BANGALORE, INDIA: Large companies and SMBs use business social tools, defined as technologies that enable business collaboration and communication, such as intranets, video conferencing and social networks, in dramatically different ways, leading to very different selling motions and partner opportunities, according to a new research released by Microsoft Corp. at its annual partner conference at Houston, USA .
The study, conducted by the research firm Ipsos among nearly 10,000 end users at SMBs and large companies in 32 countries, found that, in addition to using solutions such as intranets and instant messaging services, SMBs are more likely to utilize multiple external social tools for professional purposes. Large companies, on the other hand, are more likely to deploy fewer, more prevalent collaboration tools.
"Social collaboration technologies represent a growing opportunity for both large companies and SMBs to realize the benefits of cloud computing through and all-inclusive approach to productivity," said Ramkumar Pichai, GM - Microsoft Office Division at Microsoft. "The new Office is more social than ever. With SharePoint, Lync and Yammer, Microsoft alone has the expertise, portfolio, capabilities, vision and insight to make the future for workplace collaboration a reality."
Other findings:
Although the top use for social tools in both large companies and SMBs is communicating with colleagues (selected by seven in 10 of all end users surveyed), those at smaller companies use social tools for a broader range of tasks, including communicating with customers, clients or vendors and researching customers, clients and competitors. In contrast, end users at large companies are more likely to use social tools for finding an expert of information within their company.
Barriers to adoption still exist across large companies and SMBs. For both groups, security concerns (71 per cent of end users at large companies vs. 60 per cent of SMB end users) and productivity losses (58 per cent at large companies vs. 59 per cent at SMBs) were identified as the top risks.
End users at large companies are more likely to say their IT department can be a barrier to using social tools (41 per cent at large companies vs. 36 per cent at SMBs).
Those at large companies are also more likely to say social tools are restricted at their workplace because of concerns about the company image (27 per cent vs. 21 per cent at SMBs) or data loss (25 per cent at large companies vs. 22 at SMBs).
"Consumerization of IT has changed the fundamental way in which businesses communicate, with enterprise social tools now following a ‘bring your own device' model into the workplace," said Rebecca Sizelove, associate vice president, Ipsos Public Affairs. "However, there are distinct differences between how SMBs and large companies adopt these tools, and technology decision-makers still require a certain amount of education around the benefits social tools can provide. This creates opportunities for technology vendors to educate and sell to businesses of all sizes."