The Software “Hard Sell” is Alive at VoiceCon
After
attending VoiceCon in Orlando this week one thing is more apparent than
ever – telephony software is winning the battle of mindshare over
hardware alternatives. While this has been true for a while, what is
new is that current economic conditions are further fueling the case
for software in terms of practicality at the knowledge worker desktop,
more stringent return on investment analyses and distribution channel
economics. One old idea and another brand new one make this case.
During
a keynote speech, Gurdeep Singh Pall, Microsoft’s Corporate VP of
Unified Communications, made a strong case for businesses to drop their
desktop office phones in favor of a PC-based softphone. While this
battle has been going on for a decade or more, today’s business
environment is beginning to support this argument in ways we did not
envision ten years ago. The current global recession is making the
emphasis on capital expenditure reductions an absolute necessity.
Spending $300 or $400 on a desktop phone to work behind a PBX is no
longer practical in many cases, especially when one considers the
improved technology in softphones over the past decade and the small
amount of time many workers spend at their desk. While many old-time
telecom people have balked at this inevitable transition for years, the
fact that most office workers today have a mobile/smartphone attached
to their belt or in their pocket negates the argument that office
workers need or require the desk phone form factor to do their work.
The
second interesting VoiceCon event was the announcement that Siemens
intended to port its unified communications OpenScape platform to
virtual servers within Amazon.com’s data centers to provide UC services
from the “cloud.” This means that potential SMB customers will be able
to sign up for any or all offered Siemens UC services, initiate trials
and manage their telecom systems via a browser from the Amazon.com
website. The resulting service would be less complex to provision than
if the customer bought the software themselves and less expensive
because there would be no upfront hardware and software expenses for
the customer to absorb. The Siemens’ sales channel partners also see
great potential for sales process simplification. The fact that
Amazon.com currently seems to have a great deal of underutilized
capacity across the company’s seven global data centers will make this
a win-win situation for all involved. At this point Siemens refers to
this arrangement as a “proof of concept”, however turning it into an
available offering may only be three to six months away.
Times
are certainly changing and the speed of change seems to be increasing.
Necessity is truly the mother of invention. Sit down and hold on. The
future is coming fast.