Thursday, 17 October 2013, 11:04 am Press Release: Polycom |
Video Conferencing Expected to be Preferred Business
Communications Tool in 2016 According to New Survey on
Global Video Conferencing Trends and Etiquette
• 96 per cent of business managers
and leaders say video conferencing helps companies defy
distance and break down cultural barriers to improve
productivity
• Asia Pacific sees
video as critical tool for global business
• Audio quality – the ability to
hear everyone clearly – ranked as the most important
feature for an ideal meeting over
video
NEW ZEALAND – October 17, 2013
– Polycom, Inc. (Nasdaq: PLCM), the global leader in
open, standards-based unified communications and
collaboration (UC&C), today announced that almost all (96
percent) business decision makers believe video conferencing
removes distance barriers and improves productivity between
teams in different cities and countries. According to the
“Global View: Business Video Conferencing Usage and
Trends” survey of more than 1,200 business decision
makers, conducted by Redshift Research and commissioned by
Polycom, video conferencing is an essential tool helping
improve team collaboration and closing the physical and
cultural gap between colleagues doing business across
distances.
Video Conferencing Becoming Pervasive in
Business
The survey found that video is becoming
more pervasive in businesses across the globe. When asked
to choose their preferred methods of communications today,
respondents ranked video conferencing third (47 per cent)
after e-mail (89 per cent) and voice/conference calls (64
per cent), and those same business leaders and managers
expect video to be their most preferred collaboration tool
in three years (52 per cent), followed by e-mail (51 per
cent) and voice/conference calls (37 per cent). Respondents
who use video conferencing today said the three biggest
advantages are: better collaboration between globally
dispersed colleagues (54 per cent), greater clarity of
topics being discussed (45 per cent) and more efficient
meetings (44 per cent).
Over three quarters of decision-maker respondents (76 per cent) are now using video conferencing at work with 56 per cent of video users taking part in video calls at least once a week. The survey found that in Brazil, India and Singapore that number jumps up significantly, as more than two-thirds of respondents in those countries use video conferencing at least once a week.
The survey also revealed that 83 per cent of respondents, and almost 90 per cent of those in their 20s and 30s, use consumer video conferencing solutions at home today, and almost half of all respondents use video conferencing at home at least once a week.
“The growing popularity of video conferencing at home, especially by millennials entering the workforce, is a big driver of increased preference for and adoption of video collaboration in the workplace,” said Jim Kruger, EVP and Chief Marketing Officer at Polycom. “Some key factors to making video as popular in the office as it is at home is ensuring it’s easy to use, providing a high quality connection, delivering enterprise-grade security, and participants’ willingness to accept and adapt to cultural differences as they communicate across borders. We’re seeing businesses around the world defy distance every day using video collaboration, including increasing productivity, enhancing employee engagement, improving time to market and helping to save lives.”
The study also showed that laptops and desktops are the most popular devices for business video conferencing (75 per cent of respondents), followed by conference rooms (48 per cent) and mobile devices (42 per cent). As video conferencing continues to become more pervasive, in three years laptops and desktops are still expected to be the most preferred device (72 per cent), while mobile devices and conference room usage will increase to 55 and 51 per cent, respectively.
Survey Uncovers
Recommendations for Ideal Videoconferences and Distractions
to Avoid
The survey provided sharp insights from
video conferencing users into which behaviours constitute an
ideal video meeting, and which are distracting for business
decision makers.
The survey found the top three most
important criteria for an ideal video meeting
are:
• The ability to hear everyone clearly (69 per
cent)
• Technology that is straight forward and easy
to use (60 per cent)
• Good eye contact with
colleagues/ everyone is clearly visible (58 per
cent)
Respondents who use video conferencing said the most
distracting things, which should be avoided during video
meetings, are:
• Mobile phone going off during a
meeting (58 per cent)
• People attending from
inappropriate places – e.g., public transit, in stores (52
per cent)
• People who are multi-tasking or look
distracted – e.g., tapping on keyboard – (51 per
cent)
• Inappropriate background distractions such as
colleagues, music, noise (50 per cent)
What
one country finds distracting, another doesn’t
mind
The Polycom survey shed light on different
opinions between users of video collaboration in various
countries, where one activity may be distracting in one
country but accepted in another.
• Appearance
matters (sort of). When asked if people not wearing
business attire was a distraction, respondents from India,
Singapore and Poland topped the list (30, 26 and 21 per
cent, respectively), and on the other end of the spectrum,
13 per cent or fewer of respondents in the UK, France,
Russia and The Netherlands find attire to be a
distraction.
• APAC sees video as critical tool for
global business. In the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region,
international communications (between colleagues in
different countries) ranked as the most important use of
video conferencing (65 per cent), versus 57 per cent for
inter-country communications.
• Close the deal.
India leads the way in using video conferencing for new
business with 60 per cent of respondents saying they use or
would use video conferencing for new business. This was
followed by Russia and Brazil at 49 and 44 per cent,
respectively. Across the globe, 38 per cent of respondents
use video, or would use video, for new
business.
• See me, hire me. The U.S. leads the
way in leveraging video conferencing for recruitment and
hiring, as 32 per cent of video respondents said they use or
would use video for this purpose, followed by APAC at 28 per
cent.
• Flexible working. In the Europe,
Middle-East and Africa (EMEA) region, respondents were
mostly using video conferencing to empower flexible working
environments, which was cited as the second highest reason
for using the technology, after “connecting with
colleagues across the country.”
Occupational
variations:
As access to video conferencing increases
to virtually all employees with a mobile device or laptop,
the survey found that video users in various business
functions within organisations use video to defy distance in
slightly differing ways:
• CEOs and founders rated
flexible working and inter- office/local meetings (50 per
cent each) as their top reasons they use or would use video
conferencing, followed by international meetings (46 per
cent), new business/sales and company/department meetings
(39 per cent each).
• During an average week, the
marketing function uses video collaboration the most
frequently (64 per cent use video at least weekly) in an
organisation, followed by IT/engineering and facilities (62
per cent use video at least weekly). However, when it comes
to daily usage of video at work, the HR function is the
power user (32 per cent indicate they use video conferencing
daily), followed by sales executives (28 per cent indicate
they use video conferencing daily).
• The
IT/engineering and manufacturing/supply chain functions are
most likely to use video collaboration for international
meetings, with 61 and 58 per cent of respondents,
respectively, saying they use or would use video to
collaborate face to face with colleagues internationally. In
fact, according to the survey results, these are the two job
functions that use video collaboration more for
international meetings than local, in-country video
meetings.
All respondents, regardless of role, predominantly used video conferencing for inter-office meetings, followed by international inter-office meetings. Overwhelmingly, respondents said it is important to try and understand different country cultures when meeting using video conferencing (97 per cent) and 89 per cent of respondents called for etiquette rules to be established to help them better use video conferencing for business.
To help business better navigate these differences and drive more effective use of video conferencing, Polycom is launching Polycom’s Guide to Collaborating Across Borders,an insightful new guide designed to help readers understand the nuances of doing business across the globe. This guide is one of several new resources for business leaders across almost every enterprise function – from IT to HR to the C-suite – to learn how video conferencing can help them defy distance and achieve their goals more quickly and efficiently. Click here to learn more about how people and businesses use video to defy distance around the world.
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