BRAINYARDNEWS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR


David F. Carr
David F. Carr
David F. Carr is Editor of The BrainYard, the community for social business on InformationWeek.com, covering social media and the...
Read Full Bio >>
See More From This Columnist >>
SHARE



When One Collaboration Tool Can't Do It All

David F. Carr | November 28, 2011
 
   
When One Collaboration Tool Can't Do It All American Water's single-pane-of-glass strategy brings multiple collaboration systems together on the desktop, avoids $3 million systems migration expense.

American Water's single-pane-of-glass strategy brings multiple collaboration systems together on the desktop, avoids $3 million systems migration expense.

In an effort to improve collaboration, American Water Company took a hard look at its hodgepodge of systems from different vendors--and decided not to consolidate them.

"We decided we would rather put our effort into a multi-vendor, single-pane-of-glass environment than go to one vendor that says it does it all," said Steve Brescia, manager of enterprise architecture at the New Jersey-based company, which operates regional water utility companies across the United States.

In particular, American Water decided to stick with Lotus Notes for email, even though it is moving forward with a SharePoint implementation that might suggest now would be the time to move to a more Microsoft-centric architecture including Exchange, Outlook, and perhaps Lync for unified communications. When American Water was evaluating its options, it concluded that a migration to a single-vendor collaboration platform would have cost about $3 million--an expense it preferred to avoid, Brescia said. Instead of consolidating vendors and servers, American Water chose to integrate at the user interface level, using the Notes plugin from Harmon.ie, which makes it easier for Notes users to tap into SharePoint resources.

Top 20 Top Add-Ons For Microsoft SharePoint
(click image for larger view)
Top 20 Top Add-Ons For Microsoft SharePoint

The rest of American Water's collaboration technology base includes Cisco IP telephony, Cisco WebEx webconferencing, and IBM Sametime for presence information and instant messaging. Harmon.ie does not address all those components, but American Water hopes to address them with the same "single-pane-of-glass" approach over time, Brescia said. "I know I'm repeating myself, but that really is our mantra."

This week's release of Harmon.ie 3.0 for Notes is now functionally equivalent to the version for Outlook, which was the first to implement SharePoint-based social media features. Although most analysts judge SharePoint an incomplete social platform, it does provide the building blocks of a social network, such as profiles and activity streams, that Harmon.ie is able to tap into.

[ Check out 10 Great Android Apps For Collaboration. ]

Brescia said he is also looking forward to implementing the upgrade for the mobile client it includes. The value he has been getting from the previous Harmon.ie for Notes release is mostly from its integration with the file management features of SharePoint. Users can browse files and share them with a team directly through the Notes interface. Instead of downloading a file from SharePoint and emailing it to a colleague as an attachment, users can more easily send a link--speeding up the process, saving on disk storage, and avoiding confusion over multiple versions of the same document, he said.

"That keeps with the spirit of what SharePoint is," Brescia said.

Harmon.ie also provides a federated calendar capability that makes it possible to synchronize the Notes calendar with a schedule maintained as part of a SharePoint Team Site or even a personal Google Calendar.

Brescia said one improvement he would like to see is automation of the function for emailing links, rather than attachments. That only works for email sent within the firewall, so files still have to be sent as attachments to external correspondents. Ideally, the system would be smart enough to decide automatically who should be sent a link and who should be sent an attachment, rather than the user having to do that manually, Brescia said.

"That's doable, but it's not an out-of-the-box feature we have in the product," said David Lavenda, VP of marketing and product strategy for Harmon.ie. It's a customization Harmon.ie can provide on a consulting basis, he said. "It comes up from time to time, but it's not a universal request."

Follow David F. Carr on Twitter @davidfcarr. The BrainYard is @thebyard

Companies that have implemented or are evaluating managed print services look to the model for its ability to reduce costs and increase end user productivity. However, IT teams need to be aware of security and scalability when selecting a partner. Here's how two large companies in diverse industries got a handle on printing. Read our report now. (Free registration required.)

COMMENTS

STAYUPDATED

Sign up to the BrainYard email newsletter

*Required field

Privacy Statement

BRAINYARDRESEARCH
The State of Community Management
The State of Community Management documents a comprehensive set of lessons learned to help define this emerging role and give you the tools to be successful in your social initiatives.
Enterprise 2.0: What, Why and How?
This paper is an introduction to Enterprise 2.0 ‐ why it is one of the most crucial concepts to understand in business today and how you can begin to take advantage of E2 in your organization.
Guide to Understanding Social CRM
This paper presents the foundational components of Social CRM and lays the groundwork required for your company to build and maintain long and valuable customer relationships.
VIDEOGALLERY
Startup DataSift's Big Data Platform
DataSift CEO Rob Bailey talks about the growth in big data, and his company's platform to ingest, manage and provide that data from social networks. He also provides a quick demonstration of the product.
Salesforce.com's Social Enterprise Approach Pushes
Salesforce.com co-Founder Parker Harris discusses why the company has moved past its Cloud 2 mantra, with acquisitions like Heroku and Radian6 enabling even tighter customer relationships for the enterprise.
March Madness And Social Networking
March Madness and pro sports hold many lessons for social network marketing. In this exclusive interview Eric Lundquist interviews sports broadcaster Butch Stearns on what social network marketing can learn from how sports teams social network
SLIDESHOWS
7 Examples: Put Gamification To Work
An increasing number and variety of business applications are integrating game mechanics, or gamification, to improve user engagement, engage new...
Get Social: 11 Management Systems That Can Help
Social media management systems can help your organization manage and measure increasingly sophisticated social strategies.
6 Social Sites Sitting On The Cutting Edge
Your company's Facebook and Twitter presence are established, but don't rest there. Consider these other social sites--some familiar, some less...