Monday, April 9, 2012

Two Ways to Stomp the Toxicity Potential of Anti-Lotus Notes Users

I tend to search Twitter from time to time, seeing if I can assist people having trouble with technology areas I'm familiar with (i.e., Lotus Notes, Domino and IBM i).

When I search for "Lotus Notes" a lot of times I'll see things like this:

"I hate Lotus Notes #withallmyheart"
"I am sure there is a special circle in hell for the inventor of lotus notes"

Just toxic baloney.  Most of what you read is unspecific ranting that doesn't describe the real root of the problem.  A problem isn't really being asked to be solved.  It's users complaining for the sake of complaining.  Like the Hatfield's and the McCoy's, there's no real reason behind the hate.

I replied to a tweet a few days ago that said that selling and training "wasn't an IT department's job."  I strongly disagree.  I'm not a professional trainer.  I have limited sales experience from maybe 10 years ago and wasn't very good at it.  I tend to get loud and drop an occasional curse word.  But what I bring to the table is enthusiasm, excitement and a willingness to offer education to our users.  I need to generate a buzz about our technology.  If I don't, then who else is going to do it?  They didn't see the Opening General Session at Lotusphere.  I did.  And it's my responsibility as an employee to bring that electricity, that vibe, that positivity back to our users.

Administrators, I'm talking to you here.  Here are two ways to help curb the nonsense and spread positivity about Notes in your company.

1. Make sure you have adequate horsepower

If your users complain about Lotus Notes being slow, here's the solution:  Fix. The. Slow. Problem.

Chase down bad network connections.  Add liberal memory to computers.  Make sure they're not running old garbage hardware that YOU wouldn't use.  Check DNS issues.  Use virus protection that isn't a pig.  Notes isn't slow!  If you run this enterprise level collaboration tool on a Pentium 3 with 512 MB of RAM, the problem is the hardware!  Not Notes!

This is probably the easiest thing to do because it's technical.  If Bob in accounting has three 8-port hubs in his office and complains about losing connection to the server, then put your technician hat on and fix it for him.

It's no secret that Notes loves resources.  So what?  I'd assume it takes a bit of fuel to push a rocket into orbit, right?  Notes does so many things behind the scenes compared to Outlook that it's no surprise it may take a little horsepower.  Memory is so cheap now anyway that it's no big deal to buy and install.  Give it resources and make it fly for your users. A little infrastructure investment will pay for itself over and over again in increased user productivity.


2. Sales, Training and Enthusiasm

Lotus Notes needs to be sold to your users.  You know why?  They're not stupid.  They hear things.  They see things.  They use Gmail at home and see the simplicity.  They have co-workers who are partial to Outlook, ill-informed about Lotus Notes and then spread toxic misinformation.  Like a rumor, misinformation travels until it's corrected.  Even then, the damage is already done.  A reputation wrongly ruined in the 9th grade will still haunt a kid until they graduate high school. 

In my company, I can point to only a few people out of 200 or so who are vehemently anti-Lotus Notes. If I were looking at it from another angle I'll tell you I have 99% happy Notes users!  The two or three anti-Notes people a hard sell and I welcome the challenge.  However, their dislike of the product isn't toxic.  They simply haven't been trained enough with the product and have preconceived notions about what the product should do.  It's a matter of hearing those complaints, finding the solutions and educating the user.  In the end, those few users may not "love" Lotus Notes (although many of mine do), but they will know how to use the product to be hopefully more productive than with what product they used to have. 

I've been holding two-hour training sessions for my users now 24 months after our initial migration from Outlook.  I explain why we use Lotus Notes.  I explain the power of Lotus Notes.  I explain the strength and security of the IBM i on Power Systems platform, which our Lotus Domino servers are running on.  I get excited and energized about the whole thing.  You bring that enthusiasm and positivity to the users and good things will happen.

I show them screen shots of what they'll have with Lotus Notes 8.5.3.  I show them simple tips and tricks like how to book a meeting room and a projector.  I demo Sametime Meetings on my iPad.  I tell them we're doing Sametime Unified Telephony soon and explain how it will be rolled out.  I tell them how and why they'll be more productive and how our company will save money by implementing these solutions.  You know why I know it works for me?  Users tell me how happy they are that they can color code their mail.  I'm serious.  We take that for granted because we already learned it in a presentation a long time ago.  But something that simple just breeds more positivity. 

Stomp the toxicity.  Get positive.  Users will be much more productive if they learn a bit about the product. 

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Windows/Linux on x86 is More Costly Than IBM i on Power Systems

I came across this paper which outlines the value proposition for IBM i on Power Systems.  Contained within is some fantastic information, including the following whopper:

"The cost advantages of POWER7 based systems and IBM i 7.1 may be illustrated by comparing costs for server infrastructures in four midsize businesses with $200 million to $1.3 billion in sales, and 500 to 4,500 employees.
 

Overall three-year costs for use of POWER7 based systems and IBM i 7.1 average 42 percent less than for x86 servers with Microsoft Windows Server and SQL Server, and 56 percent less than for x86 servers with Linux and Oracle databases. Figure 1 summarizes these results.


"Three-year costs include hardware acquisition and maintenance; license and support costs for operating systems, databases and other systems software; personnel costs for system and database administration; and facilities (primarily energy) costs.

Comparisons are between latest-generation versions of all platforms. These include IBM Power 720, 730 and 740 systems with IBM i 7.1 and PowerVM virtualization; and x86 servers based on Intel 7500 and 5600 series (Nehalem EX) processors with Windows Server 2008 and SQL Server 2008, or Linux and Oracle Database 11g. VMware ESX 4 virtualization is employed with Windows and Linux servers.
 

Costs for use of POWER7 based systems and IBM i 7.1 are lower across the board. For example, initial acquisition costs for hardware and software licenses average 18 percent less than for x86 servers with Microsoft Windows Server and SQL Server, and 43 percent less than for x86 servers with Linux and Oracle databases. Figure 2 summarizes these results."


When IBM are promoting that IBM i on Power Systems is far less costly than Microsoft Windows Server or Linux on x-86, they need to understand that customers can be confused when they don't support major products like IBM Connections, Lotus Notes Traveler or Sametime Media Manager on IBM i.