On the Gforce topic some very valid non-technical comments have been made and I think some of them should be discussed and maybe, just maybe, Genesys will one day listen.
[quote]
Vic wrote:
Genesys' strength is in its flexibility and customization. And it is of great concern that I see how Genesys does not consider all the development companies that probably outnumber vendors 20 to 1 as a major force to be used in both promotion and upsell of its product, instead focusing on the vendors, who, interestingly enough, generate most of their money through sale of PBXs such as Avaya.
Genesys must take the development companies under its wing and nurture them, because I believe that it is a matter of time before PBX makers like Avaya will start offering a popup on its own.[/quote]
There are two comments here that I believe are linked. Genesys should (1) be supporting smaller (more dynamic) vendors more and (2) they should be encouraging developers to extend the functionality on offer.
To me the Genesys market looks to have it a development plateau and the reaction from Genesys is to get defensive and hold on. There is probably a very good marketing reason for this but I'm a techie not a marketeer. I'm sure we users, developers and integrators, want to see that the product offerings that are expanding with new products coming out. To me this would increase the market size and also encourage customers to increase their investment. Genesys used to be like this – I can remember the products from before email\multimedia came out, before WFM, before GVP. These 3 products have a shared common factor in their origins – they all were originally developed outside of Genesys and then integrated into the Genesys portfolio. This is a strategy which maybe Genesys should return to?
Today if you want to expand the functionality available you have to look up what the licensing costs are and do the maths. Having done this myself I can vouch that the sums don’t add up as any new product would be at a cost that very very few customers would even contemplate. What does this mean? Dynamic developers aren’t creating new products which is causing market growth to slow, which hurts all of us. It looks like short termism is getting the better of the long term view.
I realise that there will be lots and lots of holes in my arguments, which is the reason to start this thread, so we can discuss them
. I’m also not anti-Genesys as I live and breathe Genesys - ‘doing’ Genesys is how I make my living.
As the exam papers at school used to say: Discuss