key insights
- Lotus Notes is a smart option for a diverse organisation like
the Salvation Army.
- Notes clients such as Nomad and Traveller connect dispersed
users.
- Quickr assists with collaboration, providing access to shared
documents online.
- Collaboration solutions deepen relationships, spur innovation
and reduce costs.
- Dealing with a single server vendor ensures superior customer
care.
Key Innovation
Lotus Notes is the communications backbone for the Salvation
Army in its mission to provide social services to New Zealanders
from one end of the country to the other.
Salvation Army
- Christian church was started in London in 1865
- Present in more than 100 countries
- Has a strong social service mission
- Is a worldwide Lotus Notes user
- Has more than 1000 New Zealand Notes users
Mark Bennett is a man with a mission. As head of the information
systems group at the Salvation Army, he not only believes in the
community work the Christian organisation undertakes but is also an
advocate of IBM® Lotus Notes® as a
tool that can help with those efforts.
When he began working for the Salvation Army four years ago,
Bennett was already a soldier, as non-clergy members of the church
are known. Although he was a newcomer to Lotus Notes, he took only
a little while to become a convert.
A visit to his Australian counterparts convinced him of the
virtues of Notes, which is in use throughout the worldwide
organisation .
"We've never looked back - now I don't
understand why everyone doesn't have Lotus Notes."
Mark Bennett, Salvation Army information
systems group manager
The Salvation Army in New Zealand is both a church and a
nationwide social services organisation. It has a unique
military-style organisational structure.
International headquarters in London, headed by a general,
commands more than 50 territories worldwide, of which New Zealand
is one. Within each territory are divisions; there are five in New
Zealand (one of those covering Fiji and Tonga).
More than 1000 Salvation Army staff up and down New Zealand, and
50 in the islands, use Notes for email and a range of other
applications. Users include ministers, addiction centre staff,
tutors in the army's Employment Plus service, clerical and
healthcare workers and communications staff.
They could be a solitary person in a small-town Salvation Army
shop or one of 20 staff in a HomeCare centre co-ordinating the 1000
or so workers who provide a variety of services to people in their
own homes.
Delivering wide area network services to such a dispersed user
population would be a logistical headache. Bennett neatly sidesteps
the problem by distributing the Notes Nomad client on USB drives
and having users connect to divisional servers, or the data centre
at territorial headquarters in Wellington, via the Internet.
Nomad requires no installation, running directly off the USB
drive. Another group of users are regularly on the move and stay in
contact with Traveller, a Notes client that extends email access to
laptops and smartphones so staff have the flexibility to stay
connected while working remotely.
Bennett says it works very well with the new breed of mobiles.
"If you have a Windows smartphone or Nokia Series 60 device,
Traveller installs a little client. Then all your email, contacts,
to-dos and journal entries come racing down to your phone in real
time.
"It means not having to get out a laptop to check email."
Notes is both an email system and a workgroup tool allowing
creation of shared databases for all manner of specialist purposes.
It is an important platform for ensuring church workers in all
corners of the world are singing from the same song sheet.
Two key databases are "orders and regulations", described by
Bennett as a handbook for how the church is run, and "dispo", short
for disposition of forces, which lays out the organisational
structure and contact details of church personnel.
There are also a number of IT-specific databases for such things
as logging service requests - which used to be jotted down on
paper, with haphazard results - and asset management. Recent
additions are blogging and wiki templates.
But the main work in progress is creation of an electronic board
system. Many of the Salvation Army's functions - financial and
property management, for example - are run by specific boards,
which operate at both territory and division levels.
Users will be able to create an agenda item in the system,
allocate people to deal with it and record progress.
"We're trying to make it that every board the army runs - they
all run on similar lines - can use a single template." Changes to
the template will then automatically be available to all users.
While Notes is at the centre of the Salvation Army's
relationship with IBM, there is more to it. On the hardware front,
IBM supplies the majority of the church's servers.
"I see a huge advantage in having all your kit the same in terms
of the relationship that gives you with the vendor." As a committed
customer, you can expect more of your supplier's attention, Bennett
says.
While Notes is giving the Salvation Army the ability to share
information among users, another Lotus product, Quickr, will allow
them the flexibility to collaborate on centrally stored documents -
with or without Notes.
"In our church settings what that means is they could create a
Quickr place for their music team and the people with Lotus Notes
accounts could access it and those without could too."
Quickr also has a lot of potential as a platform for simplifying
remote access and file backup.
Bennett says being part of a worldwide organisation that uses
Notes has two big benefits. For one thing, you can share content
and expertise; for another, there are price advantages.
For the first time this year he attended Lotusphere, the user
conference held each January in Florida, finding it invaluable. "It
was exceptional both in seeing what's coming and for the tech
workshops - some of them were superb."
In terms of advancing the church's work, Bennett sees Notes as
the organisation's most important tool. "I have a keen affinity
with the mission and the history of the Salvation Army and am keen
to see it go forward. Lotus Notes is a perfect fit for an
organisation like ours."
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Reader Value:
- Lotus Notes is an economical
communications and workgroup tool.
- Simple but powerful Notes applications
can take just a day or two to create.
- A variety of Notes clients makes
connecting via the internet or from on the road easy and
secure.
- New Lotus applications like Quickr can
extend Notes' capabilities into areas such as online document
collaboration.
Key Benefits:
- Lotus Notes lets the Salvation Army
share organisational templates between users around the world,
reducing the need for paper-based operational manuals.
- Standardising on a single communications
and workgroup tool has significant pricing and support
benefits.
- Lotus Notes Nomad and Traveller clients
make it easy and secure for users in remote locations or on the
road to access Notes email and applications.
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further reading:
related ibm product
Technologies used in this case study:
- IBM Lotus Software delivers robust collaboration software that
empowers people to connect, collaborate, and innovate while
optimising the way they work. With Lotus you can drive better
business outcomes through smarter collaboration. Find out more >>