Spinning IBM’s virtual world
Business Center Still Gaining Momentum
IBM (NYSE: IBM) has announced that live sales avatars from Australia, Singapore and Malaysia will staff its virtual IBM Business Center. This team will also help clients from New Zealand. They join others from North America, Latin America and Europe who started working there in May. This means the center, which has had 10,000 visitors since it opened, offers the opportunity to connect with a real IBM representative 24 hours five days a week.
The virtual Business Center offers a place for IBM sales people, clients and partners to meet, learn, collaborate and conduct business together. It has six areas: Reception, Sales Center, Technical Support Library, Innovation Center, Client Briefing Center and Conference Center.
Accessible through Second Life, it is unique because it is staffed by real IBM sales representatives from around the world — not robots or kiosks — who can chat with visitors in several languages and build business relationships. If someone wants to buy hardware, software or services, or needs help solving a business problem, the IBM sales avatar will either help him or her or ensure that the person is connected with the right IBM expert inside or outside of Second Life. Signing contracts, paying, or exchanging sensitive information would take place by telephone or through the Web.
"There has been a huge surge in the popularity of the Web activities like social networking, people are very accustomed to meeting each other online socially," says Paula Summa, General Manager, ibm.com, the company's decade-old telephone and Web sales organization. "We've just applied that concept to the business world.
"Social networking and virtual world participation is skyrocketing in Asia. Asia is, after all, a hotbed for 3-D gaming. Why not 3-D business, too?"
Added Summa: "Although this started as an experiment, it has resulted in sales leads. This is a new and exciting way for clients and IBM to do business."
The combination of 3-D virtual experience, its existing 2-D Web site and real IBM people to conduct business is designed to make customers' business experiences more effective.
The virtual center is staffed by ibm.com employees who speak one or more of the following languages: Bahasia Malaysia, Cantonese, Tagalog (Philippines), Mandarin, English, Portuguese, German, Spanish, Dutch, Italian, French and Canadian French.
IBM's Virtual Business Center's technical support library gives visitors access to technical information, including Redbooks and Systems Journals. One advantage of going to a virtual world to get your information is that finding it can be faster and easier than just navigating a Web site. In the virtual Business Center you can browse the 3-D book shelves, view a 3-D book or just ask the librarian, just like in the real world.
"This is just one of several major steps IBM has taken to improve the over-all online experience for its clients," Summa said.
The news follows an IBM Web site upgrade that started rolling out worldwide in June. The ibm.com web site in Australia now has a flashier home page and dynamic navigation that allows most visitors to reach relevant information in half the number of clicks it took previously. The change will take place in Singapore, Malaysia and New Zealand later this year.
IBM's web site has 3 million pages of original content, the equivalent of all the pages of the books in a small town library. IBM has recently been recognized for giving its clients a positive online experience.
In March, ibm.com was ranked the No. 1 Web site of any U.S.-headquartered company and seventh worldwide by the FT Bowen Craggs Index. In May, small and medium businesses ranked IBM No. 1 in the online experience it offers, according to industry analyst firm Compass Intelligence. It analyzed 40 Web sites, including those of major information technology companies Dell, HP and Microsoft.
IBM has 5,000 employees in the Virtual Universe community. Its employees are also visiting and working in other 3-D places, like Active World and There.com.
According to Gartner, by the end of 2011 "eighty percent of active Internet users and Fortune 500 enterprises will have a 'second life type virtual presence web site', but not necessarily in Second Life." Second Life has more than 9 million registered users, up from 1 million in October, 2006.
More than 230 IBM researchers, consultants and developers use virtual worlds to experiment with and develop social networking tools, and to design new ways of learning and doing business. IBM has about 50 other virtual islands in Second Life for purposes such as research, on boarding of new employees, developer support and IBM internal and client meetings. IBM developed this center with NMC Virtual Worlds, a virtual services unit of the New Media Consortium.
For more information contact Michelle McIntyre
