Videoconferencing pioneers - what the wider enterprise can learn from HR 05/10/2009
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(1 Votes)Much has been made of videoconferencing technology used for international meetings between senior executives but little has been said about human resources professionals using conferencing services to facilitate communications within their organisations. In fact, HR pioneers in some enterprises are exploiting videoconferencing to drive efficiency and cost savings across their organisation.
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- Videoconferencing
- Main benefits for videoconferencing
- Interviewing via video
- Group training
- Major announcements
- Reducing cost and carbon footprint
BT Conferencing
Videoconferencing
Cathy Ham, general manager, Portfolio and Marketing, BT Conferencing
Videoconferencing, or visual collaboration, has developed rapidly since its early business use in the 1980s. Until the late nineties, videoconferencing was an expensive investment and was frequently reserved for senior executives to hold meetings with their counterparts across the globe. Times have changed since then, with superior technology and lower prices enabling many different departments and even small enterprises to adopt videoconferencing as a means of inter- or intra-company collaboration.
The use of conferencing has often been limited by the imagination of the executives who invest in it, with a large proportion of companies continuing to use it only for high-level meetings across their organisation. In certain companies, however, the HR department is pioneering new uses of videoconferencing technology to facilitate their daily activities and better achieve their objectives.
Main benefits for videoconferencing
Tom Buttle, former HR executive with one of the world’s largest international oil and gas companies says, “On a weekly basis we had to communicate with our support staff in Bangkok, share policies with our counterparts across Europe and report activities back to the US. Conducting these meetings over the phone or by email on an individual basis led to a lack of cohesion and wasted time as information was repeated between different people. Obviously it would be difficult, not to mention costly, to travel to these meetings each week so videoconferencing provides a viable alternative.”
Running meetings via videoconferencing can save a lot of time and trouble as well as cutting the cost and environmental impact of travelling to meetings but it isn’t the only way to utilise this collaboration service. Many HR departments, particularly those within larger or internationally dispersed enterprises, interview potential candidates via videoconferencing facilities.
Interviewing via video
Flying interviewees to the company head office on the company expenses is no longer necessary and in fact, in the current climate where candidates are scrutinising their potential employer’s carbon footprint, may even cause some brand damage.
Group training
Some innovative HR departments are delivering standard training to multiple personnel at once, using a combination of video and web conferencing tools. All that is required for this is that each employee has his or her own computer or access to a videoconferencing suite and the trainer can manage the course as if everyone is in the same room. When web conferencing is added to the mix, trainers can share documents, host question and answer sessions, and run Powerpoint presentations on the screen – reinforcing the learning experience. Not forcing anyone to travel for the training promotes productivity and reduces costs, while time is saved by running the course only once.
Major announcements
Jeanne Barrett, global head of Human Resources at BT Conferencing based in the UK, uses this approach to deliver information to employees in the UK, Americas and Asia/Pacific region from senior executives based in Boston.
“We’re fortunate to have unlimited access to videoconferencing facilities as it’s the nature of our business,” says Jeanne. “We frequently use videoconferencing to run team working workshops across continents which help us align global plans and resources around projects. Also, when major news hits that we want to celebrate with the employees, we hold a videoconferencing session between the employees at our London office and other offices around the world.”
BT’s recent acquisition of Wire One in the US was an example of this. “On the day of the acquisition announcement, we held a 13 site videoconference enabling the CEO and other senior leaders to share the news personally throughout the company,” Jeanne adds. “We find that this method makes all our employees feel valued. It really transmits the enthusiasm and keeps the excitement high across the organisation.”
Reducing cost and carbon footprint
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