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Identifying The Barrier To More Widespread VOIP Service Usage
Identifying The Barrier To More Widespread VOIP Service Usage
Identifying The Barrier To More Widespread VOIP Service
Usage by Jon
Arnold
Services available on the Internet or services that have been
enabled through the widespread availability of high-speed Internet
in homes and businesses are continuing to be incredibly successful,
and there is every indication that this trend will continue. The
popularity of worldwide VOIP services has increased to almost $16
billion in 2006, after doing an amazing and unprecedented doubling
act in 2005.
But one of the things that is even more amazing is that several
studies have concluded that VOIP services, based on its current
trend, popularity, and financial price points, is well set to
triple by the year 2010. Hosted VOIP services are managing to
outnumber and outpace the IP PBX market, and the biggest thing
fueling this is the implementation of VOIP in the residential
market.
Residential VOIP services are well established and pretty much bug
free, providing a very stable platform to replace the traditional
telephone. It was well over a year ago that the number of new VOIP
activations passed the number of new traditional phone activations
for the first time in history.
Business VOIP services are gaining significant ground also. While
some say that business VOIP is still a year or more away from being
ready for "business prime time", that fact really depends on what a
business requires from their VOIP services. To be sure, business
VOIP has gained significantly in recent years, where it was only a
few years ago that the best business VOIP phones sounded as if you
were calling from the bottom of a bathtub.
The biggest thing holding back more widespread acceptance of VOIP
is the availability of reliable high-speed Internet access and
bandwidth. For the residential customer, they often have very
low-end DSL service, which often is not much faster than dialup and
equally as unreliable. Even if they do not have a "low end" plan
for their DSL or cable Internet service, the service is not
reliable enough for use with VOIP, and that is not the VOIP
provider's fault.
Consumers need to understand that the reason they are paying
$30-$50 per month for Internet access is because their Internet
service provider has oversubscribed their connection. Some
consumers may get the service they think they are getting, but when
you see the ads that say "3 mb speed", most consumers don't realize
that 3 mb is not guaranteed, nor in most cases, will they ever see
it, since it is a theoretical maximum only. Consumers also do not
realize that the advertised speed is their "download" speed only,
and that their upload speed is significantly less, perhaps only as
much as twice the speed of a dialup connection. With one computer
using the connection, they may not see it, but if they are using
one computer AND VOIP services, they could be asking more of their
Internet connection than it is capable of providing.
Businesses face the same problem. Even if a business has "business
class DSL" or "business class cable", that still does not give them
dedicated or guaranteed bandwidth in most cases. Sure, the business
class service is significantly cheaper than getting a T1 line, but
sharp business owners are quickly finding out that you get what you
pay for. If you want dedicated and reliable, then you get a T1
line, but if you want "cheap" and "maybe it will work most days"
service, you get service like DSL or cable that is really designed
for the residential market, even with the name "business class",
which is a marketing gimmick more than anything else.
Even a small business with 6-8 phone lines, which also means 6-8
computers online at the same time, cannot make a long term plan for
success with business class DSL or cable, especially if they want
to migrate those phone lines to VOIP service. It is only a matter
of time before the realities of that shared and non-dedicated
Internet connection catches up with them.
Sure, a T1 line costs more, but a T1 line provides dedicated
bandwidth availability and a 99.99% uptime guarantee, 24x7. The
cost of a T1 is prohibitive for residential use, but for a
business, even a small business, that depends on the Internet for
their business operations, and which could save even more money
with VOIP, the real question becomes one of whether or not a
business can afford NOT to get a T1 line, or are they willing to
let their competition (who DID implement a T1 line) pass them by
and leave them in the dust.
For more insights into recommendations for VOIP Services and to read about
both Residential and
Business VOIP recommendations and options, please visit our web
site at http://www.voipinsideinfo.com
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