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The new unified communications led for Microsoft Australia - Harold Melnick

If you think I have been a little quite lately, it's because Harold Melnick has now taken over as the new unified communications lead for Microsoft Australia.

Harold can be contacted on his Microsoft Office Communicator

If you want to stay in touch with me, I have a blog transformatio "The SaaS journey for Australian ISVs"

Posted by oscartr | 1 Comments

Great article from an Aussie engineer

I came across this article from Computerworld Australia. I like the practical approach that the author Peter John Revill has outlined. This is his final comments, which are specific and practical.

"I have come to the conclusion that, as is usual in warfare, there is more grey than black and white. Both the Microsoft and Cisco solutions have there merits and downfalls.

For those in the trenches trying to sort all of this out, my advice is to become an expert in the technologies involved, rather than becoming a slave to any one vendor. For example, learn SIP forwards and backwards so you can debug your Ethereal packet captures to work out why OCS will not talk to Cisco Presence (I confess that I have poured over SIP output for a good four hours before finally sorting out all the integration gremlins). And learn why QoS is important, understand the different codecs available and their distinct advantages/disadvantages, but most of all, don't forget that until the PSTN dies, you are still going to need to integrate with it. A thorough understanding of ISDN, FXO, FXS and myriad of other considerations when connecting to the PSTN will serve you well."

Great article Peter

The Cisco/Microsoft battle for unified communications

The cold war has escalated to all out war with Gates predicting the death of PBX

Peter John Revill (Network World) 24/12/2007 07:36:24

The cold-war between Microsoft and Cisco for the much coveted "unified communications" market has escalated to all out war, with Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates predicting "the death of the PBX."

Before we delve deeper I have to come clean. My day job is as senior network engineer for a Cisco VoIP partner. I have a vested interest in seeing the Cisco side of things dominate. But long ago I realized there is no use digging your head in the sand when something new comes along. Hence the hours I should have devoted to studying for my CCIE Voice lab exam have instead been spent attempting (mostly successfully) to understand, use and integrate the Microsoft IP telephony and VoIP solutions to the best possible advantage.

Depending on who you talk to, unified communications is described as telephone and video collaboration, or as a converged network for voice and data, or used as an all-encompassing term to describe all forms of call and multimedia/cross-media message-management functions. For now, I'll use it to refer to any IP telephony solution that can co-exist with data.

Unless you have been living in a cave, you have to have noticed the buzz surrounding unified communications. In fact Gartner identifies it as one of the "Top 10 Strategic Technologies for 2008". It is a competitive space currently filled by traditional PBX vendors (such as Avaya, Nortel, Alcatel, etc.) and some would say dominated by Cisco who long ago realized that IP telephony is more than just a way to help sell more POE switches.

Microsoft entered the market with much gusto with the release of Office Communication Server 2007 in October but, truth be told, the company has been dabbling in this space long before.

That Microsoft has experience with VoIP should come as no surprise. After all, the fundamentals of VoIP and IP telephony are simple: signaling protocols (such as the open standards SIP, H.323 and MGCP and the Cisco-proprietary SCCP) create and tear down calls between two like-protocol end-points, while the actual voice is encoded inside a codec (such as G.711, G.729) and is then transported over an RTP stream (RTP being a simple extension to UDP).

Microsoft has employed aspects of the technology in a range of offerings. Microsoft's Xbox Live service, for example, uses voice to allow players to scream insults at enemy players or give orders to teammates while playing the hottest new Xbox title (such as Call of Duty 4). Microsoft Net Meeting, a rudimentary IP softphone, has been around for a long time, and before Office Communication Server there was Microsoft Live Communication Server 2005, a presence server that enabled Live Communication clients to see the status of other employees (for example, on the phone, in a meeting, etc.). Even the enterprise-staple, Microsoft Exchange 2007, has been getting in on the action, supporting "unified messaging" which, translated, basically means electronic, voice and fax "mail" all being accessible via a single interface.

Many of Microsoft's proposed IP telephony/VoIP products have only just come to market, so it is worth re-hashing the pieces that make up the Microsoft solution and where they coexist with (or replace, depending on which side of the fence you sit) traditional PBX technologies.

The oft-hyped Office Communication Server is essentially the PBX destroyer. Equipped out of the box with "presence" (something you need to buy as a separate server from Cisco) and integrated with existing address books and corporate directories, OCS acts as the PBX of old. End users install an OCS client that allows them to see the presence of other users, instant message them and call them, if desired.

If your corporation has been sold on the benefits of collaboration (multiple people being able to edit the same document/spreadsheet/presentation at the same time) you will need to fork out for Microsoft Office Live Meeting, which integrates seamlessly with OCS.

Your voicemail needs can then be taken care of with your existing Exchange 2007 server by simply configuring (and paying to enable) unified messaging.

In this battle Microsoft fights on the land, in the sea and in the air. To get the equivalent functionality in Ciscoland you would need four separate products (Cisco Call Manager, Presence, Unity and Meeting Place, respectively). When you factor in that you probably already have an Exchange server, it seems that your Microsoft VoIP defense budget leaves you room for other pressing domestic issues (virtualization perhaps?).


The Microsoft solution, when all the pieces are integrated, is sexy. Taking a page from the Apple book, Microsoft has implemented the "gee-wiz" features that demo to customers very well. Be it the text-to-speech e-mail engine, the voice recognition Auto Attendant of Exchange Unified Messaging, or the tight integration of Live Meeting with other Microsoft applications, the Microsoft solutions shout "hip" and "snazzy." (Two videos on the Microsoft Web site, based on the rather dreadful movie "The Devil Wears Prada," showcase this perfectly.)

But for all the hype and jazz, the Microsoft solution falls short on a number of issues that are going to be important to larger enterprises. While taking care of the sex and sizzle, Microsoft has forgotten the fundamentals that make these technologies work. Basic features such as music-on-hold is slated for future releases, and even the venerable call-parking is not a feature currently supported. The core routing rules, such as which trunk to use when routing to emergency calls or how to use site access codes for overlapping extensions, are also very limited in flexibility on the Microsoft platform. Finally, the list of supported VoIP gateways is laughable, with none of the major vendors currently supported.

However, while these oversights might give Cisco and its partners some comfort, they are small and short lived when you consider the factors going Microsoft's way. Microsoft has a loyal troop base of MCSE's and other server experts chomping at the bit for a chance to roll out VoIP their way, with the software and the servers providing the intelligence and the network simply delivering the packets. No new Call Manager interfaces to learn, no separate directories to take care of, and familiar Microsoft products and jargon is nirvana to the Microsoft Administrator.

However, a lack of understanding of the importance of QoS in a converged network, and failure to understand the many finicky aspects of the PSTN, will doom many overzealous Microsoft administrators. A criticism often directed against Cisco VoIP engineers is their lack of understanding of the traditional PSTN and PBX technologies. With Microsoft administrators lacking understanding of the IP network as well the PSTN, this criticism will (pardon the pun) ring true.

The aftermath

The Microsoft IP telephony solution is still in its infancy but already shows the telltale signs of a bright kid. If Microsoft is smart enough to send it to the right schools it will grow up to do great things. For the here-and-now, Cisco has little to fear from Microsoft in large enterprises and the Microsoft reputation is a two-way street: While the company obviously has strong brand recognition, many large enterprises will be less than inclined to trust such a critical corporate function to a company with a less-than-enviable reputation for software quality.

The best bet at the moment is the use of both Microsoft and Cisco technologies. The use of Exchange 2007 for voicemail with a Call Manager is a no-brainer. Most enterprises currently run Exchange, and integrating Call Manager effectively is a snap. Smart channel partners that resell both Microsoft and Cisco will use this as an opportunity to push Exchange 2007 upgrades by touting the virtue of unified messaging when integrated with Call Manager.

The Cisco presence vs. Microsoft presence argument is going to come down to money: In order for Microsoft OCS clients to be able to "see" the on-hook/off-hook status of Cisco IP phones, you need a Cisco Presence server. This means doubling-up on licensing and many enterprises may opt to use the Cisco Presence client. Finally the Microsoft Live Meeting product is too tightly integrated into OCS at the moment to be a viable Cisco MeetingPlace alternative for current Call Manager users.

I have come to the conclusion that, as is usual in warfare, there is more grey than black and white. Both the Microsoft and Cisco solutions have there merits and downfalls.

For those in the trenches trying to sort all of this out, my advice is to become an expert in the technologies involved, rather than becoming a slave to any one vendor. For example, learn SIP forwards and backwards so you can debug your Ethereal packet captures to work out why OCS will not talk to Cisco Presence (I confess that I have poured over SIP output for a good four hours before finally sorting out all the integration gremlins). And learn why QoS is important, understand the different codecs available and their distinct advantages/disadvantages, but most of all, don't forget that until the PSTN dies, you are still going to need to integrate with it. A thorough understanding of ISDN, FXO, FXS and myriad of other considerations when connecting to the PSTN will serve you well.

Peter John Revill is the Senior network engineer at a Perth, Australian-based Cisco VoIP Partner. He has been working in computing for 7+ years and specifically in the VoIP/IP telephony field for the past three. He holds a CCIE in Routing and Switching (#18371) and has his CCIE voice lab booked for March 2008. He can be contacted at nervlord@westnet.net.au. The views in this article are Revill's and may not represent those of his employer.

 

For those of you reading this blog, this will be my second last post on Unified Communications. The next post will be announcing my replacement in the role of unified communications at Microsoft, they will be starting in the role in the beginning of 2008.

 

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Some recognition for Unified Communications in Australia

It was great to attend the Frost & Sullivan Industry awards dinner

It was amazing to see the progress the industry made with Cisco and Microsoft all winning awards in the Unified Communications Category.

With Microsoft winning 4 out of 5 awards in the unified communication category, it was an important step in recognising the Australian Unified Communications Team

A big congratulations to Peter Hughes of Cisco and George Atrash from Dimension Data for Systems Integrator of the year

A big thank you to the Australian Unified Communications team at Microsoft - Sandra Lee-Joe, Sonya Aboudargham, Mario D'Silva, Johann Kruse, Lisa Eastley, Colin Lee, Jonathan Spellman, Fiona Cheong and Belinda Varriale

Oscar Trimboli (l) Peter Hughes Sonya Aboudargham; Johann Kruse; Jennifer Yust Lisa Eastley, Laura Hughes, Frank Huges, Fiona Cheong, Belinda Varriale

 

 

Frost recognizes 11 Australian Information and Communications Technology companies Frost & Sullivan - November 16, 2007

Frost and Sullivan today presented 17 awards to the best and brightest in the Australian Information and Communications Technology (ICT) industry. The second annual Frost and Sullivan Best Practices Awards recognize 11 companies spanning three market sectors: digital media advertising, unified communications, and enterprise outsourcing. Sponsors include Aspect Software and Salesforce.com.

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Each of these sectors has a dedicated local researching analyst who produces a series of in-depth reports during the year that are available in Frost & Sullivan’s growth partnership services.

Said Mark Dougan, managing director for Frost & Sullivan Australia, “An integral part of our research program is recognising both market and customer leadership. Market leadership is based on our assessment of who leads the market in terms of market share and growth over the past year. Customer leadership is based on the views of customers and end users on the levels of satisfaction they have with various suppliers.”

“Of course these are all highly competitive markets, and many high quality vendors or suppliers compete neck and neck. Receiving a Frost & Sullivan award is therefore a tremendous recognition of success both in the marketplace, and in the minds of customers,” added Dougan.

Frost & Sullivan congratulates all its Award recipients:

Digital Media Advertising awards:

1. carsales.com.au – 2007 Frost & Sullivan Advertiser Satisfaction Award for Online Classifieds Advertising

2. SEEK Ltd – 2007 Frost & Sullivan Market Leadership Award for Online Classifieds Advertising

3. Tempest Media - 2007 Frost & Sullivan Market Leadership Award for Online General Advertising

4. ninemsn - 2007 Frost & Sullivan Advertiser Satisfaction Award for Online General Advertising

5. Google Australia - 2007 Frost & Sullivan Market Leadership Award for Online Search Advertising & 2007 Frost & Sullivan Advertiser Satisfaction Award for Online Search Advertising

Unified Communications Awards:

6. Microsoft Australia

2007 Frost & Sullivan Customer Endorsement Award for Unified Communications in BFSI

2007 Frost & Sullivan Customer Endorsement Award for Unified Communications in Government

2007 Frost & Sullivan Market Leadership Award for Unified Communications in Government

2007 Frost & Sullivan Customer Endorsement Award for Unified Communications in Healthcare

7. Cisco Systems – 2007 Frost & Sullivan Market Leadership Award for Unified Communications in BFSI

Enterprise Outsourcing Awards:

8. EDS – 2007 Frost & Sullivan Market Leadership Award for Enterprise Outsourcing in BFSI

9. IBM – 2007 Frost & Sullivan Customer Satisfaction Award for Enterprise Outsourcing in BFSI; 2007 Frost & Sullivan Customer Satisfaction Award for Enterprise Outsourcing in Government; 2007 Frost & Sullivan Market Leadership Award for Enterprise Outsourcing in Government

Of the year Awards:

10. Dimension Data – 2007 Frost & Sullivan Australia Unified Communications Systems Integrator of the Year

11. Salmat – 2007 Frost & Sullivan Australia Business Process Outsourcing Service Provider of the Year

About this program

The Frost & Sullivan Awards banquet, held annually, recognises outstanding performance by companies in the ICT industry in Australia. Introduced for the first time in 2006, the Awards attracted some of the leading names in technology on a single platform to compete for the most coveted titles in ICT. Benchmarked against leading companies in each category, the recipients of these awards represent the best-of-breed in the country.

This year’s Awards is supported by Aspect Software (silver sponsor) and Salesforce.com (bronze sponsor), Viocorp (official internet broadcaster) along with MediaConnect & M&a, Marketing & Advertising. Computerworld Australia is the official media partner.

 

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A launch starts well before a launch

Working at Microsoft, I always get the question what do you guys do with your day. A few weeks ago we did a local press launch to coincide with the world wide launch.

We did our press event in Sydney at the Intercontinental Hotel and connected via Microsoft RoundTable to our offices in Melbourne

So what better way to highlight our software than to use it to launch to the press - that way your presentation is the demonstration.

Thanks to Tony Wilkinson (Sydney) and Mario D'Silva (Melbourne), Cara Leggett from the Microsoft Public Relations Team and Ry Crozier and Alex Murphy from Howorth our Public Relations company we had a full house in Sydney and Melbourne with Australian journalists.

We have an amazing core team lead by Sonya Aboudargham, Lisa Eastley, Belinda Varriale, Graham Vaughan, Fiona Cheong, Joe Walkden, Jeanette Warth, Jonathan Lewis, Martin Walsh, Deeps DeSilva, Sandra Lee-Joe, Johann Kruse, Mike Heald, Michelle Markham, Robin Young and Rita Alexandrou, from our agency MRM Worldwide Frank Lang, Laura Hughes and Alisa Lai. It takes a lot of people to make this launch happen.

This is before we start our customer launch next week

 

 Clair DeevyBritts_Wall16IT_guy_in_server_room

Mario D'Silva Ry Crozier UC launch Australia Tony Wilkinson Unified Communications Launch Australia   Cara Leggett Unified Communications Launch Australia Australian Early Adopters of Unified Communications  Franks_Phone Oscar Jonathan - Internal Launch  

 

As a result, when you have a great team pointing in the same direction, you get amazing results in the local press

BHP, Lion Nathan ride Microsoft unified comms  By Rodney Gedda, Computerworld Australia

Microsoft's unified communications blitz By Stephen Withers, ITWire

Microsoft launches Office Communicator 2007 By Adam Turner, SearchVOIP.com.au

 

A big thank you to the local journalist who supported this event. It would have been very lonely without you.

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DiData - world class from Australia again with Cisco Call Manager and Exchange 2007 integration

CAIRNS CITY COUNCIL BUILDS UNIFIED COMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE

Dimension Data Deploys Microsoft and Cisco Infrastructure to Support Regional City Council’s Strategic Plan

Sydney, Australia, October 18, 2007 – Dimension Data today announced the successful rollout of the first phase of a three-year unified communications project with Cairns City Council (the ‘Council’), a key component of the Council’s ambitious plan to deliver improved services to its growing constituency and become a world-class regional city.

Working with its strategic partner Dimension Data, the Council is deploying a Cisco and Microsoft-based unified communications infrastructure to improve both its internal communications efficiency and deliver superior service to its constituents. The infrastructure will be rolled out over a three-year period to over 1000 users, with a pilot phase involving 30 users currently underway.

Council staff can now contact and collaborate with each other more easily than ever before, saving time and boosting productivity. Staff will also benefit from a unified inbox, creating a single location for all email and voicemails received. Exchange 2007 has also enabled ‘play on phone’, which allows users to access voice messages in their email inbox from a mobile phone, landline or other number.

“Dimension Data has been proactively involved with Cairns City Council since 2001, designing, deploying and supporting our Cisco infrastructure. As a result, Dimension Data has become engaged with our strategic planning and understood the direction we wished to take in deploying a converged infrastructure,” said Dennis Littlewood, Manager, IT Infrastructure, Cairns City Council.

The initial phase of the project has entailed upgrading the Council’s existing Cisco equipment and deploying cornerstone Cisco, Microsoft and Dimension Data technologies for unified communications: Cisco CallManager 5, Microsoft Exchange 2007, Microsoft Identity Integration Server and Dimension Data’s IP telephony – Active Directory (IPAD) Connector. This stage of the engagement is well underway and Council is currently on track to have its new infrastructure in place as planned.

Year one of the project has also seen a number of significant Cisco hardware deployments, including gateway, email and multimedia router upgrades, and a range of different Cisco IP handset models.

The Council’s phone lines have all been re-routed from its existing PABX to the new Cisco IP PABX, with all Council users provisioned in CallManager. Users not involved in the pilot have had their IP phone lines forwarded to their existing handsets, making the upgrade process invisible. The advantage of this approach is that when the full system is rolled out to these users, it will be a simple matter of installing a new Cisco IP handset and switching off the call forwarding. This is expected to take place in stages throughout 2008, once the system has been fully tested and all users trained.
Dimension Data IPAD

IPAD is a unique solution that allows organisations to operate their unified communications applications through a single directory by integrating the Microsoft Active Directory and Cisco CallManager environments. This provides a single point of user administration for functions including replication of user information (including moves, additions, changes and deletions), mapping of data fields between the two systems, and scaling to connect additional directories for a complete identity management system.

“IPAD provides a single interface for user administration for the Council, across the entire Microsoft and Cisco IP telephony solution,” said Mr Littlewood.
Future Phases

The next phase for the Council is the implementation of Cisco Unified Contact Centre (IPCC), which will enable IVR functionality and intelligent call routing for the Central Customer Service Centre, Council’s IT service desk and the Civic Theatre’s box office (which is run by the Council). It will also enable advanced functionality including click-to-call and desktop videoconferencing. The system’s ability to route calls to the right staff member means call handling can be tailored to different classes of customers (down to the individual level). Calls can be moved in the queue and skill groups used to define which agents have the required knowledge to deal with a customer’s query quickly and efficiently.

The move from legacy equipment to a converged network has brought a raft of less tangible benefits, like improved fault tolerance, the ability to federate with other councils if desired, and a range of possible future upgrades that can quickly and easily be deployed to meet future needs, including wireless connectivity, and Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007 for instant messaging and presence.

“We’ve been very happy with the improvements to our telephony environment; we’re now looking at upgrading our Contact Centre as well. We’ve upgraded our infrastructure to the latest Cisco IP network, so the back-end work has been done,” Mr Littlewood notes.
“Now, when we want to add new applications or capabilities, we’ve got a platform that will accommodate them.”

-ENDS-

About Dimension Data
Dimension Data plc (LSE:DDT), a specialist IT services and solution provider, helps clients plan, build, support and manage their IT infrastructures. Dimension Data applies its expertise in networking, security, operating environments, storage and contact centre technologies and its unique skills in consulting, integration and managed services to create customised client solutions.
About Cairns City Council Cairns City Council was created in 1995 as a result of the amalgamation of the existing Cairns City Council and Mulgrave Shire Council. It has three key areas of responsibility. Firstly, it must deliver services and infrastructure, in partnership with the community, governments and the private sector; secondly, it must encourage and facilitate economic, social and cultural development; and thirdly, it must ensure all its operations are sustainable – environmentally, economically and socially.

 

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Microsoft's unified communications blitz

A raft of new hardware and software will - Microsoft hopes - change the way people communicate at work ITWire Australia and Stephen Withers

 

Between them, Office Communications Server 2007, Office Communicator 2007, Office Live Meeting and Exchange Server 2007 SP1 provide provide presence information plus voice, video and instant messaging, all integrated with popular applications such as Microsoft Office and SAP's Duet as well as telephony systems from vendors such as Nortel.


According to Oscar Trimboli, director of Microsoft's unified communications business group in Australia and New Zealand, users benefit from gaining access to communications functions from the familiar Office user interface, administrators enjoy the convenience of managing a single directory rather than one for each PABX plus another for the IT systems, while accountants like the idea of gaining these benefits while sweating existing assets instead of buying new telephony gear.

For example, users can set up conference calls simply by dragging their names into a window instead of messing with awkward and easily forgotten key sequences.

Microsoft has done the groundwork for the introduction of the new software by qualifying staff at nearly 800 systems integrators around the world (including more than 20 in Australia), and by lining up support from Ericsson, Mitel and Nortel.

"Microsoft has done an excellent job of readying the local partner community," said Audrey William, research manager at Frost and Sullivan Australia.
Other companies falling in behind the software giant include Genesys and Tandberg.

Genesys Enterprise Telephony Server allows users to route calls to and from any contact using both IP soft phones and traditional telephony equipment from 25 vendors. The software can (among other features) detect 'in a call' presence status from current and older PABXs, uses SmartTags to allow users to dial contacts by clicking their names in Office applications, and to highlight and call any 10-digit telephone number appearing in Internet Explorer, Outlook, Word, Excel, Communicator and Firefox.

Tandberg has announced plans to make its videoconferencing systems interoperable with OCS 2007.

Early adopters of the software include resources company BHP Billiton which has rolled out OCS 2007 to 11,000 of its 39,000 employees in 25 countries, and brewer Lion Nathan, which is "very happy with their RoundTable [Microsoft's new conferencing phone with a 360-degree camera] experience," according to Trimboli.

For now, Mac OS X users are out in the cold, but according to Microsoft Australia technology specialist Mario D'Silva, a forthcoming version of Microsoft Messenger for Macintosh will support most OCS 2007 features.

 

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Australian case studies on Unified Communications

We are all pleased locally what an important part Australian companies are playing in the world wide launch of Office Communications Server 2007. A big thank you to Data#3. Dimension Data and Hewlett Packard who helped make these happen. Great examples of PABX integration with Cisco & Polycom

Lion Nathan Australian Beverage Maker Improves Efficiency with Unified Communications Solution

Lion Nathan, a maker of fine alcoholic beverages in Australia and New Zealand, wanted to enhance its collaboration tools. Geographically dispersed team members needed a faster way to locate one another and to share information. To improve communication, the company became an early adopter of Microsoft® Office Communications Server 2007 and Microsoft RoundTable™. The company integrated its existing voice over IP (VoIP) telephony system with the new solution, and pilot users now can manage voice, e-mail, instant messaging, and conferencing through a single interface. These users are more efficient because they can locate one another faster and because integrated technologies mean more connections and fewer missed calls. Enhanced conferencing features improve internal collaboration, and the company looks forward to improving communication with external parties as well.

Eastern Health Healthcare Provider Improves Patient Outreach with Unified Messaging Solution

Eastern Health is the second largest healthcare provider in the State of Victoria, Australia. It provides public healthcare services to a population of 800,000 people across an area of 2,800 square kilometers. With more than 7,000 staff working in five hospitals, Eastern Health relied on e-mail and voice mail to contact its practitioners. The organization wanted an integrated messaging solution to streamline collaboration and cut operating costs. Using Microsoft® Exchange Server 2007 with Unified Messaging in conjunction with Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007, Eastern Health has created a unified communications environment that offers extended capabilities and improves patient outreach. The new system provides a one-stop gateway for collaboration that is scalable for future expansion, is cost-effective, and helps improve patient care.

 

BHP Billiton Global Commodities Company Saves on Travel Costs with Unified Communications

BHP Billiton is the world’s largest diversified resources company. It has 39,000 employees working in 25 countries worldwide and returned a profit of U.S.$13.7 billion (excluding exceptional items) in fiscal year 2007. With global operations demanding frequent inter-office communications, the company found itself hindered by a range of different systems and protocols, and poor call quality from its many remote offices. To consolidate its online meetings solutions worldwide, the company turned to Microsoft® Office Communications Server 2007 to deliver an integrated communications solution to improve collaboration and communication for its employees. With highly secure content sharing, software-based voice over IP capability, and integrated presence management, the new environment creates a unified communications solution that helps reduce long-distance call costs and travel budgets, and removes company dependence on hardware-based IP telephony solutions.

 

University of Sydney Major Research University Increases Productivity with Unified Communications

Founded in 1850, the University of Sydney is a leading research institute that operates in multiple campus locations worldwide. Over the years, the university’s many departments had adopted a diverse range of incompatible technology solutions—including various e-mail systems. To provide a common messaging solution enterprise wide, the IT department deployed Microsoft® Exchange Server 2003 in January 2006. In December of 2006, the university took the next step toward unified communications when it launched a pilot program with Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007. By using built-in instant messaging and presence capabilities, employees now have real-time access to their colleagues’ availability. With instant messaging and sophisticated Web conferencing capabilities, users also have a variety of ways to contact colleagues quickly and work collaboratively on local or global projects.

 

Queensland Rail Limited QR Limited Gets on the Collaboration Train with Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007

Staff in the geographically dispersed coal division of QRNational needed to travel extensively to meet and make critical decisions. As part of the Microsoft Queensland Spotlight 2007 program, QRNational worked with Microsoft Gold Certified Partner Data#3 to create a prototype online collaboration portal based on Microsoft® Office SharePoint® Server 2007. This has the potential to increase productivity, streamline order management, improve timely decision making and enhance strategic planning.

 

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Unified Communications: Only for big business?

Adam Turner wrote a good piece on unified communications for Small and Medium Business on SearchVoIP.Com.au

 

Unified Communications sounds like an exciting prospect for large corporates, but you don't have to be a heavy hitter to enjoy its benefits.

Many Unified Communications features are set to available as part of hosted services targeted at small to medium businesses, says Oscar Trimboli - Director of Microsoft's Unified Communications group in Australia.

Microsoft is working with telco Telstra, as well as hosting providers WebCentral and Emantra, to provide hosted Unified Communications offerings, Trimboli says.

"Unified Communications is a bit pointless if only a small segment of enterprise organisations get the benefit of it. It needs to be broadly adopted and that's why we've been putting these building blocks in place with the partners like Telstra, WebCentral and Emantra for a good couple of years," he says.

The upcoming release of Microsoft's Office Communication Server (OCS)

2007 will further unify voice and data communications, says Emantra managing director Ross Dewar.

"Microsoft has paid a lot of attention to making this new technology work with legacy phone systems and to understanding exactly how real users work," Dewar says.

"For example, with OCS 2007 a simple phone call can become a conference call or a video conference on the fly. Voice-mail and faxes move over the network like email and will arrive in the Microsoft Office Outlook

2007 inbox where users can sort, prioritise, and forward them, just like any piece of email. Users on the road can dial in over any telephone to hear their emails and appointments."

Dewar sees strong potential for pay-by-the-month managed services around OCS in combination with Emantra's existing Hosted Exchange 2007, Windows Sharepoint 3.0 and Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 services.

"Smaller companies will like the hosted model because the traditional ownership and operation of this new technology may well be out of their technical and financial reach. Larger corporate and government entities will be attracted because of the speed in which the hosted model can be implemented, as well as the reduced distractions and risk of having the service externally managed. Even very large organisations will look at utilising a hosted model to prove the concept before making a major investment in an in-house capability," he says.

 

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Pretty little web site

Thanks to Martin Walsh - web master and black belt in the art of online - check out this little beauty http://www.microsoft.com/australia/uc/

 

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A good Cisco and Microsoft discussion on a pod cast from Getronics

Not So Unified Communications

How businesses can make the most of Cisco and Microsoft communications solutions without getting crushed as the companies collide in the enterprise. Lee Nicholls, Global Solutions Director for IT services provider Getronics explains in this Microsoft Watch podcast.

 

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Looking for a new challenge

Unified Communications Services -Solution Sales Professional (SSP UC Services)

Are you excited about an opportunity to drive sales of Microsoft’s new enterprise products?

Are you a strong Sales Specialist with passion for delighting customers & partners?

If so, then the Incubation Sales Team is the right place for you!

Microsoft is looking for a UC Services SSP to cover our Enterprise and Upper Mid Market Sales Segments.

As a UC Services SSP you will own managing a defined territory in an effort to meet the revenue objectives and close complex deals for EHS (filtering, encryption and archiving services) and LM (Live Meeting Hosted conferencing) in the Enterprise Sales Segment.

You will be responsible for working with Microsoft field sales teams to engage with our Enterprise customers in an effort to upsell them on UC Hosted Services.  You will also work with key partners (telcos, LARs, VARs and SIs) on sales planning and execution, perform skills transfer for partners' sales forces and provide input and feedback from field and partners to the marketing and product development process.

This role covers the ANZ region and is focused on driving the largest hosted services opportunities with Microsoft’s key customers. Effective sales pipeline development and management experience required. Close coordination and support of the field sales team is essential.

They key responsibilities of this position include selling LM and EHS solutions to customers, removing roadblocks to deployment, and driving customer satisfaction. In addition, you will provide leadership to others in identifying opportunities and helping customers to evaluate hosted solutions within their environments. You will also be responsible for managing investment funds to support large opportunities.

The ideal candidate will have a proven record of growing new businesses and building technical relationships.  A strong working knowledge of selling hosted services, specifically web conferencing and/or messaging services focusing on SPAM filtering, and archiving solutions is highly desirable.. Ability to effectively present to a wide range and size of audiences from IT technician to CIO level is a must. A good understanding of issues surrounding deployment and integration of technologies and solutions is required. This position can be based in either Sydney or Melbourne and may require approximately 20% travel.

Position Requirements:

  • Solution Selling Experience: Proven success with enterprise customers, working knowledge of solution-selling strategies and tactics and business value selling
  • A minimum of 7 years experience in Enterprise software sales, enterprise consulting or an equivalent
  • Demonstrated experience and success engaging with senior executives in a sales process and working with leading consulting, systems integrator and major computer vendors
  • Excellent interpersonal, verbal and written communication, analytical and presentation skills are required
  • Candidate must possess exceptional demonstrated decision-making, conflict resolution, problem solving and negotiation skills
  • Strong understanding of web conferencing and/or messaging AV, Anti-spam, Disaster Recovery and Archiving preferred.
  • BS/BA degree or equivalent experience.

 

If you think you have what it takes contact our recruitment team about the role and a full position description

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The SharePoint MVPs are starting to talk about presence

Ivan Wilson has started writing about SharePoint and presence being turned on in his blog

 

Posted by oscartr | 0 Comments

Australian Partner Conference - Unified Communications Pre-Day Workshop winners

During our recent Microsoft Australian Partner Conference on Hamilton Island we got our partners to do some work. 21 tables of partners who we given two different customer scenarios to solve

The winner was Table 17 - The Mobile Sixers

We committed to publishing the winning entry - here it is

 

T171

T172

 

T173

 

T174

 

T175

 

Posted by oscartr | 0 Comments

A hand written thank you is so important in an electronic age

I wanted to acknowledge Philip Hayes from Telstra Business Systems and his wonderful note of thank for my presentation at the Telstra Business Conference in Coffs Harbour in August

 

Thanks Philip for taking the time to write the note

 

Philip Hayes Telstra Business Conference Thank You

 

Posted by oscartr | 1 Comments
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