VoIP is Now Accepted by Businesses as the Way Forward for Voice Infrastructure

paper.gifResearch and Markets has announced the addition of “Success Factors for Hosted and Managed VoIP in Europe” to their offering.

"VoIP has become mainstream and customers of all kinds are deploying hosted and managed VoIP services to make their voice networks more flexible and solve their business communications problems. Unified communications are not a priority for many of them.” - Margaret Hopkins

VoIP is now accepted by businesses as the way forward for voice infrastructure; whenever a new system is required, both in-house and hosted VoIP solutions will be considered. While a number of providers, notably BT, have been offering outsourced VoIP services for some time, the market is still getting established and there are a wide variety of providers and an even wider variety of types of offering. Customers range from large multinationals to the smallest start-up. Marketing strategies vary from those that boast the exciting new features of unified communications to those that emphasise a simple message about flexible phone systems.

The report looks at outsourced VoIP systems for medium and large businesses, the problems the systems aim to solve and how the offerings available succeed in providing solutions. It identifies nine success factors for service providers entering this market. The report also provides forecasts for spend on VoIP voice calls and connection, equipment and management services for France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden, the UK and Western Europe from 2007 to 2012.

Success Factors for Hosted and Managed VoIP in Europe answers your key questions:
  • What do businesses want from VoIP?
  • What drives businesses to consider hosted or managed VoIP services?
  • What types of problem can VoIP help businesses to solve?
  • How are service providers offering VoIP solutions?
  • How big is the market for hosted VoIP?
  • Which customers want CPE-based services?
  • What are the characteristics of a successful outsourced VoIP service?
  • Will shared-platform IP Centrex or hosted iPBXs be the preferred model?
  • Which types of business will prefer which solution?
  • What is the best route to market – a distributed channel strategy or a centralised call-centre approach?
  • Is it essential to include the IP access with the VoIP service?


Posted on Jan 07, 2008  Reviews | Share |  Digg
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