IBM and Microsoft both offer quite good collaboration functionality. Which do you go with? That depends on your organization’s approach to messaging and IT infrastructure.
If you have decided that your collaboration strategy will focus on a suite
approach as opposed to best-of-breed technologies, then you will most likely
take a hard look at IBM and Microsoft to meet your needs. Both IBM and Microsoft
have produced a suite of integrated technologies that deliver a collaboration
functionality that addresses all four of the collaboration pillars. Microsoft
delivers collaboration functionality in a combination of Microsoft Office
SharePoint Server 2007/ Exchange and IBM delivers the functionality in a
combination of Quickr, Connections, and Lotus Notes/Domino.
Four Pillars of Collaboration
• The Messaging Pillar enables teams and individuals to
communicate and manage their interactions in a formal, auditable manner. This
includes email, calendaring, scheduling, and contact management.
• The Real-Time Collaboration Pillar is more focused on ad-hoc
communications providing the team with the capability to easily initiate a
real-time conversation between one or more individuals. This includes Instant
Messaging, Web Conferencing, and Unified Communications capabilities
• The Team Collaboration Pillar provides the content management services
that collect, store, and manage the documents that are pertinent to the team’s
activity. This can include document management, ad-hoc workflow, and basic
project management.
• The final Pillar, Social Networking, represents the newest pillar in
the collaboration house. This pillar provides a way for teams and individuals to
share knowledge not only within the team, but to be able to reach out to an
extended group for their input and feedback. Technologies in the pillar can
include Blogs, Wikis, RSS, and Tagging.
IBM Collaboration Capabilities
The Lotus brand showcases
IBM collaboration solutions. For those of us who remember Lotus 123 and early
versions of Notes, much has changed. They have revamped nearly their entire line
of products and have added new collaboration products.
• Messaging–
Lotus Notes and Domino Server provide all functionality in the messaging pillar.
Their latest release sports a brand new interface and deeper integration to
their collaboration products
• Real Time Collaboration – IBM offers instant messaging and Web
conferencing with Sametime and Sametime Unyte. The platform offers secure
instant messaging and Web conferences. The instant messaging client lets you
interact with a variety of other IM systems through a gateway.
• Team Collaboration – Lotus Quickr fills the team collaboration niche
with a variety of features that include file sharing, team calendars, team
tasks, blog, wiki, RSS feeds, contacts, lists, and discussion forums. One of the
most exciting new features in Quickr is their connector approach to integration.
These connectors include:
o Windows/Office Connectors
o Lotus Notes/Microsoft Outlook
Connectors
o Sametime Connector
o Connections Integration
• Social Networking – Lotus Connections and its hosted cousin LotusLive
represent a relatively new product release. This tool models the non-business
social software tools like Facebook, Delicious, and MySpace by putting them into
a business context. The tool boasts 7 modules:
o Profiles – Update your
profile, network with others, follow what others are doing,
etc.
o Community – Share information with those of like minds through a
community.
o Bookmarks – Like Delicious, you can tag information and
make that tag public. This can provide huge improvements in search because the
tags make it easier to content and people
o Blogs – Simple and
straightforward tool to publish your content
o Activities – Very
flexible tool to share ad hoc tasks among a large group. With the connectors,
you can put emails, instant messages, and files right next to the tasks in
context
o Files – Share files among your communities
o Wikis –
Share web-based information among your communities
Microsoft’s MOSS 2007 Collaboration
Capabilities
Microsoft addresses collaboration with three products,
Outlook/ Exchange, SharePoint, and Unified Communications Server. These products
deliver the four pillars of collaboration in a highly integrated model, often
creating a seamless user experience.
• Messaging– this capability is
addressed with Microsoft Exchange and Outlook. The combination of Exchange and
Outlook provides a integrated suite of messaging functionality
• Real Time Collaboration – Microsoft delivers this capability with
their Unified Communications Server. This suite of functionality provides
instant messaging, Web conferencing, presence and integration with Outlook,
SharePoint, and Telephony systems.
• Team Collaboration – SharePoint is the primary delivery vehicle for
the Team Collaboration functionality from Microsoft. SharePoint provides
o Team Calendars
o Team
Contacts
o Announcements
o Meeting Management
o Outlook
Integration
o Document Management
o Content and Document
Workflow
o Task Management
• Social Networking – Microsoft delivers social networking using the
functionality contained in SharePoint. SharePoint provides
o Blogs
o Wikis
o Discussion
Groups
o Personalization through MySites
o User Profiling. The
integration with Active Directory provides an easy way to provide employee
lookups and profile searches.
Selecting the right solution for your company is a
difficult task as both IBM and Microsoft have developed collaboration
capabilities that can meet the needs of most organizations. Key decision points
will center around your strategic direction on messaging and architecture
platform. Those focused on Microsoft Exchange and/or
.Net will likely look towards Microsoft for their collaboration needs. For those
organizations that have standardized on Notes/Domino will find IBM’s direction as
a better fit. Also, we are seeing organizations that are standardized on
J2EE as a development standard being bettered aligned with the IBM
solutions.
Michael Porter, Michael.Porter@Perficient.com,
is a Principal, Portal and Collaboration for Perficient. Michael has more than
15 years working with technology and helping customer meet their content
management, portal, and collaboration needs. He has worked with many clients in
understanding and defining how to align business needs to the available
technologies.
Alan Weintraub ( alan.weintraub@perficient.com)
is a Principal, ECM Solutions for Perficient (
www.perficient.com). Alan has extensive
experience in all phases of Enterprise Content Management solution
implementations. He has worked as a Research Director at Gartner, focusing on
the Content and Document Management markets and a consultant where he designed
and implemented document management systems. Prior to his consulting experience
Alan engaged in technology management for major pharmaceutical companies. He has
over twenty five years of experience in the information systems
profession.