Home › Forums › Archives › Instant Messaging › Other Instant Messengers › Using instant messaging in the business world
- This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 23 years, 1 month ago by
Gandalf.
-
AuthorPosts
-
January 10, 2002 at 9:31 pm #8072
Jeff Hester
KeymasterMost companies don’t have an official policy on instant messaging, and fewer still have recognized and standardized on an instant messaging platform for corporate use. But instant messaging is being used in almost every company with Internet access.
In a July 2001 survey of 185 businesses where instant messaging is approved, Osterman Research, Inc. found the following programs being used:
- Lotus Sametime – 27%
- AOL Instant Messenger – 26%
- Yahoo Messenger – 15%
- Other – 32%
You almost never hear of Sametime outside of the corporate world, so those who have only used consumer instant messaging may wonder why it ranks where it does.
For the most part, instant messengers do the same thing: send text messages instantly between two people online. But corporations are often looking for features not found in the typical consumer IM product.
Do you use instant messaging for your work? Note that I didn’t ask if you use instant messaging at work (I know you do that!).
If you use IM for your work, what program do you use?
Are there special features you or your company require that aren’t typically available in the consumer IM programs?
Jeff Hester
BigBlueBall.comJanuary 11, 2002 at 5:48 am #69137Gandalf
MemberI use instant messaging for work. I work for a big company with offices all over the planet. We use Sametime, which is ok but not very fancy compared to the MSN/Yahoo/AIM.
There are some nice things about it though. It is secure. I know I’m chatting with who I think I’m chatting with, because you sign on with your Lotus Notes name and password. You can’t pretend to be Bill Gates or whoever.
It also has some nice things for holding online meetings with groups of people, with tools for electronic whiteboard and application sharing.
It offers audio and video, which I’ve played around with a little but doesn’t seem to add much value. Mostly if I really need to talk to someone, I’ll IM them (since I know they’re online), then call them.
It’s useful because it’s quick, easy and cheap. You can multi-task, carrying on a discussion with someone on a part-time basis while you’re on the phone or going through email.
I wish there was a way to search for people with a certain interest (like Odigo’s people-finder) and then broadcast an IM to them. Sometimes it’s hard to find someone with specialized expertise in a company as big as ours, and that would make it much easier. You can with Sametime send chat requests to a predefined group list, but you have no control over who is in the list.
IM makes work move along much more smoothly and helps fill in the communication gaps that used to exist (phone tag, geographic boundaries, etc.).
Gandalf
=== Absolute power corrupts absolutely ===
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.