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Customer Feedback, Support and Care Driving Our Business

CMMA Blog

This year’s Kollective EMEA Customer Council brought together over 60 attendees from all over Europe. This annual two-day London event gives our customers, prospects and partners – along with our team – the opportunity to learn, network, share stories, provide feedback and hear about our vision for the future of video delivery, software distribution and what’s next. 

I was told a few years ago that it is unique that we would invite our prospects to a customer event, especially one with a lot of story sharing and late-night networking. It is unique as these customer events are not always pretty. They can become difficult and tenuous and any issues with the product and services are openly aired. Kollective hosts this event and opens it to prospects, encouraging them to spend time, with and without Kollective, talking to our customers about our product, service and support because we have nothing to hide. If our customers have an issue, we want to know about it and fix it.  

As a matter of fact, over half of the features we built into recent product releases are the result of feedback and requests directly from our customers. At the end of Council, Kollective employees leave the room and we host a customer-only feedback session. In this session, we invite customers to come together and discuss what’s going well, areas of improvement and their wish list. After the session, they provide us with notes that our team follows up on. This is just one example of how our strong relationship with our customers helps guide our priorities and defines our technology and approach. Our business revolves around our customers’ feedback and their success. 

One of the biggest concerns that came out of the customer-only session in October was around Kollective’s growth into software delivery and beyond. Customers wanted to know ‘how will we maintain our high level of support during this heavy growth period?’ 

I’m proud to say that we have seven teams around the globe dedicated to supporting and providing service to our customers. Our support teams include event services, support, customer success, enterprise video strategy, customer escalation, customer experience and solutions architects, making up nearly 40% of our headcount. As our business grows, these teams will continue to expand.  

That may seem like overkill but delivering engaging video securely and at scale across the enterprise – from the security implications, to reaching remote locations, to each network being unique and everything in between – is a massive challenge. Our teams are dedicated to supporting our customers – helping them to build engagement via video and navigating the issues which often come with delivering these events.  

But we believe there is more to be done with our technology than delivering video. On an almost daily basis, news of another large company suffering a cyber-attack will hit the headlines. We’ve seen such data security breaches devastate even the largest and most well-known companies, resulting in not just a loss of company data, but also a loss of customer trust. 

In many cases, these attacks are the result of software updates not being installed in a timely manner . With the same 9MB client our customers use to scale the delivery of video, our peer-to-peer software-defined technology now helps IT teams keep their networks secure. Rather than having a server distribute the same piece of content to a few machines at a time, our bit-agnostic ECDN can help keep pace with major operating system updates and critical patches, protecting your business without impacting critical applications. 

Looking towards the future, we will continue to support new use cases providing universal edge delivery. And, as we continue to invest in our technology, we will also maintain our customer-first approach, delivering the very best experience possible for our customers. 

8 Ways to Boost Trust and Transparency in Your Organization

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The post Customer Feedback, Support and Care Driving Our Business appeared first on Kollective Technology .

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5 Ways Your Enterprise Company Could Benefit from Video All-Hands Meetings

CMMA Blog

Town hall meetings. Round-ups. All-hands meetings. Whatever your company calls it, most businesses have some iteration of the all-hands meeting, which exists to keep employees at all levels in the loop on current initiatives, progress, growth and company news. These meetings might take place weekly, monthly or quarterly, but whatever their frequency, it’s important that all employees are present in one way or another to hear what your organization’s leaders have to say.

If your organization has remote offices, for example, this is especially important as your business likely has many employees who are off-site but still need to be engaged at every level.

For this reason, many organizations are choosing to offer their all-hands meetings via video. Here are six ways your enterprise-level company could benefit from video all-hands meetings.

Visual relevancy makes an impact

It’s fairly common knowledge that people retain information better when they receive it in a visual medium, such as a photo, infographic or video. Due to decreasing attention spans, people remember just 10 percent of what they hear after three days have passed, but that jumps to 65 percent retention if the information is paired with a relevant visual.

In this age of video everywhere, it’s no longer acceptable to just send office updates through an email and hope that it’s opened. For your organization, that may look like a slideshow presentation to accompany your video, or something else visually illustrative that reflects the culture of your organization and captures your team’s attention.

Trust grows using video

A study by the University of Michigan about the most effective forms of communication for trust-building placed video calling second (first place was in-person contact) over audio calls, email and text communication. Considering in-person contact isn’t always an option, trust-building communication tactics like video all-hands meetings can work to grow internal positive sentiment and employee satisfaction.

After all, a Kimble Application study found that 31 percent of employees said that they sought more transparency from upper management regarding the health of the business.

Additionally, the same study found that 75 percent of American workers care deeply about their company’s well-being, but only 23 percent say that they have full insight into how their organizations are actually doing. That’s a big knowledge gap to bridge, but the clear solution is fostering a deeper sense of trust at all levels.

Hear diverse voices

Moving your all-hands meetings to a video platform allows team members who work on different projects and in different offices to contribute alongside in-office employees. Additionally, if your in-person all-hands meetings are generally run only by C-level executives, consider bringing in other team leaders and employees to speak – this can encourage a sense of teamwork and recognition that points to high levels of employee satisfaction.

To this point, a Reward Gateway study found that 70 percent of employees say that motivation and morale would improve “massively” with more regular recognition from senior leadership.

Convey flexibility in energy with a location change

If you’ve facilitated or attended an all-hands meeting in the past, it has probably taken place in your largest conference room or even a theater. However, consider changing this up – a switch in location can communicate flexibility and energy.

For example, if your executives are traveling in another country or another city, consider broadcasting from there to showcase a different environment and/or team members. You might even want to go live from an event , trade show or another exciting off-site location.

Recording features offer repurposing potential

Speaking of archiving, it’s a judgment call to decide if you want to give people the option to watch an all-hands meeting video after it has run live. For some employers, requiring mandatory viewing at a certain time has proven more effective, while others want to give employees who might be absent, in a different time zone, in a meeting or on vacation the opportunity to view it after it airs live.

Employers who prefer the former say that making it available after the live event reduces the amount of engagement and discourages people from attending, while proponents of the latter argue that flexibility is the point of taking the meetings to video in the first place.

Ultimately, it’s up to your organization to determine what feels right. However, there are other benefits to recording the all-hands meeting – you can isolate certain portions and repurpose them on social media, as part of your marketing materials or even upload a video to YouTube . Maybe your upper leadership said something inspirational – this is ideal YouTube content that can be paired with an SEO-heavy caption to boost views. Or, perhaps your team is announcing new products or developments – recording the meeting and editing it down into more digestible segments will allow you to share the news in an authentic voice that conveys excitement and can build trust with employees, shareholders, and even prospects.

There are many benefits to enterprise-level companies transitioning their all-hands meetings to video. Aside from helping employees retain more information, there’s substantial proof that a transparent and accessible all-hands meeting can foster productive feelings of employee satisfaction that will reduce turnover. Finally, there’s the opportunity for taking the content of the meeting beyond the computer and repurposing it in a variety of ways. However you decide to do it, get ready for happier, in-tune employees.

Amy Lecza

Amy Lecza

Content Marketing Manager, G2 Crowd

Amy Lecza is a content marketing manager for G2 Crowd, a B2B software review platform that brings transparency to B2B buying. She’s passionate about learning, editing, and copywriting, and she’s been known to carry around a red pen for copy editing emergencies.

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8 Ways to Boost Trust and Transparency in Your Organization

When employees and customers trust their leaders, a company is better able to weather crises and excels.

Related Blog Posts

The post 5 Ways Your Enterprise Company Could Benefit from Video All-Hands Meetings appeared first on Kollective Technology .

To view our Partner blog, click here

Adapting To An Age Of High Frequency Change

CMMA Blog

There is a rolling argument between futurists and historians about the very nature of change.  

The futurists say that we are living in an age of accelerated change. The reason our heads are spinning – a sensation reported to me by most people I speak to – is that everything happens faster now. Super-charged by our global economy, hyper-connected by technology we are witnessing an age of disruption and transformation never before seen.  

The historians counter this by pointing to periods from the past. What about the shift from horse-power to the combustion engine? The changes that brought about, in agriculture, commerce, city design and our social lives? Or the advent of domestic automation, releasing us into paid work and largely creating the modern leisure industry? These were the real ages of accelerated change.  

I would argue both parties are equally right, and equally wrong. They treat change as if it is some-thing that can be measured in a single dimension. As if we can benchmark change on a single, simple scale. 

In short, change isn’t measurable in a single dimension. It has both amplitude and frequency, like a wave. If the last century was about long waves of great amplitude, this century is about change at high frequency. 

What does it mean for business? Time is of the essence, like never before. We need to be sharp, adaptive, agile. We need to access and process information faster, take decisions more swiftly and confidently, be prepared to alter our course to respond to the rapidly shifting landscape. These are the challenges for business in the 21st century. Not to be overly focused on optimizing our current mode for efficiency and profit, but to be prepared to jump to the next one, whether following the customer or leading them. 

High frequency change in the enterprise is facilitated by: 

  1. People: Customers demand personalized instantaneous interactions. Leaders need access to information on demand, so knowledgeable decisions can be made quickly.
  2. Processes: Every organization needs to consider its structure, processes and distribution of power to meet these challenges. And technology will inevitably play a critical role in meeting them.
  3. Systems: Security requires constant vigilance of systems to rapidly evolving threats.

This demand for speed translates throughout the enterprise. Ensuring the rapid flow of information and updates across the business is critical to the sustained success of the modern, agile, enterprise.

Tom Cheesewright

Tom Cheesewright

Applied Futurist

I’m Tom Cheesewright, Applied Futurist. I help global brands and industries to see what’s next. I tell compelling stories of tomorrow. And I help to build strategies for sustainable success, whatever the future holds.

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How To Prove ROI Of Video With Analytics

CMMA Blog

There are no two ways about it: video content requires budget, and a lot of it.

First of all, there are the costs associated with creating the content. This can include everything from event production of a CEO town hall to populating an on-demand training video library, with all the staff time, scripting, recording, and editing that entails. Next, you have to factor in the cost of serving up your content, such as the need for extra hardware or a software ECDN solution like Kollective to alleviate demand on your network. Finally, someone needs to spend time managing the content and responding to any network performance issues.

However, just because something requires a big budget doesn’t make it a poor purchase. When compared to producing a large, in-person town hall event or conducting live, on-going training, video is far more cost-effective and scalable.

But as a large line item on the comm’s team budget, video will always require protection from cuts and rationalization for growth. That’s why it’s essential your team measures the ROI of your video efforts if you hope to prove that video is worth the time and money your team is investing.

While this sounds obvious, it’s far from common practice: according to ITSMA , 74% of organizations were unable to measure or report how their marketing efforts impacted their business. When it comes to video, that means the vast majority of comms teams are producing live CEO video presentations to employees worldwide or creating massive training libraries without any insight into who, if anyone, is actually watching.

That’s where analytics come in. A robust analytics platform like Kollective IQ can help you measure the performance of your live video events and on-demand content in real time. By analyzing specific video content and your longer-term trends, you’ll be able to build your case for continued video investment while making the adjustments necessary to improve performance.

You can do a number of things with video metrics. First, and most importantly, you can determine the performance of your videos. Metrics like unique event views and average view duration can show how many people watched your content and for how long. With those numbers alone, you can then determine your overall content engagement. Compare your video costs against what it would take to achieve similar engagement without video to then prove ROI to your leadership team.

But video ROI is just the beginning. There’s a larger network ROI case you can make. Your video performance can act as a proxy for your network performance; if a video is buffering, that means there is a bottleneck in your network that is impacting the flow of your other critical business data. Use your analytics to measure network performance and tie improvements in data flow to business metrics like productivity.

To prove the ROI of your video strategy, keep in mind the following:
  • Analytics need data: If you’re not collecting data, you have nothing to measure. But surface-level, basic metrics don’t always tell the whole story. Your analytics should be able to drill down deep into the performance of each asset to provide the data required to unlock insights.
  • Invest in insights: To improve ROI, you have to not only measure the data but use it to take action. To use it, though, you have to understand it. Dashboards can make it easier to collect your data together in a way that makes it simple to analyze successes and identity issues so you can make informed strategic decisions into your content and network.
  • Proving ROI isn’t a one-time event: Analytics should be an ongoing practice. You should be looking at the performance of your content over time to make sure you’re seeing improvement or catching minor issues before they turn into something major.
  • Don’t forget to prove it: Make sure you share your video performance with your leaders. They likely don’t speak video, so don’t just give them raw metrics. Integrate your video performance data into your business analytics to show how video is driving business performance, and then use data visualization to make it easy for leaders to see the success for themselves.

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The Benefits of Videoconferencing For International Businesses

CMMA Blog

It’s hard to overstate the part that culture plays when conducting business overseas. Whatever the organization, wherever in the world it operates, effective communication is essential to success. English remains the de facto language of global business, but there are a variety of cultural nuances and business customs that can complicate our efforts to communicate with our international partners and clients. 

I recently spent some time in Japan meeting with our partner NTT, to discuss our ongoing growth in the region. To arrive on time for my meeting, I needed to be five minutes early. Before a meeting begins, it’s customary to complete the exchange of business cards (or “meishi koukan”). An exchange that acts as a formal self-introduction. Cards are given and received using both hands and are to be displayed on the table for the duration of the meeting. 

In North America, swapping business cards is not nearly as formal and many professionals don’t even carry them any longer. If the exchange of cards does happen before, during or at the end of a meeting, they quickly find themselves placed into breast-pockets or cardholders. To the Japanese, this demonstrates poor etiquette and could result in a big impact on decision-making. What is considered polite conduct in one country, may not be considered so in another. I’ve been to Japan a number of times for business and I’m grateful to have received proper guidance along the way.  

With so many exchanges taking place via email, chat and phone, many professionals tend to undervalue the importance of face time. I am a firm believer of quality face time with customers, partners, prospects and employees. Nothing quite compares to being with the person(s) with which you are meeting. While I’m often on the road, many enterprises have been cutting back on corporate travel for years.  

There are many reasons for this, though chief among them are cost-cutting exercises (international travel expenses hurt rather than help the bottom line). Complicated visa processes, higher airfares and greener tendencies have also contributed to this shift. While this makes sense when looking to minimize expenses and maximize profits, it’s to the detriment of our relationships in which the cultural preference is for face-to-face interactions. 

What is most notable when sitting and speaking with someone, is just how many communication cues are lost, or simply unavailable, when doing business by email or phone. Body language, hand gestures and facial expressions are just some of the important indicators that let us know how a conversation is progressing, or where it may be stalling.   

Videoconferencing technology brings all of those visual cues back into play. Done properly, it allows conversations to flow more naturally, and is especially important in cross-cultural communication, where there’s greater potential for actions and answers to get “lost in translation”.  

As a method of communication, video puts us in a brilliant position to change the way companies build and maintain their international relationships. By providing potential opportunities to connect and collaborate with partners and clients from across the globe, in a way they favor, companies can deepen their working relationships, defy the impact of distance and break down cultural barriers.  

By closing this divide, today’s businesses can benefit from greater collaboration and more genuine conversations. This not only ensures more productive meetings, but also provides the opportunity for more meaningful business relationships, regardless of whether you’re working from San Francisco or Tokyo, Japan.

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Microsoft Ignite: Inspiration In An Established Ecosystem

CMMA Blog

Last week, 30,000 people descended upon Orlando, Florida to take part in the annual event that outlines Microsoft’s vision for the future. True to form Satya Nadella kicked off the event with an inspirational message of customer commitment, open data sharing and a commitment to give back to humanity. The keynotes, sessions, Expo time and meetings kept our team very busy. For those of you that weren’t able to attend, we compiled our four takeaways:

1. Surplus created by tech intensity should be shared

2. Customer centric bundling of Microsoft products

3. The partner ecosystem and enterprise infiltration are strong

4. Data is the tie that binds

In Satya’s keynote, he illustrated how tech intensity (the access to technology and the extensive use of technology for improvement) will create a surplus that needs to be distributed equitably across society. He introduced an initiative called AI for Humanitarian Action . This commitment to social improvement clearly communicates Satya’s personal values, but also the power of Microsoft as a social change agent.

As I watched the unveiling of Microsoft 365 , I was excited to see more bundling of products and the responsible product teams into groups that form whole solutions at Microsoft. The days of product selling have gone by the way side and the focus has shifted to building solutions that solve customer problems. This is a huge win for customers and partners of Microsoft.

Those partners and customers form a very solid foundation of strength for Microsoft. The mere fact that there were 30,000 people in Orlando for the last week of a calendar quarter speaks volumes of Microsoft’s influence within their customer and partner base. There were thousands of booths on the expo floor, and hundreds of sessions for attendees to choose from. It was my first Ignite, but many of people I spoke with, that had been in previous years, felt that this year was the biggest and best yet.

As the tech intensity infiltrates the world, the amount of data that is generated will continue to increase and need to be accessed with ease. Adobe, SAP and Microsoft understand the importance of sharing that data and have formed an Open Data Initiative that will help share more data with their customers. This is a perfect fit for companies like ours, because we are in the business of moving data across the enterprise (behind the firewall) with ease and we’re proud to do that with Microsoft.

Learn how Kollective scales the modern workplace through our integrations with Microsoft.

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