Cisco  Quad is an important and interesting component of Cisco’s Collaboration  portfolio. I say interesting because when we first saw Quad a year ago  there seemed to be a lot of potential, but Quad was a work in  progress. The product had the potential to tie a lot of work and  communication capabilities together in one cockpit or dashboard for a  regular business user. Imagine Outlook combined with Twitter, Facebook,  and select business applications you might use, all on one desktop. Quad  is also similar to what contact center agents have experienced for  years, with multiple functions on one screen, or the ability to get to  them through one screen. Not surprisingly, Quad also has potential for  use in the contact center to makeover what an agent in a contact center  would use as the agent desktop, by providing a lot more functionality  than what is currently available (particularly in the social media  realm). 
Yesterday, Cisco provided analysts with an update on Quad - one year  later, by Murali Sitaram, who runs the Collaboration Software Group,  where Quad now sits. We also had the opportunity to hear what Cisco has  learned after trialing Quad on 64,000 Cisco users over the past year.  Talk about a proof point of “eating your own dog food.” Murali showed us  a live demo of Quad running on his desktop, rather than showing us a  canned demo. 
Collaboration is one of the key offerings at buy Cisco. In case you  aren’t familiar with the portfolio, collaboration includes enterprise  social software (such as social media and monitoring, e.g.;  SocialMiner), conferencing, messaging, TelePresence, mobile  applications, customer care, and IP communications. Even though these  are separate product areas, Cisco has developed them with a continual  eye on process, culture, and the interrelationship between these areas.  Collaboration is truly people oriented, and as Murali explained, Quad is  an enterprise collaboration platform that integrates the places people  “live” at work; the social aspect, content, communication, and business  process.
As he pointed out, as workers we are always dealing with different  types of content, whether it is a spreadsheet, web page, word file, PDF  file, presentation, etc. We also communicate through voice, video, and  file sharing, etc. Different types of workers “live” with different  applications. HR professionals live with applications such as Oracle or  PeopleSoft; sales people spend part of their day with Salesforce.com,  while customer service agents deal with an agent desktop, for example.
Cisco integrates with Microsoft OCS for instant messaging,  SharePoint, Active Directory, and Exchange for calendaring. Quad also  integrates with Documentum and other content repositories. Cisco is also  looking to integrate with Lotus Notes for calendaring and Lotus  Sametime for instant messaging, refurbished Cisco wants to continue to improve upon  building a platform that integrates the Cisco components together, but  over time with other third-party products, to provide an integrated  experience. Quad is rooted in the social element, putting the user at  the center of the conversation and bringing information to them.
Murali’s demo highlighted the four main areas of Quad. The first was  Myview, which the user configures to highlight how they want to work  during the day. Myview is rooted in the user’s activity feed, much like  you would have on Facebook and Twitter, with a stream of content of  interest to the user. The user can follow people or be followed, comment  on posts, add photos, etc. Myview also can have calendar items,  directory with presence capabilities, voicemail, etc.  It gives the user  a sense of what is going on within their groups or teams.
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