Why your teleconferences are absolutely rubbish (it’s all about video!)

Information | Sunday February 27 2011 12:34 pm | Comments (3) Tags: , , , , ,

I got some rather eye-popping statistics in from Cable & Wireless today. They talked to over 4,800 consumers and businesses across the UK, India, Spain, Germany and Singapore and ended up with these results:

- Over 42% of Brits check or write emails and 32% doodle while taking part in a conference call

Well, I admit to having done similar. But only when the person on the teleconference is droning on about something I already know. Right? ;-)

You’re the same too, yeah?

- 24% of the UK would be happy to deal with a Doctor on a video call

I’m surprised at this one. I have no issue with this. Indeed I’d much prefer a video call with a doctor rather than having to arse around getting to the surgery.

- Over 46 per cent of all respondents from Germany, India, Spain and Singapore check or write emails, while on average 43 per cent surf the net, 17 per cent doodle and 11 per cent have even made another phone call.

Almost every teleconference I’ve been on with more than 5 people seems to feature at least one of the parties having to ‘put himself on mute’ whilst he makes another call. I always find that rather fascinating, given you’re meant to be paying attention to the current call.

Other findings? Heh. Have a read of this one:

- Over a third of respondents in the UK still put on a formal phone voice when answering a call from a number we dont recognise and on telephone conference calls

Heh. Now, I don’t think I do this. But I wonder if, subconsciously, I actually do. Shocking. I think I do.

“Ewan speaking?”

OK let’s talk focus:

- In the UK our concentration and focus on telephone conference calls begins to wane after an average of 23 minutes, but on a video conference call or in a face-to-face meeting our attention span rockets to 35 minutes, putting us on par with Singaporeans who report the longest concentration time on a video conference call at 37 minutes

On a video conference there’s next to no room for staring at the wall, is there? That 23 minute statistic will be heavily relevant to anyone who has to work through 60+ minute teleconferences every week.

- Interestingly, on regular one to one phone calls the average focus in the UK is just nine minutes, a figure our German cousins put to shame with the ability to concentrate for over 16 minutes

This is shocking. Goodness me. Don’t bother with any call longer than 10 minutes in the UK then? ;-)

- 87% of Brits claim face to face contact is more likely to lead to a business decision

Aye, I buy that.

- The use of video conferencing solutions in business can save customers at least 25% on their travel costs.

Oh come on, only 25%? And the rest! What about the 12,000 business class flights? x3? ;-)

I’ve seen quite a lot of video conferencing services across the years — and the best are the ‘life size’ ones where it really is like being on Star Trek. You feel like you’re actually sitting across the board table from the people in Sydney.

I will need to check out the Cable & Wireless ‘managed video conferencing‘ service and see how that works.

Meanwhile, if you’ve got some 60 minute teleconferences scheduled next week, send the ‘meeting owner’ this post and tell them to keep it to 30 minutes in order to hold the attention of the attendees…

Related posts:

  1. Jajah absolutely rocks
  2. Getting absolutely hosed by UK networks: Why is it so expensive to call another mobile?
  3. Lypp launches genius Outlook plugin for conference calling

Video: Andrew Gilbert, Qualcomm’s top man in Europe

Information | Monday July 5 2010 5:11 pm | Comments (0) Tags: , , , ,

On Thursday afternoon last week I got 20 minutes with Andrew Gilbert, Qualcomm‘s top man in Europe. He agreed to go on camera to give us an overview of the company and talk about opportunities with the company’s Brew MP platform. If you think you know Qualcomm, do think again. Did you, for instance, know that Andrew runs a $100m fund for investing in (or acquiring) companies of interest to their business? I didn’t. So if you’re working on some technology that Andrew and his colleagues may well need, do think about talking to them.

I had no idea of Qualcomm’s breadth of operations. Yes I knew they did the SnapDragon processor. Yes I knew this was relevant to the latest Android and Windows phones, but I didn’t have a clue about their medical operations, nor did I realise that they’ve paid mobile developers $3bn of revenue so far.

Have a watch below…

Part 1:

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Part 2:

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Thank you for taking the time Andrew, it was very good of you.

You can get these videos straight to your iPhone or podcast unit of choice by subscribing to the Mobile Developer TV iTunes podcast feed (just click):

Or you can manually add the RSS feed using this address:

http://mobiledevelopertv.blip.tv/rss/itunes

Related posts:

  1. Video: The Rafe Blandford Interview
  2. Video: Parts 2-4 of Ben from Chomp (including demo)
  3. Video: Sony Ericsson’s X10 Mini super-small Android device

New Video Series: Is the mobile marketing industry too obsessed with smartphones?

Information | Saturday June 12 2010 11:01 pm | Comments (1) Tags: , , , , , ,

Is the mobile marketing industry far too obsessed with smartphones? That’s the question I’ll be asking in a new video series coming soon to Mobile Industry Review in association with OpenMarket, the leading global mobile transaction hub.

In the wake of Clarityn’s apparent success at achieving 70,000 downloads of their iPhone pollen count application, I sat last week wondering on whether the resources that were deployed on that project could have been better spent reaching the whole marketplace.

The big problem with marketing types is that the iPhone (and to a lesser extent, many of the Android devices) are gorgeous. Imagery renders beautifully. The UI experience is elegant. It’s utterly simple to convince the CEO that it’s the right thing to do. I firmly believe that the new mantra in today’s mobile marketing industry is ‘nobody ever got shot for building an iPhone app.

It’s all well and good, but it’s ridiculously limiting. Clarityn’s team specifically deployed the app in the knowledge that it would only work for a very, very small segment of the United Kingdom. I suspect that the app was ‘just a test’. But what about ubiquity? What about accessing the whole market? It’s not as if the billboards I see around are only compatible with 32 year old males of Scottish descent. Everyone can ‘access’ them. Similarly with TV ads, the latest audi advert works on any television. Any. It doesn’t matter whether you’ve got a Samsung TV or a Sony.

So what’s going on with mobile marketing and mobile marketing budgets? Why does the market — at least from my vantage point — appear to be so obsessed with smartphones when their job should be reaching everyone? Is a ‘text campaign’ just too boring, nowadays? What about the huge segments of the population who are simply ignored by the latest iPhone gizmo that no doubt cost the brand a pretty penny to develop?

Well, I’m going to check this out.

Next week I’m taking the camera equipment to the IAB Engage for Mobile event in London. I’m going to produce a series of videos from there on the subject of The Smartphone Obsession asking this key question: “Has the mobile marketing industry become too focused on smartphones?”

If you’d like to participate, let me know (ewan@mobileindustryreview.com). I’m going to be filming all day at the event and I’m working out the schedule right now. I’m aiming to produce a 5-video series, with each episode featuring an thought leader.

Standby for more information soon!

Video: Hands on with the £55 Orange Rio

Information | Thursday June 3 2010 8:18 am | Comments (1) Tags: , , ,

Have a look at the 55 Orange Rio — a highly capable QWERTY device that’s sure to give the chaps at RIM a run for their money. Word has it that the device is selling very well on the High Street. I’m not surprised.

Here’s the video — and remember, if you’re viewing on an iPad or iPhone, the video will play right-away thanks to our gorgeous new HTML5 video support update.

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And if you’d like to see some more pics, here’s the Rio Flickr gallery I created.

Video: Using The Times iPad App

Information | Tuesday June 1 2010 2:16 pm | Comments (0) Tags: , , ,

I took out my iPhone and recorded a QIK video of The Times iPad application in use. See what you think…

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