During our IM conversation, the developer simply clicked a button in our conversation window marked as “Share”, and began a Web conference with me which included audio, video, and desktop sharing
We'll then schedule a web conference session to review and finalize it...This begins with a 2-hour web conference, and then item writers will have around 10 days to write 15 questions each
There’s IMs, voicemails, web conferences, phone conferences, etc… Enter Microsoft Lync 2010 just announced today which aims at enhancing that unified communication experience
While there are many best practices that can be drawn from Ricoh's example, I want to highlight just three here: Investment in training and education - as part of the launch activities, Ricoh developed a substantial library of video resources to help staff understand how to use the platform and get the most out of it, as well as offering regular web conference sessions and face-to-face sessions
So my key themes over the rest of this series: Organizations need to give up some control. Declaring web conferencing sessions and reTweets into a repository simply ain't gonna happen
Collaboration: This may include web-conferencing, rich media sharing and authoring, Leverage Expertise : In most cases, learning experiences need to leverage internal subject matter experts or external experts to help define, design, create, deliver, and facilitate the experiences
Lync Server 2013’s integration capabilities with SharePoint 2013 open up an entirely new outlet and set of capabilities for organizations to have a centralized platform, SharePoint 2013, to access nearly ever system in the organization to now include web conferencing, video conferencing, as well as phone (VOIP), and even your current investment in technologies, for example, your current Cisco hardware that drives your VOIP technology