EZINE:
In this issue, read about how the Covid-19 pandemic has allowed for managed services players to show their worth, and discover how the use of collaborative tools has made businesses consider how to make conference calls more engaging
EGUIDE:
In this 17-page buyer's guide, Computer Weekly looks at how employers can support a future of flexible working, with video conferencing, collaboration, augmented reality and unified comms technologies all lined up to play a part.
WHITE PAPER:
Learn how Microsoft and Polycom deliver a complete and interoperable end-to-end UC solution that addresses key business challenges like total cost of ownership (TCO), productivity, efficiency, and team collaboration.
EGUIDE:
This expert E-Guide discusses the integration of video-conferencing into a unified communications strategy by introducing guidelines for establishing a video-conferencing action plan and weighing the pros and cons of various web conferencing options.
CASE STUDY:
Polycom’s intensified reliance on an enterprise-wide collaboration environment allows employees, partners, suppliers and even customers to engage one another through any combination of voice and video communications, content sharing, presence awareness and instant messaging. Read on to learn exactly how these features are used and the ROI achieved.
PRESENTATION TRANSCRIPT:
Get a holistic view of the potential costs and savings associated with SIP trunk consolidation. Uncover actual costs and savings models, a review of key technical considerations, primary design considerations, and a discussion of a holistic architecture that can take you from SIP trunking to UC easily and economically.
EGUIDE:
If you're unaware of what WebEx video conferencing software has to offer, it's in your best interest to educate yourself on its exciting, evolving functionality. In this expert e-guide, learn how WebEx is evolving with the times to provide businesses with top quality video conferencing.
WHITE PAPER:
The demand for personal video for organizational communication is growing rapidly. By 2015, over 200 million workers globally will run corporate-supplied video conferencing from their desktops.