MESSAGE
DATE | 2005-04-03 |
FROM | Ruben Safir Secretary NYLXS
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] VoIP/ Web Browser
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Enterprise VOIP-zilla?
By Eric H. Krapf
My daughter was born in 2000, just as the Internet party was winding down. She grew fast that first year, as babies do, and my wife and I wonderedas parents dohow big shed end up. Back in 2000, many of us were still hearing, echoing in our brains, the predictions of Net boosters concerning the growth of the Internet. These predictions always seemed to begin, If the Internet continues growing at its current pace And I would think to myself: If my daughter continues growing at her current pace Visions of Reebzilla the giant toddler, literally bursting through the roof of the house. The point, of course, is that industries, like humans, grow in their infancy at unsustainably high rates. On the Internet question, our columnist at Business Communications Review magazine, Peter Sevcik, did yeomans service in painstakingly debunking the forecasts of the Net boosters.
But now the hype is back, and its all about VOIP. Jeffrey Citron, the CEO of Vonage, said this week that his company is adding 15,000 subscribers a week. CNET News quoted Citron as saying, Do the math, and its easy to see where well be by years end. That is to say, continuing to add subscribers at the current rate would put Vonage at more than 1 million customers by the end of 2005.
Im not inclined to question this specific prediction (or suggestion of a prediction). Its short-term, and I assume Citron has good visibility (remember that word?) as to what his business is likely to achieve over the next nine months. So Ill stipulate: Vonage could well have 1 million customers by year-end.
Then the question becomes: So what?
CNETs article noted that Vonage is adding more subscribers per week than is the entire cable industry. That fact, however, is not as impressive as it seems, and it does, in fact, reveal something about residential VOIP.
While the perception may be that cable VOIP offerings are now ubiquitous, thats really not the casefar from it. Comcast, for example, wont offer voice ubiquitously in its serving areas until the end of 2006. The company is in trials, headed toward launch, in only three cities: Philadelphia, Indianapolis and Springfield, MA. Thats projected to expand to 20 markets, passing 15 million homes, by the end of this year.
Im not questioning the likelihood that cable companies will use VOIP to take a chunk of the residential voice market away from the telephone companies. (Comcasts goal is 20 percent penetration five years out from market entry.) Im not even doubting that Vonage will get its taste.
But the vast majority of the residential voice market will continue to be circuit-switched for years to come. The telcos, which will continue to own that vast majority, have no reason to migrate off their legacy platforms, and they wont do it.
Why does that matter? Because it means that the place where voice technology will be least interesting over the next several years is in the residential wireline marketplace.
By the time Comcast has its VOIP service available to all subscribers, shipments of VOIP endpoints to the enterprise will outnumber TDM shipments by 50 percent, according to Allan Sulkin, our PBX guru.
Enterprises will also be ahead on the innovation curve. Enterprises want and need a reasonbeyond priceto adopt VOIP. I saw at last months VoiceCon that theyre looking for those reasons: As Ive pointed out before, the hot sessions at VoiceCon were the ones about SIP and applications.
Enterprises, while not price-insensitive, have other motivations, not the least of which is that VOIP systems are the only kind that anyone is trying to sell them. If youre an enterprise, buying TDM VOIP may now be the riskier choice; such is not the case for a residential customer.
The residential market, on the other hand, is price-sensitive. Residential customers are looking to VOIP services because they want to save money. They want to make free calls over the Internet.
Finally, the other thing thats transforming the voice marketplace has nothinginherentlyto do with IP. Im talking about wireless, in all its forms, with all its implications: From total landline substitution on the consumer side to the full range of application and device convergence thats occurring in the enterprise.
Here again, the consumer market is much more likely to remain on new iterations of traditional (i.e., cellular) platforms, while the enterprise will move more quickly to 802.11-based IP systemsthough this distinction matters less in a wireless world where new applications are driving the market across all platforms.
I guess what Im saying is that, all in all, the enterprise is where its at today in voice.
What do you think? Drop me a note in the VoiceCon Enews Forum.
------------------------------------ Eric H. Krapf is the Editor of Business Communications Review and the Program Chair of the VoiceCon Fall 2005 conference. Each week, the VoiceCon Enews newsletter (which this column originally appeared in) presents opinions and analysis of the trends in enterprise voice technologies. Our point of view is simple: No hype, just information that network and communications professionals like you can use. We've been doing this for more than three decades in the pages of Business Communications Review magazine. We encourage you to share VoiceCon Enews with your colleagues. They can sign up for their own copy on the VoiceCon home page at http://www.voicecon.com.
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