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VoIP Far and Away Favored Overseas
by Jim Thompson
[July 12, 2002]
While the U.S. market dithers about deploying VoIP, service providers in
overseas markets are already reporting great gains from their initial
expenditures based on a study completed by the Boston-based research firm,
Aberdeen Group.
Packet-driven Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology has finally
shed its image as a second rate substitute for conventional,
circuit-switched public switched telephone network (PSTN) voice systems and
"proven its business value to enterprises and service providers," according
to a recent study by Aberdeen Group.
In a survey of enterprises and service providers titled What Works:
Significant Voice Over IP Deployments of 2001, analysts note that VoIP
technology has finally been standardized and service providers would do well
to pay attention.
"At last, all elements needed to successfully build a VoIP solution exist in
field-tested form. The potential savings, in administration as well as
monthly recurring costs, are too great to ignore," noted the report.
In their research, the Aberdeen Group took a practical approach in
evaluating the benefits of VoIP. "Instead of looking at it from a technology
side, we asked the question, 'are there business benefits that drive the
technical deployment?' We wanted to know if the technology has matured
enough to deliver a business value," said Dana Tardelli, senior analyst with
Aberdeen Group.
The study investigated VoIP deployments ranging from carrier networks to
service providers and hosted IP-PBX solutions for mid-size enterprises. By
and large, the question was whether "VoIP delivers a value proposition for
those deploying the technology?"
No ear strain
According to the study, which also noted that 2001 was a "watershed" year
for VoIP uptake, the answer is a resounding "yes!" The benefits of VoIP
deployment include:
- Lower internal and external communication costs.
- Lower bandwidth expenses.
- Incorporation of voice applications that can enhance business processes.
- Optimization of infrastructure resources.
Poor quality, which had been the major impediment to VoIP deployment, is in
the view of the Aberdeen Group no longer a major concern. According to the
study, "the impasse between QoS [quality of service] and VoIP has been
resolved."
Even carriers are beginning to accept that quality is no longer an issue as
they move away from running VoIP via asynchronous transfer mode (ATM)
switching technology and toward true VoIP. "The improvements in VoIP call
quality, based on broad support in today's IP networks for DiffServ
[differentiated services] and other QoS mechanisms, have eliminated the need
to rely on ATM to provide QoS," noted the report.
Harmonic quality
In measuring quality, instead of looking at such things as milliseconds of
delay or jitter data scores, equipment was used in real world situations to
determine if it "felt right."
"In many cases the decision maker personally tested it by making phone
calls," commented Tardelli. "It still has a way to go, but there is no
question that quality is no longer a major issue."
Reliability of VoIP was also not a major concern for those companies taking
part in the survey. Everyone questioned said dependability is key, but none
expressed major concerns that the technology would be any less reliable than
a traditional phone system.
"There is a measure of faith that the phone system will be there," said
Tardelli. "None of the companies indicated that they had left their
traditional phone system in place as a backup."
Generally, VoIP solutions offer enterprises lower initial capital
expenditures and decreased ongoing telephony expenses, with greater
functionality. Companies with heavy intra-office calling and those with
extensive long distance calling needs see immediate cost savings.
Service providers, too, can reduce technology and investment risks. By
offering hosted IP-private branch exchange (PBX) solutions for small- and
medium-sized enterprises, VoIP opens the door to new service models that
focus on selling business functions, rather than commodity access.
"People get excited when they hear they can reduce their long distance
costs. But I personally see the big benefit being applications," said
Tardelli. "It's things like switching a call to someone who is actually
working at home or converging voice, data and video that make VoIP the way
of the future."
Overseas adoption
VoIP has already gained acceptance in overseas markets. Recent deregulation,
coupled with dependable equipment and costly international calling rates,
have pushed the adoption of VoIP technology forward in Europe, Africa, Asia,
and the Middle East.
While the market is moving toward VoIP technology, don't look for widespread
adoption in the U.S. anytime soon. In most cases, lower long distance costs
and increased functionality are not strong enough arguments to convince
American companies to perform a "forklift" upgrade and discard a functioning
communication system.
"We'll see slow, not explosive, growth," cautioned Tardelli. "Most companies
will not turn to VoIP until they have outgrown their traditional system,
when a PBX has past its life cycle, or when they move to new offices."
The high cost of building out existing infrastructures to supply VoIP
services will also prevent many service providers and competitive local
exchange carriers (CLEC) from entering the game immediately.
In a time when venture capital is little more than a dream for most, and
profits have become the holy grail of corporate America, additional
expenditures will likely have to wait. But, as existing equipment becomes
obsolete and competition forces the survivors to adopt new marketing
strategies, the benefits of VoIP will certainly outweigh the costs.
Tardelli believes that adoption of VoIP will accelerate over the next four
to seven years. In the next five years, the decision to drop PSTN systems
will come down to service providers being able to guarantee reliability.
"In five years from now, I think that 50 to 60 percent of all new buyers
will turn to VoIP solutions," said Tardelli.
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