Adobe Acrobat Connect Becoming Enterprise-Ready

I’ve been using Adobe Acrobat Connect for more than a year, and I’ve come to appreciate its simplicity. The web conferencing program has fit the bill as a Minneapolis-based colleague and I have collaborated on refining The Culture of Collaboration workshop.

The latest version of Acrobat Connect Pro, which Adobe is releasing today, includes a host of features that will appeal to many enterprises. Key new features involve presence and regulatory compliance. For more on presence, see my March 7, 2007 post. Corporate IT directors, particularly those in highly-regulated industries, get nervous about real-time collaboration tools. As David Slater, Adobe’s group product marketing manager, mentioned to me last week, the feedback his team got from IT people could be summed up this way: “If you don’t take compliance seriously, we can’t take you seriously.”

Well, that message resonated with Adobe. The new version of Acrobat Connect Pro enables capturing, archiving and editing collaborative sessions, online meetings, and text chat. Certain industries would prefer no retention capability, and that’s possible too. Also, the updated software provides advanced authentication to verify that users are who they say they are. Administrators can also selectively restrict functionality for particular users plus provide privacy notices and secure permission from participants before recording online meetings.

Regarding presence, Adobe has integrated Acrobat Connect with Microsoft Office Communications Server and Microsoft Live Communications Server plus IBM Lotus Sametime and Jabber. Later this year, Acrobat Connect will interact or “federate” with public IM networks. So it’s easy to check a colleague’s availability and launch an IM session right from an Acrobat Connect meeting.

What differentiates Adobe Acrobat Connect Pro from other real-time collaboration solutions is the simplicity of the user interface and the ease of integrating video into collaborative sessions using its Flash platform. Adobe is focused on making video as easy for knowledge workers to deal with as text. Incidentally, the cost of Acrobat Connect Pro is roughly $500 per seat for a perpetual license or $500 per seat per year for a hosted version with fewer features.

Web conferencing is transitioning from a one-to-many presentation or training tool to a few-to-few collaboration tool.  Recently, my colleagues and I formalized our continuing research into all facets of collaboration by establishing The Culture of Collaboration Institute. Our research indicates that users want tighter integration between real-time and asynchronous collaboration.

Now that Adobe has refined real-time collaboration, the company should now think more about what happens if somebody misses an online meeting or collaborative session. How can they quickly access the parts of the session relevant to them? How can they effectively contribute asynchronously? Focusing on questions like these helps fit collaboration into work styles.


Comments

One response to “Adobe Acrobat Connect Becoming Enterprise-Ready”

  1. chris bailey Avatar

    At my college we use a different tool for working on our projects online.
    Its free and needs no installation since its online, go to http://www.showdocument.com
    pretty useful for me since i usually do my projects on the laptop. -chrisman

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