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Corporations are Adopting Text Messaging

05 September 2006, Unknown

Text Messaging has altered an election in Spain, brought down a Government in the Philippines, saved lives during Hurricane Katrina and the Tsunami in Asia. Now corporations are using texting to rally their troops?

London, UK (PRWEB) September 4, 2006 -- Hundreds of protesters rally outside the Presidential Palace. In a string of unsolved murders in recent months, trade union leaders, government critics, students, journalists and others have been killed. Students had begun clamoring for President Gloria Arroyo to do something. They organize themselves not via voice or e-mail but text messaging, says Tom Sheahan, CEO of Red Oxygen (www.redoxygen.com). This isn’t the first time a text messaging campaign has been used to alter government in the Philippines. A huge text-messaging campaign in the Philippines is said to have contributed to the wave of anger against President Joseph Estrada in 2001 that ultimately resulted in his removal.

Similar situation occurred in Spain on the eve of the Election Day in March 14, 2004. Demonstrations were banned 24 hours prior to an election. They rallied their troops via text messaging, with 94% mobile phone penetration rate in Spain. It is the most ubiquitous form of instant communication. Some urged supporters of the Socialists, the eventual victors, to vote. Others tried to rally supporters of the Popular Party, defending against it accusations that it had tried to cover up evidence of Al Qaeda's apparent responsibility for the Madrid bombings.

“I was unfortunate enough to be in Thailand during the Tsunami last year; I couldn’t place a call out. The networks were jammed. I was able to text my family and friends that I was OK. SMS/Text messaging is the last thing to go down, and the first application to come up on Cell Networks. It is more reliable, cheaper and it works everywhere! You can’t make that claim with GPRS,” says Sheahan.

Corporations are now just starting to implement text messaging as a part of their standard communications process. One large food company in Australia had 8 staff members communicating with their remote field sales force. They implemented the Red Oxygen’s NotesSMS product to communicate with the remote field sales force. It, not only cut down on communications costs, but it saved time. They now only have a group of four instead of eight, and save thousands on their phone bill!

“I think a few years ago, corporate users thought text messaging was just for teenagers and university students. Now they realize it’s a vital part of communication, with any age group. Whether it is crisis communication or just delivery a notice that a meeting has been changed” Tom Sheahan, CEO of Red Oxygen. According to the Economist, “Text messaging is the second most popular form of communication when an employee is working off-site.

The corporations are looking for solutions that integrate into their existing IT environments. Whether the corporate users use Microsoft Outlook, Lotus Notes or IBM’s Sametime instant messaging client, they want solutions that integrate into their environments, and tools that allow them to control cost and mange it. The corporate user cannot go to website and transpose all of their existing proprietary mission-critical contact details into an third party website or re-enter their millions of addresses to proprietary email address cellphonenumber @ provider.com. The corporations are also looking for solutions that allow them to integrate text messaging into their existing back-end CRM/ERP systems.

“When we were evaluating solutions, our Telco supplier wanted us to put all of the contacts on their website. We would be forced to hire a person fulltime, just to keep their website up to date. The Red Oxygen solution, OfficeSMS, puts a send SMS button on the Microsoft Outlook toolbar, and it grabs the mobile numbers from the existing contacts lists or global address book. The user just hits the send SMS button, writes the short message and hits send – just like email. It was also easy to install with no user intervention, the same way we manage security software and no end user training” Tricia Porter, Pfizer Australia

“The IT influential US market has been one of the last markets to catch on to the new text messaging revolution. They had problems early on delivering text messages from one network to another. They had so many different types Cell Phone Networks deployed; TDMA, CDMA, GSM, IDEN and Analog. The US Cell phone networks now have it working seamlessly, but it is just moving up the food chain to the corporate users from the teenagers and university students.” Tom Sheahan, CEO of Red Oxygen


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