency between communications and getting a real-time
response is made possible when both parties are connected through
instant messaging with presence.
Collaboration opportunities are boundless when team members have access
to collaborative workspaces, desktop sharing, and conferencing tools.
Virtual work teams and mobile employees can easily locate other team
members and participate in meetings via audio and Web conferencing.
Customer service teams can reach out to experts through IM text
sessions, escalate the contact to a phone call or video session, and
gather the necessary information to respond to customer inquiries
quickly, without the need to call the customer back.
But the power of UC to improve product and reduce communication latency
is not limited to person-to-person interactions. The next step for UC is
integration of these services into the business process workflows in a
way that the rules engines, workflow applications, and systems can
initiate and respond to various types of communications across the
process continuum. Businesses have only begun to exploit the UC
possibilities.