Saturday, February 11, 2012
Google  
Web voicendata.com
 RSS | Archive    
 Home > V & D 100 > V&D100 - 2003 > VoIP SWITCH: Overcoming Reluctance
  V&D100 - 2003
VoIP SWITCH: Overcoming Reluctance
Even though carriers clinged to TDM switches, VoIP vendors made headway
Nareshchandra Laishram
Tuesday, June 24, 2003
Print Comment Email DiggDigg DeliciousDel.icio.us RedittReddit

The voice over IP (VoIP) equipment industry took a quantum leap in year 2002–03, driven by significant deployments in ILD operations. The VoIP equipment market, which was negligible in the previous fiscal, registered a healthy first year sales of Rs 48 crore. Unit-wise, an estimated 77,000 ports of VoIP equipment were shipped during the fiscal.

VoIP deployments during the fiscal 2002–03 were primarily led by the ILD operators. Data Access, in particular, focussed heavily on this new technology. Its core infrastructure, connecting the US, the UK, and Japan with points of presences (POPs) in India was totally based on VoIP technology. The VoIP vendor, which benefited out of this full-throttle VoIP play by Data Access was Israeli player Vocaltec Communications. Vocaltec received as many as three separate deals from Data Access during a short period of 10 months. And thus, it clearly was the market leader in India during the fiscal. It effectively captured 65 percent of the VoIP equipment market.

The other two ILD players, though late to take up VoIP, had begun the process of embracing VoIP towards the end of the fiscal. In particular, Bharti Telesonic took upon itself to regain grounds lost to Data Access, by going for a significant deployment during the last quarter. VSNL, which had gone for rudimentary VoIP equipment towards the earlier part of the fiscal, was also looking at a more aggressive VoIP act in the forthcoming months of fiscal 2003.

The market today is in very early stages. Deals in the current year could go in any direction. And each of the deals could result in dramatic shifts in standings of players in the market. However, fiscal 2002–03 ended with Vocaltec taking market leadership with 65 percent market share, followed by Ericsson at 14 percent and Cisco Systems at 10 percent.

Key Trends
n Industry: The VoIP industry during 2002–03 was full of action, with more than a dozen of vendors actively competing for the pie. Almost all global players were vying for both marketshare as well as mindshare. There were two types of players. The IP players like Cisco, Vocaltec, Commworks, Sonus, Winphoria, Nuera, Arelnet, and Verso Technologies are holding the VoIP-only banner. On the other hand, the traditional TDM switch vendors like Alcatel, Siemens, Ericsson, Motorola, and Nortel prescribe a more sequential migration from TDM to VoIP. The second group likes to call its VoIP product lines (in many cases TDM switches with VoIP capability) as NGN switches. During 2002–03, Vocaltec, Cisco, Veraz and Verso were the VoIP vendors which achieved the TEC certification for deployments in India. The TEC certification is required if the VoIP equipment being implemented is to interconnect with BSNL/MTNL/VSNL equipment, the incumbent telcos of India.

Top Equipment Providers
Vendor Revenue (Rs crore)
Vocaltec 31-Jan
Ericsson 7.00
Cisco 5
Others 5
Others include Winphoria Networks and Starlinks

n Drivers: Though worldwide the drivers of VoIP deployments by carriers are mainly cost reduction, network utilization and IP-based services, in India, the main driver has been better network utilization. Carriers want optimum usage of their network capacities. The new competitive ILD players like Data Access are in the market with minimal capex, leasing international trunks from others. They want maximum value out of the international bandwidth that they have leased. Incumbents like VSNL and BSNL own the trunks for ILD and NLD and already have significant traffic utilization of the capacities. They want further usage optimization of their current capacities before going in for further capex. New integrated telecom service providers have also emerged. Bharti has built both international and national long-distance capacities, while Reliance Infocomm and Tata Teleservices have put in national and long-distance capacities. In addition, there are also utility companies and cellular operators that have invested in their own national/intra-circle trunks. These companies have just started filling up their capacities with traffic and at the moment are not in a hurry to deploy VoIP. Cost reduction and IP services are not major differentiators in India. TDM switches too have become dirt cheap, and with the number of lines that operators go for in India, TDM switches have become even more cost-effective. And value-added services have not yet become that important for Indian service providers.

n Technology: VoIP equipment have undergone a bifurcation. Today, there are two clear segments of VoIP equipment. One, the VoIP gateways and gatekeepers installed mainly in the Class 4 Tax/Tandem layer of telecom networks. Two, the VoIP softswitches deployed by operators in the Class 5 layer of telecom networks. These switches have a lot more intelligence as compared to Class 4 switches. In addition to the traditional VoIP vendors, the Class 5 softswitches have an array of well-known traditional TDM switch vendors vying for this crucial piece of next-generation telecom network.

V&D estimates

CyberMedia Research

Deployment action in this space has also begun in India with the Tatas conducting a commercial trial during the last fiscal. H.323-based equipment still rule the roost, with SIP-based equipment beginning to make a mark. With several standards of VoIP being there in the market, equipment coming out in the market have support for several of these standards.

n Prices: The switching space in India is a highly competitive market, with prices of TDM switches hitting rock bottom. Though VoIP equipment are just getting deployed in India, they compete with TDM switches. Thus, TDM switch prices play a significant role in price determination of VoIP equipment. And VoIP vendors targeting India have not had the buffer of a new market when it comes to price competitiveness. VoIP equipment prices are calculated for every unit of port equivalent to every DSO circuit or line in the case of TDM switches. Per port prices of VoIP gateways during fiscal 2002–03 varied from Rs 4,500–7,000 ($90–150), depending on the size of deployment.

Forecast
It was the government’s dramatic go-ahead to VoIP implementation by both ILD operators and ISPs in April 2002, that gave impetus to VoIP implemetation in the service provider space. The market, though still at an infantile stage, is growing very fast. iLocus estimates India’s VoIP traffic in calendar 2003 to touch 1320 million minutes.

V&D estimates

CyberMedia Research

In fiscal 2003–04, it is expected that ILD operators will come under intense pressure from competition, compelling them to deploy VoIP equipment. Data Access has signed a global framework deal with Vocaltec for supplying $8 million worth of equipment for its global expansion during the currrent fiscal. A part of this deal has already been implemented. VSNL has also started deploying Alcatel’s NGN-ready switches in its network.

What could make fiscal 2003–04 an even better year for VoIP is the fact that for the first time, one is likely to see significant rollouts of VoIP in national and local networks. India’s largest operator, BSNL, which had already deployed VoIP equipment in six locations during the last fiscal, could go in for expansions. Tata Teleservices is known to be carrying out a commercial trial of the next-generation softswitch from Winphoria Networks (now acquired by Motorola) in its Western India network. Commercial induction is expected around mid-2003. Aksh Broadband, a unique broadband operator in the state of Rajasthan, has already ordered for Versio Technologies’ Clarent softswitches. The deal worth $5.7 million (licences for 256,000 endpoints) is for an end-user level implementation of VoIP across Rajasthan which is slated to be completed by end 2004.

Considering the already booked orders and the likely VoIP implementations from various service providers, Voice&Data estimates that the market for VoIP equipment will grow by over 100 percent to touch Rs 100 crore in fiscal 2003–04.

Nareshchandra Laishram

Page(s)   1  

Print Comment Email DiggDigg DeliciousDel.icio.us RedittReddit
CDMA MOBILE PHONES: A Chicken-egg Situation
FIXED PHONES: Crushed by a Juggernaut
TELECOM SOFTWARE: Adieu Slowdown!
 

Subscribe to our Newsletter
Name:
Email Address:




 

Current Issue

Click here to book your copy now







Your Opinion Matters

Does cloud computing cast a cloud on the future of IT professionals?

Is your Accounts Payable Solution working for you? Think Again…


   CIOL Services
IT News | IT Jobs | IT Outsourcing | IT Shopping
 



  For Voice&Data Print Subscription
  [ Magazine Subscription ]  [ Contact Info ]  [ Media Kit ]

 
Other CyberMedia web sites
[Dataquest]  [PCQuest]  [CIOL]  [Living Digital]  [CMR India]
[DQ Channels]  [The DQweek]  [CyberMedia Events]
[CyberMedia Digital]  [Cyber Astro]  [CyberMedia India]
[Global Services]  [BioSpectrum]  [BioSpectrum Asia]  [DARE]
[Computer Shopper]   [College Buying Guide]   [Technology Review

CyberMedia India Ltd

 
  Copyright © CMIL. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.
Usage of this web site is subject to terms and conditions.
Broken links? Problems with site? Send email to
webmaster@ciol.com