WHITE PAPER:
Today’s new remote reality makes collaboration tools more important than ever. In this white paper, learn about a study conducted by Forrester Consulting on behalf of Slack which zeroed in on the benefits teams saw after switching to Slack.
WHITE PAPER:
Today's new remote reality makes collaboration tools more important than ever. In this white paper, learn about a study conducted by Forrester Consulting on behalf of Slack which zeroed in on the benefits teams saw after switching to Slack.
WHITE PAPER:
Read this white paper to learn why messaging middleware is essential in service oriented architecture (SOA) and get an understanding of how it works and what it requires.
sponsored by Silverpop Systems Inc. an IBM Company
WHITE PAPER:
This white paper reviews the key steps necessary to implement a transactional email marketing campaign. It also recommends methods to ease the pain of implementation while improving the results.
WHITE PAPER:
This document discusses the reasons e-mail archiving is necessary, the benefits of archiving messages, the different options available for archiving, and how administrators can determine which option is best for a given company.
WHITE PAPER:
Exchange Server 2007 changed the way your communications infrastructure operated forever, delivering a potent and powerful e-mail engine. And with Exchange Server 2010, Microsoft’s upped the ante, delivering a more powerful feature set and functionality. But does all of this mean bigger management headaches?
WHITE PAPER:
This Forrester Consulting white paper examines the total economic impact and potential ROI that companies may realize by deploying Oracle Universal Content Management, a systematic approach of managing structured and unstructured content.
WHITE PAPER:
This white paper introduces one company's portfolio of online services, including scalable and security-rich email, web conferencing, and social collaboration, that can help to improve employee responsiveness and effectiveness in support of social business.
WHITE PAPER:
Social technologies, commonly called Web 2.0, were originally used to describe consumer technologies that enable groups to organize and share information and media. But enterprises quickly caught on to the value of these easy-to-use tools for capturing and sharing ad hoc information that may otherwise not be documented.