Firms Clamor For A Slice Of Internet Voice Market
Date: 11/17/98 Author: Michele Hostetler
Networking- gear makers are fighting to be heard in the emerging market to move voice traffic over the Internet.
In an initial step toward merging voice and data networks, key players are vying for a toehold in this nascent market dubbed ''Voice over IP.'' IP stands for Internet Protocol, the language used to transmit data online. Voice over IP traffic travels over any type of internal or external network.
''This is no longer the Internet telephony toy that you heard about in '97 and '98,'' said Ross Manire, consultant and former 3Com Corp. senior vice president for sales to telephone carriers. ''This is for real. I would describe this as no less than a revolution.''
Products are beginning to hit the market in force to prepare for a major push in '99. While there still are quality and reliability hurdles to cross, new nationwide networks include both voice and data capabilities.
The Voice over IP services market could hit $24.4 billion in '02, according to Framingham, Mass.-based International Data Corp. That's up from $700 million in '97.
''I think we're in the real early-adopter phase of the market,'' said Al Bender, general manager of the Voice over IP product line at Nortel Networks, which was formerly Bay Networks and now is the data-networking arm of Northern Telecom Ltd. ''Ninety-nine will be the knee of the curve.''
The market is so new that no single company has a huge advantage over another, says Brett Azuma, analyst at Dataquest Inc. in San Jose, Calif. Even big voice equipment players such as Nortel and Lucent Technologies Inc. are starting on new ground with the converged networks, he says.
''These companies need . . . to develop experience,'' he said. ''They're on the very beginning pieces of a learning curve.''
But data-networking firms may have a leg up, says Larry Lang, a Cisco Systems Inc. marketing vice president. Voice over IP works like a mirror image of modems, Lang says. While modems put data over voice networks, these products use new technology to run voice over data networks, he says.
''In many ways, the voice network is coming to us,'' Lang said.
There are three different markets for Voice over IP. One of the first opportunities will be sales to Internet service providers that want a piece of the voice market, says Kurt Bauer, marketing vice president and manager of Ascend Communications Inc.'s access-switching group.
''It's a very large opportunity for the service providers that have traditionally been data-oriented to get into the voice market,'' Bauer said.
Dollar signs are guiding Internet service providers to voice. Voice traffic brings in eight to 10 times the revenue of data traffic, says Dataquest's Azuma.
These new networks also are expected to give relief to data-clogged voice networks, Cisco's Lang says. Voice networks weren't designed to handle lengthy log-in times on data calls.
''I'm particularly obnoxious about that,'' Lang said. ''I dial in with my laptop (at home) and leave it on until I go to work.''
The second market is wide-area-network access. Corporations can combine their separate voice and data networks to save money, says Ron Sege, 3Com's senior vice president for its large computer systems unit. The average company can save 30% on operating costs by combining the two networks, he says.
Third, local-area networks also could overhaul their systems so workers can receive voice mail on personal computers, he says. That market's worth $30 billion worldwide, he says. Products will begin appearing in early '99.
But local-area-network telephony is the most uncertain market because companies worry about reliability, Sege says.
''(Customers say,) 'Dial tone is a God-given right . . . and my network's not reliable enough,' '' he said. Data networkers are addressing that concern with new products due out early next year, Sege says.
Another hurdle to Voice over IP is developing a standard for gatekeepers that enables voice networks to talk to each other, Nortel's Bender says. Without a standard gatekeeper technology, voice calls could stop at a network's edge.
''Unfortunately, the networks are just islands in themselves,'' Bender said.
Even if the networks can talk to each other, it won't do much good if the quality's not there. New products will address quality-of-service issues, Bender says.
Products that handle simple tasks such as busy signals and announcements of numbers no longer being in service will hit the market in December, Bender says.
More services can be created because Voice over IP is more flexible than circuit-based voice networks, 3Com's Manire says. 3Com is working on a test program with a Swiss carrier, SwissCom, to give customers more options.
SwissCom's customers can have a screen pop up on their PC when they're on the Web that tells them a call is coming in and asks if they want to take it.
That type of service will become commonplace by '00 and beyond, Manire says.
There's more to come. Ultimately, today's conventional phones will go away, Bender says. But that'll take 20 years.
Some companies will fade away or struggle when that happens, Bender adds. Others will rise when the Voice over IP network becomes widespread. The last time such a big transition happened, Dell Computer Corp., Microsoft Corp. and Cisco came out of nowhere, he says.
That's why Nortel spent $7 billion to buy Bay Networks, he says.
''The Internet will cease to exist as we know it today,'' Bender said. ''Internet service providers will cease to exist. Telephone carriers will cease to exist. They'll be replaced by Internet telephony service providers.''
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