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Online conferencing - an opportunity for resellers?
Meet and greet from the comfort of your desk
Quocirca's changing channels One technology fits the software as a service (SaaS) model so neatly that even Microsoft – according to some, the devil incarnate of on-premise software delivery – only provides its product as an on-demand service. That technology is online conferencing.
If you would like to spend less time queueing at airports to board a metal tube crammed with grumpy germ-ridden people and use your time more productively for the pursuit of business and/or personal activities, online conferencing is for you. And, of course, it can boost your environmental credentials to boot.
At a time when data centres are being lambasted for using ever increasing power and generating more and more heat, it is easy to overlook the fact that for some applications this might be better than the alternative. If getting together for a meeting had required just one short car journey, the energy used would be far greater than that generated by the data centre CPU cycles used to power an online meeting.
Of course, online conferencing is not the be all and end all. Sometimes there is no alternative but to look a customer or colleague in the eye (even this can be done with increasingly available video conferencing – but there are psychological reasons why this hasn't taken off as much as some would like). But for many more humdrum meetings, making a special journey is increasingly hard to justify.
It is also true that some will depend on such technologies to enable them to live in remote locations, so that when they do travel for face-to-face meetings the distance covered cancels out all the environmental good using online collaboration has achieved – so let's not kid ourselves: it is sometimes as much about lifestyle as the environment.
So if we are going to save the planet, or just be more relaxed as we watch it heat up – how does it all work in reality, and what opportunity is there for resellers?
There are a number of vendors in the market and they all work in a similar way. The global market leader by a long chalk is WebEx. WebEx has not quite become a verb yet and is looking less likely do so than it did a few years ago. Microsoft with its LiveMeeting product has established a respectable second place, and then there are a host of followers keeping the leaders on their toes with new technology, pricing, and marketing initiatives. This includes Citrix Online, Genesys, and Interwise. IBM is also a player with Sametime, part of its Lotus collaboration suite.
Most vendors provide online conferencing as a purely on-demand service; this is the case for WebEx, Microsoft, Citrix Online, and Genesys. Other vendors like IBM and Interwise offer either an on-demand service or a licensed version of their software to install on-premise catering for those enterprises who like to keep as much as possible inhouse. They can also provide a hybrid model for those who want the best of both worlds.