美国中小企业转向IP通讯应用
作者: AMI
责任编辑: 阚智
来源: 《电脑商情报》
时间: 2007-06-21 22:59
Small and medium businesses (SMBs, or companies with up to 999 employees) in the United States have so far been slow to adopt converged communications. However, this trend looks likely to change from this year, according to AMI-Partners’ latest communications report which assesses SMBs’ needs and drivers for traditional and converged communications solutions. The study shows the total U.S. IP communications and managed services opportunity-including managed IP-PBX, managed security, managed backup/business continuity, managed networks, VPNs and web hosting in the U.S. SMB space-is estimated to be over $30 billion for 2007 and will grow at a CAGR of 15.6% out to 2010.
“SMBs are migrating toward converged communications solutions over a single IP network for voice, data, video to support ubiquitous communications, and outsourcing processes which their internal IT staff are unable to manage,” says Sanjeev Aggarwal, AMI’s New York-based Vice President for SMB Infrastructure Solutions.
“The SMB IP communications market is sizzling, leading to increased interest and competition from global and regional voice/data vendors, software vendors, internet/portal vendors, and large traditional telecom service providers. In addition to voice communications solutions, over the past few years telecom service providers have started to offer an expanded bundle of complementary services-Internet connectivity and managed services, including security, online backup/business continuity, web hosting and e-commerce, hosted e-mail and collaboration solutions, and hosted applications and databases,” Mr. Aggarwal says. “However, no single dominant vendor has yet emerged in this rapidly evolving space.”
In the absence of any single dominant players or offerings, SMBs are going ahead and adopting a mix of IP communications products and managed services in a best-of-breed manner to meet their immediate needs.
This report provides an in-depth view of the SMB needs assessment for theses solutions, propensity to buy, and vendor preferences for these value-added solutions in the U.S.
Some of the key findings from the report include:
-- IP-telephony:
-- US SMB IP-PBX shipments now exceed traditional TDM-PBX
(including key systems) systems.
-- IP-PBX penetration among US MBs rose from 20% in 2005 to 25% in
2006.
-- Hosted VoIP penetration, currently under 5% of US SMBs, is now
entering a high-growth phase that will drive SMB productivity
well into the next decade.
-- Collaborative communications such as webcasting, calendaring
and scheduling are now being used by over 15% of US SMBs.
-- Skype has become a convenient communication tool for quick
long-distance chats and is being used by over 5% of US SMBs.
-- Managed Services:
-- With in-house IT staff busy addressing basic break-fix issues,
both SBs and MBs are looking to outsource non-core IT services.
Key functions outsourced to managed service providers are -
security, backup/business continuity, network management,
e-mail services, web-hosting, applications and database
hosting, and IT Infrastructure management.
-- Over 10% of U.S. SMBs now use a managed firewall service and
over 15% are using managed VPNs. The opportunity for
online/off-site data storage and backup is also increasing,
driven by business continuity and disaster recovery needs, and
has risen to 11% among SBs and 15% among MBs.
“SMBs are migrating toward converged communications solutions over a single IP network for voice, data, video to support ubiquitous communications, and outsourcing processes which their internal IT staff are unable to manage,” says Sanjeev Aggarwal, AMI’s New York-based Vice President for SMB Infrastructure Solutions.
“The SMB IP communications market is sizzling, leading to increased interest and competition from global and regional voice/data vendors, software vendors, internet/portal vendors, and large traditional telecom service providers. In addition to voice communications solutions, over the past few years telecom service providers have started to offer an expanded bundle of complementary services-Internet connectivity and managed services, including security, online backup/business continuity, web hosting and e-commerce, hosted e-mail and collaboration solutions, and hosted applications and databases,” Mr. Aggarwal says. “However, no single dominant vendor has yet emerged in this rapidly evolving space.”
In the absence of any single dominant players or offerings, SMBs are going ahead and adopting a mix of IP communications products and managed services in a best-of-breed manner to meet their immediate needs.
This report provides an in-depth view of the SMB needs assessment for theses solutions, propensity to buy, and vendor preferences for these value-added solutions in the U.S.
Some of the key findings from the report include:
-- IP-telephony:
-- US SMB IP-PBX shipments now exceed traditional TDM-PBX
(including key systems) systems.
-- IP-PBX penetration among US MBs rose from 20% in 2005 to 25% in
2006.
-- Hosted VoIP penetration, currently under 5% of US SMBs, is now
entering a high-growth phase that will drive SMB productivity
well into the next decade.
-- Collaborative communications such as webcasting, calendaring
and scheduling are now being used by over 15% of US SMBs.
-- Skype has become a convenient communication tool for quick
long-distance chats and is being used by over 5% of US SMBs.
-- Managed Services:
-- With in-house IT staff busy addressing basic break-fix issues,
both SBs and MBs are looking to outsource non-core IT services.
Key functions outsourced to managed service providers are -
security, backup/business continuity, network management,
e-mail services, web-hosting, applications and database
hosting, and IT Infrastructure management.
-- Over 10% of U.S. SMBs now use a managed firewall service and
over 15% are using managed VPNs. The opportunity for
online/off-site data storage and backup is also increasing,
driven by business continuity and disaster recovery needs, and
has risen to 11% among SBs and 15% among MBs.
