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Enterprises struggle with collaboration tools

While collaboration and communication technologies are widely acknowledged to be beneficial within the enterprise, surprisingly, less than half of Canadian and U.S. organizations have actually developed a strategy that they're happy with.

The findings stem from a recent survey conducted by Coleman Parkes where CIOs and IT directors across North America and Europe were polled on their companies' current digital collaboration strategies, in other words, how they've defined the use of unifying technologies to access data and people across the enterprise.

Forty-nine per cent of Canadian and 45 per cent of U.S. companies reported being currently satisfied with the impact of their collaboration and communication tools.

Traditional tools – e-mail, Web portals, video conferencing – are relatively well known and accepted within the enterprise, but not so for emerging unified communication methods, like enterprise search (archiving and accessing content across the enterprise) and presence (communicating with an individual via a single identity that's device independent).

Although communication habits have quite successfully influenced slight variances in technology, one barrier to adoption of digital collaboration is the fact that people's habits have yet to morph to work with new technology, said Jeff Kempiners, chief technology officer with Toronto-based IT consultancy firm Avanade Canada.

"We have not yet evolved our habits to fit the next generation of technology," he said, adding that would include online whiteboards, workspace-based collaborative platforms, and real-time document repositories.

Kempiners notes that such tools can and do exist today, but education around the technology is sorely lacking.

However, that can change, he said, as long as the "two forces conspiring against us" are overcome.

First, changing communication habits will require the user to overcome that initial period of discomfort. Second, new features in a digital collaborative environment must be compelling enough for the user to want to overcome that learning curve.

Other challenges to adoption are the perception of exorbitant prices, and that tools are so "forward and advanced" that they're unattainable, he said. "There is definitely a lack of understanding as to what some of the new and exciting features are and what they can bring to the business."

If there is interest in digital collaborative tools, a company should bite the price bullet and invest in tools it knows it can manage and trust. Otherwise users will seek tools that are unsecured and unsanctioned by the enterprise, said Cheryl McKinnon, director for collaborative content management with Waterloo, Ont.-based Open Text Corp., a content management solutions provider.

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Informative!!Reply to this commentReport an innapropriate comment
The article was pretty interesting and informative.
Written by: Jefferson Peter, from Los Angeles
Collaborative Tools are Here to stay!!Reply to this commentReport an innapropriate comment
I do agree that enterprises, does sometimes show lack of enthusiasm towards the use of collaborative tools, even though they realize the advantage these tools would bring to their business, like doing business with people who are at different geographical locations. It is true that some of these collaborative tools are a bit expensive. But there are lots of collaborative tools available in the market today which are easy to use and pretty cheap for the services it offers to the business, like TAROBY (http://www.taroby.org). I feel that these digital collaborative tools would do wonders to the next generation business communication. I feel that digital collaborative tools are here to stay, owing to its advantages over traditional tools for communication like e-mail, fax etc.
Written by: Bob Robinson, from New York
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