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4th November - Independent research commissioned
by Presence technology specialists Followap www.followap.com
has shown that while the majority of employees are familiar
with Instant Messaging (IM); corporate culture and compliance
fears mean that IT departments are blocking access to these
services. Followap calls for businesses to embrace Presence
enabled technologies as part of their corporate IT policies
so that they can fully benefit from improved communications.
The research showed that while 60% of office
workers are IM users, only 28% of them use IM for business
purposes. Employees cited instant response, convenience, informality
and faster decision making as their top reasons for using
IM at work. More advanced users highlighted features such
as white board sharing, application sharing and cheap voice
calls.
With such a clear set of potential benefits
to business driving usage of IM, the researchers asked why
IM was not actually being used for business. 56% stated the
use of IM was against their corporate IT policy. Regulatory
& compliance issues and having no permanent record were also
cited as a problem, interesting points when most IM systems
do in fact allow records to be kept. Fear of security and
virus risks at 8% also featured.
Tommy Volsen, Vice President of Marketing, Followap
commented, "Properly implemented, Instant Messaging encourages
collaboration between team members and can be more easily
controlled and logged than for example SMS. Being Presence
based IM also indicates when a user is free to communicate
so in spite of its perceived informality can actually be less
intrusive than a phone call. SMS and email took time to be
widely adopted for business, Instant Messaging is going through
a similar, but I believe faster, cycle that is driven by home
users seeking the same convenience and speed for their business
communications as they are used to for personal communications."
He continued, "As voice, data and mobile communication
services converge the actual method our messages are carried
by will be come less important. Presence technology will indicate
whether people are available and how they prefer to be contacted
at a particular time. This will enable users to take more
control over their communication, whilst being in touch more
readily."
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