Schneider Electric sees Box take off, hit 25,000 users virally
Credit: (c) Can Stock Photo
When Schneider Electric, a company with more than 100,000 employees
spread out across 100 countries, wanted to find an online collaboration tool to
replace unauthorized tools its employees had been using, they chose Box, and
bought a 50,000-seat license.
Many companies are dealing
with the same issues that Schneider was facing. They were launching a Bring Your
Own Device program and found people were using consumer file sharing and
collaboration apps they located on their own. Schneider very much wanted to
bring that under control and they went looking for a tool that had what
Schneider CIO Hervé
Coureil called a
consumer look and feel, but enterprise chops.In spite of the substantial investment Schneider was making with 50,000 seats, it wasn't as big a gamble as it might seem. That's because Coureil told me he ran a rather substantial 3,200-person pilot before making the purchase decision, and saw it go viral before it went live without any push from IT whatsoever.
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He reported that during the
pilot, they simply couldn't contain deployment because people were inviting
colleagues and it just spread very quickly. In fact, they officially launched on
May 29, but already have 25,000 users. That's because they have been growing at
a rate of roughly 1,000 users every 1.5 weeks since they launched the pilot in
February, and that's with almost no corporate communications until the recent
launch. That's serious viral growth.Stay on top of CITE: Subscribe to the InCITE newsletter.
When they went looking for a file sharing and collaboration tool, a main goal was to give users an enterprise alternative to whatever they were using on their own. Coureil didn't choose to share the tools people have been using, or the ones he looked at other than Box, but he told me the tool he chose needed to satisfy several criteria most companies in this situation would find familiar.
"We found out that users without asking were using all sorts of file sharing tools from the consumer world," he told me. He added, "One of the things that was important was to regain control of that with an enterprise solution."
He seemed to recognize that if whatever they chose wasn't as easy to use as the consumer alternatives people had been using on their own, they couldn't get the traction and wouldn't achieve their goals. That's why they weighted the user interface so heavily when judging products. "What we wanted was to put into the enterprise world, a very friendly user interface," Coureil told me, adding " We wanted to look at something that would be credible [to users]."
The other criteria was that the product needed to be available on mobile and it had to work across a variety of platforms to accommodate its BYOD philosophy and the knowledge that users were going to bring multiple devices to the table. Their BYOD program started with iOS devices, but it's expanding to Android.
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