Categories: Tech & Society

With $165 Million in Funding – Ryan Holmes plans to take Hootsuite to Enterprise Market

 

The news that social media management company Ryan Holmes’s Hootsuite just raised a $165 million funding round should come as no surprise to anyone following this space.

Social media has become essential to both consumers and companies, and Hootsuite is a leader in serving individuals and small teams. Its user numbers are impressive, and clearly a good number of people are now paying for their premium tools.

But while this funding gives the company a big war chest to firm up their position as the leading social dashboard for the consumer and small business markets, it’s going to take a lot more than money to transform a historically small and medium-size business-focused software product into something that will fit the needs of the enterprise.

Creating an integrated social platform that fits into enterprise environments and processes is not a trivial exercise. Large companies need a platform that is optimized for the complexity of enabling hundreds or thousands of users on a single software platform — something that is quite different than software that serves the needs of individuals or a small team.

There’s also a difference between serving enterprise customers (companies that require scale as well as integration with other business technologies) and customers who work within an enterprise (essentially, individuals and small groups).

Here are some of the key things Hootsuite should consider as it continues to evolve its social platform:

Enterprise software must fit how an enterprise organizes and manages its work.

Multiple levels of hierarchy, complex structures and advanced administrative capabilities are just the starting point. We’re also talking about intuitive classification and multi-level approval paths. It’s not only complex but also ever-changing.

Enterprise software must focus on collaboration within and across teams. Imagine for a moment starting off collaborating with five users in a software platform and then needing to expand collaboration across 50 (or 500) employees. How will users across different teams and geographies work in harmony? Or more importantly, how will notifications, workflows and security aid in the goal of building relationships across social channels without paralyzing the productivity of the workforce? The best enterprise social software providers wake up every morning with the goal of building and expanding this type of infrastructure.

Enterprise software must serve as the system of record for the social relationship.

As enterprise companies deliver on the promise of becoming social businesses, all teams, departments, and geographies will need to operate from a central location. Software will need to house terabytes of data. This data and information will also need to integrate with other big systems used throughout the enterprise. Additionally, total security of the software environment is essential.

Enterprise software must provide high-touch customer service.

Scale and success is not just slick sales and marketing; it is embracing the enterprise in its complexity and helping make things work. True, enterprise software should be useable by the entire workforce, but having the expertise and support from your social software vendor is essential. Dedicated support, account management, in-depth training, custom configuration, and personalized software roll-out planning are critical to success.

Enterprise software must have enterprise DNA.

All of the above challenges and solutions come with after one essential characteristic: a team whose DNA ensures they wake up each morning obsessed with solving the big, hairy issues specific to that of only the enterprise. It may sound like arguing semantics, but it’s a unique mindset that separates companies that talk about serving the biggest organizations from those that actually deliver Enterprise-level solutions.

Via: VentureBeat

Image Credit: SFU Beedie School of Business

 

Team TechPanda

Recent Posts

The importance of AI-powered fact-checking & synthetic content detection

The digital world has reached a stage where information spreads faster than it can be…

4 days ago

Funding alert: Tech startups that raked in moolah this month

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…

4 days ago

If Your Documentation Takes Two Clicks to Open, It’s Already Falling Behind

Over the years, I’ve worked on all kinds of projects—big, small, chaotic, overengineered, “temporary,” allegedly…

4 days ago

AI Launches: Enterprise software, ecommerce, cybersecurity & search

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent launches in the superfast field of Artificial…

5 days ago

AI-powered explosive detection: Helping authorities stay ahead of threats

With threats becoming more complex than ever, explosive risks are evolving rapidly, posing serious risks…

5 days ago

SIA-India pre-budget submission urges satellite backbone to empower 40,000 connectivity-fragile Gram Panchayats

SatCom Industry Association (SIA-India) has called for the launch of a National Satellite Connectivity Mission…

6 days ago