Posts Tagged ‘conference calls

08
Jan

Next Generation Conference Calling for SMEs - Part 1

 

It has been a while since we posted here but I thought since our next version of the Lypp service is very close to what we use to have in the original Gaboogie application, plus a bunch of new features, that this would be a fitting place to write about Next Gen Conferencing.

Since starting Xten (now Counterpath) back in the day, technology has not changed much in terms of conference calling. I remember when we were designing the very first Xten softphone, our beta group insisted on us including at least 4 person conference calling right in the client. We did that and it was a huge selling feature, although I think I was the user who used it the most.

The one thing we found out rather quickly was that even if it was cool to have 45 people conferenced over 15 softphone nodes was not at all that practical.

i got to thinking about conferencing and much time I spend trying to manage my calls, where I put my wallet card, what the Dial-in number was, what the conference room number is, my PIN etc. Why does it have to be so convoluted?

If we take a look at the vast majority of conference service providers (CSP) out there we find one thing in common. Dialing into a conference bridge is required to join a call that is not already in progress. By this I mean there are very few services that offer scheduled call-out as an option when setting up a conference call. There are reason for this, it's not easy. It sounds simple enough but when you think about all of the potential scenarios it's gets rather complicated.

Let's say Judy is an executive assistant to Mark. Mark has asked Judy to set up a conference call for 2pm the next day and to bring on 12 other managers for that call. Hmm, not as simple as it sounds. Typically Judy would have to track each person down, send them the call details and ask them to call in at the time of the conference. She would not be sure where to find these people. They could be on the road, in the office, at lunch, who knows!?

Would it not be easier if she could simply schedule the call through an easy to understand web interface and select the contacts who were to be on the call? The rest should be done for her. The notifications should be sent and the call should just simply happen on it's own. Meaning, the attendees should be called. If they attendees miss the call they could always check the call-in details and dial in themselves or Judy could bring them in using simple touch tone commands on her phone or by using the easy t navigate web interface, without the need to use a costly conference call operator.

Well, that is all fine and good but what if the number you are calling sits behind an IVR system and you need to enter an extension to complete the connection with the called party? The first Gaboogie application did not handle this very well. The only way we could work around it was to dial multiple numbers simultaneously hoping the contact would pick up one of them, not a great solution.

Next Generation Conference Calling should handle this with relative ease. We thought hard about it and came up with 2 remedies; Extension Dialing and Sub-conference Dial-out. When the conference is scheduled the coordinator can enter extensions that need to be called and the system takes care of the rest. In the case that the call is already in progress, the coordinator can simply create a private room with a couple of digit presses and from there call anyone they need to. The coordinator can then screen the person and bring them back into the main call with ease.

Stay tuned for the next entry where we describe our mobility features and why they can help you in your work day when on the road.

27
May

Please help.

I've been trying to do some research on our competition in the conference call space, but it's not very easy to look at their stuff when you're on a mac. Or Firefox on the PC. Or Opera… If any of you nice people out there on the Internet run Windows, perhaps you can do better than me. Probably needs to be IE 6; I don't think anything else will cut it.

Help me, please. 

Come on, at least tell me that I'm an idiot for using a standards compliant browser.

I'd really love to see how this works. Honest.
This doesn't work either. If anyone wants to fire up one of the big conference calling providers and shoot me some screenshots of their web app and user experience, I'd love it: dan[at]gaboogie.com.

24
May

Democamp - Democamp Vancouver 01

We managed to scrape under the wire and be 1 of 4 of the privileged few who were selected (by the people) to demo gaboogie this eve. at democamp Vancouver. That's right, we managed to convince the audience that conference calls really can be utterly fascinating!

Democamp Vancouver

Dan from Gaboogie presented first with me driving the laptop, Kelvin from Opus Creo (crazy little tools, yep real tools - shown above) was up next. To follow were Amin from incent.tv (P2P Investment Marketplace), Weston from Sxip (firefox plugin for Sxip - Identity 2.0).

I'd rather look at Gaboogie. 

Nice to see someone sneaking a look at Gaboogie during someone else's presentation :). 

22
May

Don’t be a victim.

Voice is a touchy thing. People expect phone calls to work, and rightly so, but we're still plagued by poor wireless coverage and either beholden to the phone company's idiocy or required to patch together our own alternatives and suffer the associated issues of call quality and reliability. In the midst of a call, it doesn't matter what's under the covers. It's either seamless and clear or choppy and delayed.

It shouldn't be this way. 

Gaboogie is doing well in its early days, but like everyone else who serves up conference calls we're subject to the limitations of the phone line our users connect with (whether we're dialing out to them or they're dialing in). The tough thing is that many of our early users are also early adopters. They're holding out against the phone companies and bottom feeders, and rightly so, in the trenches of VoIP mixed up with the public Internet. Or they're getting on with their day and relying on a wireless carrier to, umm, provide wireless service reliably and consistently. Don't tell me that Vonage is the best that can be done for these hard working folks.

The good news is we have people with high expectations using our service. It's good because they genuinely appreciate the radical notion of delivering conference calling hand in hand with an intuitive user experience. That's our schtick. The bad news is that we have people with high expectations using our service. It's not really bad news; instead it highlights the basic truth that having a crystal clear conversation without paying the phone company is tough. The challenge for the applications that depend on voice, and appeal to those who want smarter voice-based services, is to deliver functionality, features and usability balanced against nothing more complex than enabling a fluid conversation.

The bottom line? If you're connecting to Gaboogie using VoIP then you're one of us, but sadly we can't wave a magic wand and fix your QoS issues.

19
May

Which way next?

We are of course delighted that Gaboogie's receiving so much positive press, including today's piece from Andy Abramson. We've also made great progress with some key customers for our service, all of whom are not only passionate about what we're doing, but excited to provide feedback and suggestions on new features.

One of these is the right way. 

In the words of one early user, 'the ball is ours to drop', which is true of any start-up. I don't see us dropping it on the product side, since Gaboogie's getting very positive reactions from many who've been immensely frustrated by old school conference calls. Instead our challenge is to resist being pulled in the many directions that come from the enthusiastic response. Our job is to stay focused.

18
Apr

The gaboogie un-teleconferencing beta preview is on!

Now that the word is out everyone wants in on the gaboogie conferencing action.

Dad, it says Gaboogie! Can I answer it? I have heard good things about this Gaboogie service.

Little Kyler has become quite serious about his role in QA, just try and pry that phone out of his hands.

03
Apr

Conference calling of old = no fun

There are quite a few services out there providing phone conferencing and conference calling services but none are really leveraging the technology that is available today to make the experience pleasant for the attendees or moderators. So many conferences start late, or attendees forget altogether to dial-in, meaning valuable time is wasted and the benefits of meeting with remote employees, clients or partners go out the window.

Reservationless or operator-assisted, old school conference calls might as well be in the dictionary, next to "bad user experience".

courtesy of www.soundghost.co.uk 

Gaboogie was conceived to do what other conference providers are not: make phone conferences easy and even fun to use!

Why do I have remember PINs and dial-in numbers? Why doesn't the conference call me?

Why would I want a conference call operator to control my call when I can have my Executive Assistant attend to that with little or no effort?

Why would I pay two people to do something that one person can easily deal with or maybe I want to deal with myself!? Come on, that's crazy talk!

Yes, Gaboogie calls the moderator and all the attendees; no-one needs to remember to call in. As the moderator, you can mute/unmute, drop and add new callers on the fly during the call.

Watch as attendees put up their hands and answer them on a private channel / sub-conference simply by clicking on their hand. Record the conference to MP3 and it's autmotically transformed into a podcast for you to share or to review privately at a later date.

These are just some of the features available in the upcoming public release of Gaboogie.

If you'd like to be one of the first to try Gaboogie, just visit Gaboogie.com and submit your email address.

20
Mar

I know! I’ll hire a bunch of sales guys!

I was having a conversation with a research analyst a few days ago and he was a little concerned about our sales model, specifically that we were expecting customers to buy exclusively via e-commerce. Apparently only about five per cent of conference calls are booked online today, and his instinct was that this number was unlikely to change any time soon. Business users are simply too entrenched in their old stick-in-the-mud ways.

I'm not naive enough to claim that Gaboogie's about to engineer a global paradigm shift, but guess which of the following reasons I buy into about why business users aren't booking online:

a) They love carrying around a little wallet card with a dial-in number and PIN.

b) Getting cold calls from Slick Rick trying to sell you a new conference service is awesome! 

c) They feel that they need the personal touch of a conference call "account manager" (aka an outsourced call centre rep.) for a service that should be so simple their grandmothers could use it.

d) It's great when no-one dials in because you forgot to send them an email telling them the time, date, dial-in, PIN, and your life story to boot.

e) None of the above.

I'm biased, naturally, but I'm voting for "e". Gaboogie will be successful if we make the user experience simple and efficient; if we don't it won't. Business users buy things that make their life easier, and I don't think I need an army of sales guys to sell them something that just works.