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What Real Independence means. Find Out
23-Sep-2009
Tags: Digital and Media Asset Management, Document Management (ECM), Enterprise Collaboration & Social Software, Enterprise Search, Portals and Content Integration
Had a nice chat the other day with an old acquaintance who previously held two interesting jobs: as a practice lead at a major technology analyst firm, as well as heading up "analyst relations" for a major vendor. This is not uncommon; there's a revolving door between staff at vendors and analyst firms.
We talked a bit about the institutional conflicts of interests when analyst firms consult for both buyers and vendors -- a primary frustration that drove him out of his analyst firm as well as me to found CMS Watch. (It's topic Alan has already plumbed here.)
We also discussed a related issue that strikes me as potentially more insidious for buyers. My colleague pointed out that software vendors typically don't spend money with analyst firms to bribe them outright. Rather, they purchase attention through which they can try to get an analyst to define the marketplace and customer challenges according to that particular vendor's approach.
It's the vendor-analyst echo chamber game, designed to manufacture artificial demand. I've seen it first-hand. The script goes like this:
You might draw some parallels here with public relations. After all, doesn't the trade press get influenced the same way? I think there's two differences. First, in most of the world, there isn't money changing hands in media relations. Second, most media outlets are transparent about the source of their information and typically don't parrot vendor pitches as original analysis or broader marketplace trends. Sure, we've all seen reporters get manipulated, but it's more the exception than the rule.
If you sense some anger here it's because I've seen enterprise teams suffer as a result of this game. One of the larger boondoggles in this regard was the promotion of "Smart Enterprise Suites" ("SES") earlier this decade, when companies were encouraged to consolidate all their content management initiatives on a single über-platform. Today you'd think that's crazy, and if you're a website manager you'd pale at the prospect of having to manage web content via the corporate document management platform. But many enterprises went down that path, and paid a steep price for it.
In the end you can't blame vendors or analysts. It's their game, not yours. You have to take responsibility for your technology buying decisions.
Web Content Management Report looks at... Extended Services in Ektron
"CMS400.NET has a slew of micro-applications, including polls, surveys, blogs, and threaded discussions with permissioned commenting, among others. The product also comes with its own email subscription/marketing system -- something customers typically procure via a third-party provider.
Larger customers may want to procure these services elsewhere, since Ektron's capabilities here aren't as good or as flexible as what you can find elsewhere on the market. On the plus side..."
(p. 634)
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