Yahoo beefs up its corporate IM package

It now allows multimedia presentations

NEWS Yahoo has announced an agreement to add WebEx online collaboration features into its enterprise instant messaging software, the web portal's latest effort to sell its IM product to businesses. The deal will allow companies using Yahoo Messenger Enterprise Edition to launch web meetings during an IM session. WebEx lets people conduct presentations over the internet, incorporating graphics, Web browsing and multimedia. Yahoo will also link with software company BEA Systems to add its IM product into BEA's WebLogic Workshop developer kit. The agreement will let BEA developers build real-time communication and collaboration into enterprise software applications. Yahoo is one of many Net heavyweights trying to peddle IM to businesses. Competitors including AOL, Microsoft, IBM and Sun Microsystems have all signalled their intentions to sell IM software to corporations. The widespread appeal of IM among the public has become a problem for many companies where services by AOL, Yahoo and MSN have been adopted on a grassroots level. Unlike email, which is packaged to many corporations with security and encryption features included, IM programs have caused concern among corporate IT departments because of the unprotected nature of instant messaging conversations. This has posed an opportunity for IM giants and enterprise software companies to sell instant messaging programs. It has also sparked ambitions from the likes of Microsoft, which views IM as the spearhead into selling real-time communications software that includes Net phone calling and videoconferencing. But the immediate need expressed by companies is for security and accountability. "The battle right now is for the hearts and minds," said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at Jupiter Research. "Vendors are busy shipping the first generation of products, so we're in the early skirmishes." Yahoo would not give any indication of how well Yahoo Messenger Enterprise Edition is selling, nor would it talk about future product refinements. For now, the product is taking incremental steps to address current market demands. "What we've clearly been hearing in the marketplace is to evolve it from text messaging, to include real-time sharing and messaging," Steve Boom, senior vice president of Yahoo Enterprise Solutions, said in an interview.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your silicon.com account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ

Get silicon.com's daily newsletter

  • Register on silicon.com

    Enter your email to register

Keep in touch with silicon.com

silicon.com newsletters