September 2008 | Volume 27 / Number 4
High Priorty
While You Were Out This Summer…
By Rich Tehrani So rather than focus on damage control, SaaS (News - Alert) providers who enable better customer interactions have been able to focus on making better products. Case in point is Oracle who has now enabled better integration between the company’s on-demand and hosted applications. This comes courtesy of lots of elbow grease and Oracle (News - Alert) Fusion Middleware. Smart Phone Frenzy Another trend we have seen this past summer is that of increased focus on mobility and smartphones such as the 3G iPhone, which I went through quite an ordeal (www.tmcnet.com/2377.1) to get myself. But Apple (News - Alert) is not alone in producing devices that make us drool — the much-anticipated Blackberry Bold is also being rolled out across various wireless networks worldwide. In such an environment it makes sense for a company like SugarCRM (News - Alert) to come out with version 5.1 of their popular customer relationship management solution, which supports the iPhone and Blackberry via an HTML interface. As mobile browsers get better — and certainly Safari is one of the better ones, it makes sense to have applications which are at least aware of the fact they are running on mobile networks so they can adjust accordingly. Sure, you can browse any site with an iPhone (News - Alert) but still, custom designed sites or even a custom application designed for Apple’s newest phone make the experience that much better. One company who is no stranger to the contact center is Aspect (News - Alert) and in a recent interview (www.tmcnet.com.2379.1) with Henry Danser, a vice president of the company, I got a solid glimpse into what the world’s leading contact center company thinks about the future of contact centers as well as the integration of the call center and UC. In addition the interview provides insight on the two other critical areas you need to focus on in your contact center — performance optimization and unified solutions. This summer has also seen CRM systems get smarter. As a result of SalesForce.com’s open APIs and technology from DataSea, users of the popular hosted CRM solution can now use natural language queries to extract specific data from massive stores of information. Think of this as having a search engine available for all corporate information available to contact center agents allowing them to better serve your customers. In theory this should result in more accurate information being disseminated by front line workers and the speed to get at this information should be vastly improved as well. This could mean in some applications there could tremendous cost savings as in a contact center (as in many other areas of life), time is money. So while many of us have vacationed these past months it is good to know that the companies making call center products and solutions have been quite busy — producing products and services, which should make your life easier this fall and beyond. Oh and on another note, I find it curious to see that over a decade after some predicted the Internet would kill the call center market, the world’s leading e-tailer, Amazon.com (News - Alert) recently announced (www.tmcnet.com/2380.1) it would hire 250 full and part time customer service positions. When will the Internet finally do away with the call center you ask? I suppose it will happen shortly after the paperless office that was predicted 20 years ago becomes a reality. – Rich Tehrani is TMC's (News - Alert) Group Publisher. CIS Magazine Table of Contents |