At EMC World 2009, vnunet.com sat down with Mark Lewis to discuss the latest content management initiatives at the storage firm.
vnunet.com: What was the key message you delivered at EMC
World today?
Mark Lewis: The message today is all about judging software solutions and
building information management solutions to get a good return on investment
(ROI). We joke that it's about getting ROI as well as a return on information.
For us it becomes: how can you take all the information you have and leverage it
for more value in the organisation? Value can come through greater insight,
knowledge and intelligence leveraged across applications, or it can come through
simply having compliance, legal aspects and e-discovery working.
Whereas last year at EMC World, the enterprise management division
discussed the launch of new products focussed on Web 2.0, collaboration and
improving customer service, now the division seems more centred around backing
up EMC's push to this virtual cloud. Where's the Web 2.0 aspect gone?
There's clearly this next-generation infrastructure force in cloud computing,
cloud storage and all the pieces we are very much in the middle of, both with
VMware and EMC. Across our division, we have always been the group that wants to
connect information to the business. We tend to sell more to businesses and have
offerings that are less based on IT infrastructure needs. For example, today I
was talking about how to connect to clouds and how to use clouds on the Web 2.0
front.
Our mission is to bring [Web 2.0] technology into the secure enterprise. We are there to federate information and supply enterprise repositories to help businesses manage their data, but we are also there to help businesses use Web 2.0 technologies in our product set like CenterStage to allow the extended enterprise to collaborate securely. We want to give our customers access to secure wikis and blogs for their project teams and project developers. We're not about to go and compete with Facebook, and we're also not going to compete with SharePoint.
The whole industry is talking about Twitter and real-time
information. Are there any plans to integrate micro-blogging capabilities with
CenterStage?
I absolutely think so. I won't disclose any plans or anything. I never fail to
underestimate people's desire to communicate more, and in more channels. I
thought Facebook would have been the extent people would have wanted to go to
when they type in they are having dinner, but I was wrong. They now have Twitter
and that is a whole new form of communication. We understand this and our focus
is to embrace it if it can be used for the enterprise and secured for those
organisations to use. We will never create a Facebook, but we do want to create
a secure online community for collaboration.
So when can we expect these updates to CenterStage
Essentials?
I hate to give predictions, but I'm sure we will have good things to say when we
are in Athens in the fall.
