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Home > V & D 100
> V&D100 - 2007 > Enterprise Equipment: Audio-Video Conferencing: All Round Growth |
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V&D100 - 2007
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Enterprise Equipment: Audio-Video Conferencing: All Round Growth
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Continued from page: 1
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| Thursday, June 14, 2007 |
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The Buyers
The traditional buyers are the corporates, especially the IT and ITeS
segment. But, now the conferencing market has diversified into different other
areas. The most important buyer for conferencing solutions are service providers
(Reliance, Bharti, and VSNL), who are into providing videoconferencing services
along with the bandwidth. The BFSI segment aggressively invested in conferencing
solutions in FY 2006-07. Major buyers were RBI, UCO Bank, Indian Bank, Canara
Bank, Punjab National Bank, SBI, and Syndicate Bank. And cost savings. Another
major vertical which pushed up the conferencing market this fiscal, was
pharmaceutical companies. Like banks, pharma companies have very wide
operations, propelling the demand for conferencing solutions.
Educational institutes are increasingly becoming a major area for solution
providers. Increased cost of education, and demand for doorstep service in
education have led to a boom in distance learning, resulting in adoption of
conferencing solutions in the sector. Telemedicine also saw a lot of interest in
it. Shortage of doctors, high specialization needs, high cost of medical care,
and remoteness of patients have led to the booming market of telemedicine in
developed countries, which is increasingly being outsourced to countries like
India. This has resulted in increased demand for conferencing solutions. On the
domestic front India is facing a problem in providing medical care to the
masses, particularly in far-flung areas. Now, with the increased availability of
broadband services even in smaller towns and cities, it has become possible to
provide telemedicine services to these remote areas. The government and private
hospitals are contemplating the idea of providing these services to offer better
and specialized health care facilities to patients.
Defense vertical has also invested in conferencing solutions. Increasingly,
service providers are focusing on this vertical. Need for real time
communication between command and frontline force has led to this, and we will
see increasing interest for future deployment of conferencing solutions.
The latest and expanding buyers are the state governments that are building
their SWANs (State Wide Area Network). With increasing interest and pressure on
the various state governments to provide transparent and efficient
administration, they are aggressively investing in e-Governance.
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IP has made it possible to extend communication privileges to
every nook and corner of the world
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Bright Future Ahead
Globalization is happening fast, and communication technologies are
helping to eradicate geographical boundaries. Video is gaining importance due to
cross-cultural engagement between employees and organizations. As convergence
brings voice, data, and video onto the same network, new technologies are
rewriting the rules of collaboration. In the past, videoconferences, in
particular, have been difficult to set up, challenging to use, and frequently
unsatisfying in its ability to replicate in-person meetings. To improve this
situation, companies are working on new technology that delivers a unique,
in-person experience over the converged network. In the coming years, cost of
ownership will reduce, maintenance of infrastructure will not be a burden, and
the general perception that people had about conferencing as a luxury will
slowly be dying. Also, with the wide scale adoption of ICT technologies, we are
headed for a bright future. Globally, with the onset of 3G videoconferencing as
well as increasing popularity of software-based solutions and interest in
enhanced collaborative tools, the markets are providing vast opportunities for
growth, as videoconferencing is increasingly offered as part of the product mix
by solution providers. While developments in telemedicine, distance learning,
and e-Governance are also likely to contribute to the spread of video as part of
unified communication solutions, there is strong evidence that point-to-point,
standalone videoconferencing solutions are expected to disappear, as the shift
to IP accelerates, and vendor partnerships continue to drive the convergence
landscape. IP has made it possible to extend the communication privileges to
every nook and corner of the world. Potential applications would span across
areas like boardroom meetings, corporate conferences, high-end surgeries,
operation theaters, education and distance learning, etc.
In terms of technology innovation, convergence and collaboration technologies
will be taking off in the coming years. More and more enterprises will move to
IP-based platforms from existing ISDN, and the need for mobility technologies
would increase.
However, the industry faces some challenges. Though they are increasingly
being eliminated, they need more attention. Taking into account the convergence
of IT, media, telecom, and consumer electronics needs, a modern and efficient
telecommunications infrastructure should be created. Management of interface
support is another challenge. There exists number of standards; separated
communications and conferencing technologies reside on different networks and
platforms, requiring different management interfaces for support.
Standardization is yet another area of concern. Most of the communication and
collaboration technologies are proprietary platforms that did not integrate with
the existing network infrastructure. It will be important for companies to focus
on increasing the overall pie rather than just fighting for the market
available.
Nilabh Jha
nilabhj@cybermedia.co.in
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