Organisations around the world that deploy the most advanced Internet protocol-based collaboration technologies achieve more than twice the return on their collaboration investment and perform better than their less collaborative peers, according to a new Frost & Sullivan study released today.
‘Meetings Around the World II: Charting the Course of Advanced Collaboration’, sponsored by Verizon and Cisco, examines how professionals in businesses and government agencies get their work done by using advanced collaboration tools such as voice over Internet protocol (VoIP), instant messaging or meeting via high-definition video or Cisco TelePresence.
The study also introduces the industry’s first quantitative model for a return on collaboration investment. The measurement, called the Return on Collaboration index, establishes a progressive impact of deploying advanced unified communications and collaboration (UC&C) technologies on business performance, and measures improvements in areas such as research and development, human resources, sales, marketing, investor relations and public relations.
The study found that businesses and government agencies deploying increasingly more sophisticated collaboration tools – such as VoIP soft phones, immersive video and fixed mobile convergence – saw a corresponding improvement in business results relative to the amount invested. The overall average Return on Collaboration (RoC) score was 4.2 – meaning organisations received an average return of four times their investment in deploying collaboration technologies in terms of improvement across business-critical areas.
The organisations surveyed by the study reported that advanced collaboration such as UC&C enhances their ability to produce positive results. For example, research and development managers in organisations that have deployed UC&C reported that advanced collaboration tools enable products and solutions to be developed more quickly, with an improved chance of market success, a higher degree of quality, and a lower overall cost of development.
The new study builds on the 2006 Frost & Sullivan study – ‘Meetings Around the World: The Impact of Collaboration on Business Performance’ – which determined collaboration is a key driver of business performance and collaboration through communications technologies can provide a competitive advantage.
“‘Meetings Around the World II’ confirms and extends the key findings of the original study and builds on those conclusions,” said Brian Cotton, vice president for Information and Communications Technologies for Frost & Sullivan. “This latest research shows adopting progressively more advanced unified communications and collaboration tools can help organisations achieve a corresponding return on collaboration and improvement across all business functions. This return was most dramatic in the areas of sales, marketing and research and development.”
Research Methodology
Frost & Sullivan in May 2009 conducted an online survey of 3,662 information technology (IT) or line-of-business decision-makers in organisations in 10 countries in Asia-Pacific, Europe and the United States. The survey gauged attitudes and practices within small and medium-sized enterprises (50 to 999 employees) and enterprises (1,000 or more employees) in the financial services, government, healthcare, high technology, professional services, manufacturing and retail industries.
The study was undertaken as organisations around the world grappled with a challenging economy, and results showed use of UC&C solutions are becoming increasingly popular around the globe. Less than half (44 percent) of all organisations surveyed have deployed UC&C tools – such as user presence on a device, document sharing, immersive video or Cisco TelePresence for near life-like visual communications, integrated voice, e-mail and instant messaging, and telephone features and management capabilities on mobile devices and the desktop.
The study also found that 40 percent of organisations that deploy UC&C plan to increase spending on this despite current economic conditions. In addition, more than 80 percent of organisations that have not deployed UC&C tools plan to deploy some form of them in the next two to three years.
Creating a Collaboration ‘Network Effect’
The greatest impact of collaboration was where the largest numbers of people interacted for a common goal, including sales, research and development and marketing. By implementing more advanced UC&C tools, the study found, organisations could increase their return across all areas.
This finding suggests that teams using UC&C tools can benefit from a ‘network effect’, a theory attributed to Robert Metcalfe, the co-inventor of Ethernet that holds that the more users on a network, the more value is likely realised from it.
While larger enterprises tended to receive greater collaboration returns, small and medium-sized businesses can increase returns by deploying progressively more advanced tools and expanding their reach beyond their organisations working with customers, partners and suppliers.