Love, Hate and the Annual Avaya Analyst Fandango
I have a love/hate relationship with Avaya.
Way back in the pre-email, pre-cell phone days, when I started as an industry analyst with Dataquest, one of my clients was AT&T. AT&T was a company I always admired and at one time in my checkered career I even tried to get a job with them. Their human resources function was as screwed up as most big companies’ but that’s another story. While AT&T was my client at Dataquest I had a great relationship with them.
As you know, AT&T begat Lucent which begat Avaya. As the voice messaging industry was winding down in the ‘90s Avaya stepped in and acquired another company that I admired and had as a client, Octel. As a result, I had lots of former Octel friends and former AT&T friends at Avaya.
This past Saturday, November 1st 2008, marks the ninth anniversary of the founding of my company, Saddletree Research. It also marks the beginning of my relationship with Avaya hitting the skids. The love affair still existed back in 1999 due to the many friends I still had at Avaya from my Dataquest and In-Stat days, but I could instinctively feel things starting to change as any jilted lover can.
These days my relationship with Avaya is something akin to Avaya being a former girlfriend after a particularly acrimonious breakup. We don’t have anything to do with each other except once a year when Avaya invites me to their annual analyst briefing. We smile at each other and reminisce about the old days and better times, but I think we both know that we’re never going to get back together. Avaya only dances with the big guys these days, like Gartner and Yankee, and select special friends. I’m an independent in every sense of the word. Gartner and Yankee are the football players. I’m the soccer playing nerd. A polite exchange of smiles is about as far as I get with Avaya.
When I go to their annual analyst fandango I endeavor to be civil and take in what they have to say. Still, I have to admit it’s like seeing the old girlfriend that you never really got over. Life has moved on and all parties have survived, but there’s still that faint feeling in the pit of the stomach. The truth is I really don’t want to like Avaya anymore but they occasionally do something that still brings back happier memories of days gone by.
This year I connected with the usual Avaya suspects who gave me the simultaneous polite smile/brush off combo, but I also met some interesting people with surprisingly innovative ideas. Most of these interesting people are recent additions to Avaya so they may not have been told the analyst relations rules yet. I found these people to be candid and sincere, which were not traits that I had come to associate with Avaya over the past few years.
One of these interesting, mold-busting people I met was Avaya’s relatively new vice president and general manager of unified communications, Steve Borcich. When we sat down to talk I was expecting the rote Avaya company recitation from Steve but instead I found a guy who was, to use an already overused expression, thinking outside the box. We talked about UC in general and in particular about how it could be applied in various business environments. For example, Steve had thought through how UC could be applied in retail settings like the big box do-it-yourself stores to locate expert help regardless of which store an individual worked in. He even talked about bringing in experts from outside the store who would provide customer assistance while at the same time promoting their own businesses. Common sense but pretty smart nonetheless.
The idea of federation, as Steve described it, isn’t a new one but the way he described the use of UC in a federated arrangement showed that Avaya has been giving UC some serious thought beyond just beating the competition. Steve’s idea of extended customer service could certainly be applied to the contact center and beyond. I was impressed.
I still met plenty of Avaya people who looked me straight in the eye and told me they would do something when I know they had no intention of actually doing it. I can usually tell who these people are and they haven’t let me down yet. On the other hand there are plenty of new people at Avaya and they have to be given a chance to prove they’re different. I hope some of them are reading this blog. Don’t let us down. People like me are counting on people like you, Steve.

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