Ard gedeelde items

Monday, November 01, 2010

The future of productivity - changing the game with Office 365

***
Microsoft Office 365 brings together cloud versions of our most trusted communications and collaboration products with the latest version of our desktop suite for businesses of all sizes.
***

A new name of the (same) game
After Microsoft unveiled the new name of their online suit during a webcast Oct 19th, formerly known as BPOS (and later codename UNION), they launched their dedicated site about Office 365. Bringing together cloud versions of our most trusted communication and collaboration products, so what is available in this box?

Introduction of a revolution?
Betsy Frost Webb - who hosted the webcast where the new suite was unveiled, calls the introduction of Office 365 a game changer for all kinds of businesses all over the world.

I intend to believe it will shape the future of productivity. All functionality in this box is available today, but it is the way it is delivered that will make the difference. In an earlier blog about the future of productivity in small and medium businesses I mentioned that the only concern of the entrepreneur is spotting opportunities and turn them into succesfull business. The way most ICT is delivered to these businesses have proved themselfs to be quit complex to implement. These efforts are killing for productivity (a measure of output from a production process, per unit of input). Functionality from flagship products like SharePoint 2010 and Exchange 2010 are way too big because of this complexity for the small businesses.
If you can manage to take away the complexity of implementation and provide the right fit functionality right away, business can be productive from the start. That's exacly what Office 365 promises.

Technique without the technology
Organisations are looking for an 'easy' way to use technology to get more insight in their business. If you sell cookies, you want to know how much sugar and weat is needed for your next production batch. Selling cookies is not about technique, but a lot about technology to make it possible. It is not about backing a lot of cookies, but the right cookies considering production resources, market and taste.

You will be interessted in the developments of the prices of sugar and weat, the influences of the weather and European laws. To discusse this you want to be able to capture this information and to discusse these with your team, your suppliers and transform that information, share that knowledge within your organisation. In the end your success depends on the right information to make the right choices based on real knowledge.

If your business is helping other organisations to succeed, you do not need a productionline. You do have the need to capture the knowledge in your organisation, even if the organisation is just you. You do have the need to have insight in your business, who are my customers? What is happening in the marketplace? How can I get in contact, provide my customer with the right information, create a platform to share information with a partner and so on and so on.
Likely you are an expert in your field, more likely you are not an IT professional, do not know and do not want to know about networks, servers, mailprotocolls and security settings. The technology though is essential to your business.

"Office 365 is more than a new brand. It’s a progressive approach to cloud applications,” said Kurt DelBene (succesor of Stephen Elop), president of the Microsoft Office Division. “We designed Office 365 to work for a business of one – or a business of one million and one.”


"To date, only the largest businesses have been able to take advantage of modern, enterprise-caliber IT solutions. Office 365 changes that."
 
The Cloud? Are you serious?
If you question the intentions of Microsoft in getting this right check out my earlier blog on Cloud. Chris Caposella describes it as follows:
 
Chapter one in Microsoft’s history was about putting a PC on every desktop. Chapter two was dedicated to transforming the enterprise data center. Chapter three is, without a question, devoted to bringing the power of the cloud to our customers and partners."
 
So what is in the box?
Key benefits for Office 365:
 
• Access to e-mail, documents, contacts, and calendars on nearly any device
• Simple and secure collaboration with colleagues and business partners
• Works seamlessly with Microsoft Office and the other programs people use today
• Business-class features including IT-level phone support, financially-backed 99.9% uptime, geo-redundancy, disaster recovery, and robust security and privacy controls and standards
• Comprehensive solutions including desktop productivity applications, portals, extranets, external Web site, instant messaging, voice and video conferencing, Web conferencing, e-mail, voice mail and unified messaging
• Pay-as-you-go pricing options which provide predictability and flexibility for all or part of an organization

Basic 'backbone' functionalities are mainly deliverd by three core platforms working together:
  • Exchange Online
    • Cloud-based e-mail, calendar and contacts with the most current antivirus and anti-spam solutions.  Includes the ability to get e-mail on virtually any mobile phone and options for voice mail, unified messaging and archiving
  • SharePoint Online
    • Cloud-based service for creating sites to connect colleagues, partners and customers.  Includes enterprise social networking and customization options.
  • Lync* Online
    •  Cloud-based instant messaging, presence, and online meeting experiences with screen sharing and voice and video conferencing
Besides these well known components Microsoft Office itself is a major addition to the functionality.
    • The world’s leading productivity tool on the desktop (Office Professional Plus) and on the Web (Office Web Apps) now seamlessly connected and delivered with cloud services – for the best productivity experience across the PC, Phone and Browser.
(*NOTE: Lync is the Unified Communications (UC) platform, formely known as Office Communication Server (OCS) and the Live communications functionality)
 
All these platforms are build to work together seamslessly. Functions are made available to almost every device from the cloud (three screens and a cloud).
On the technology part a lot more has changed. Partners are given the opportunity to add value to the platforms as they are when implementing on the customers location. Developing value add customer components will enrich the platform functionality dramatically.
 
Changing the game not only the name
Microsoft promisses these developments will change the game. Delivering the technology through services to all businesses realy is a change. To date implementing a enterprise business productivity platform was not a walk in the park for even big organisations. Now the infrastructure itself can be made available as simple as 1,2,3.
Business productivity is NOT about technology as I mentioned before. Having the right information and documents available to be able to make the right descision is more about information strategy. The larger your organisation, the more difficult the implementation or change of this strategy will be. This is why I am possitive about the changes in this game.
Smaller organisations will have the opportunity to setup needed infrastructure and are more flexible to use the power available instantly. The larger organisations will be able to choose for more business focus deminishing the burden of technology, knowing exactly what it will cost the organisation.

No comments: