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Unified Business Communication FrameworkUnified Business Communication Framework

Business Collaboration is defined as people working together towards a shared goal/result over a period of time involving multiple interactive communications.

Sorell Slaymaker

November 16, 2009

2 Min Read
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Business Collaboration is defined as people working together towards a shared goal/result over a period of time involving multiple interactive communications.

Unified Business Communication (UBC) = People + Process + Information + Technology. UBC is not just about multi-channel communication, but the integration of communication technologies/services with people, process, and information.

People--Entities that are directly or indirectly involved in the communication * Person-person, person-machine, machine-machine * Business-Business, Business-Consumer, Consumer-Consumer * One-one, one-many, many-many

Process--Following a standard business methodology towards an end result while handling all the exceptions in a timely manner. * Internal--Manufacturing, supply chain, administrative * External--Marketing/sales, delivery, support/service, billing

UC Information--Information that offers context to the communication * Who--Initiator, relationship, background, role, knowledge, group, value, preferences, history * What--Topic, tasks, data, content, plan, type (sales, services, notification) * When--Real time or delayed (synchronous vs. asynchronous), scheduled or adhoc * Where--Location (Face-face, virtual, remote), modality, availability, cost * Why--Objective (informational, decision, social, other), event, motivation, trigger

UC Technologies/Services--How communication takes place based on the above * Channel(s)--Voice, video, web, messaging, letter/fax, in-person * Presence--Status, location, availability, contact rules * Directories--User ID & information, authentication, authorization, federation * Conferencing--Bridging multiple people together across one or more channels * Control--Setup, transfer, forward, queue, routing rules * Mobility--Where to send to communication--device, network, channel * Unified Client--Smart phones, Netbooks, Virtual Clients, PCs * Reporting--Logging and recording with real-time and historical reports

Business Collaboration is defined as people working together towards a shared goal/result over a period of time involving multiple interactive communications. File sharing for example is a collaboration service, not a communications service. More in the future on a Unified Business Communication & Collaboration (UBCC) architectural framework.Business Collaboration is defined as people working together towards a shared goal/result over a period of time involving multiple interactive communications.

About the Author

Sorell Slaymaker

Sorell Slaymaker has 25 years of experience designing, building, securing, and operating IP networks and the communication services that run across them. His mission is to help make communication easier and cheaper, since he believes that the more we all communicate, the better we are. Prior to joining 128 Technology as an Evangelist in 2016, Sorell was a Gartner analyst covering networking and communications. Sorell graduated from Texas A&M with a B.S. in Telecom Engineering, and went through the M.E. Telecom program at the University of Colorado.

On the weekends, Sorell enjoys being outside gardening, hiking, biking, or X-skiing. He resides in St. Paul, Minn., where he has grown to appreciate all four seasons of the year, including camping in January.