Recently in telecommunications Category

SUTUS, the maker's of the Business Central 200 office-in-a-box, have announced inter-operability with Excel SIP Trunking.  The real news for the marketplace is that Excel and SUTUS (along with Polycom) are bundling a system for small business.

The Business Central 200 is developed specifically for businesses of up to 25 employees, Sutus Business Centralâ„¢ comprises a wide array of advanced telephony, data and networking functions. It includes a business-class phone system, file server, email server, router, firewall, wireless access point, VPN remote access server, and automated backups. It has the ability to simultaneously support both standard phone line and VoIP connections and comes with an array of business productivity features. Now VARs can get the office-in-a-box at almost no cost with a SIP bundle from Excel.

The interoperability allows resellers to provide their small business customers with a guaranteed low cost, reliable and full-featured IT and telephony bundle that is unmatched in the market.  It also allows the channel to better service small businesses due to the Business Central's advanced built-in remote support features. Tech support that would previously have required a truck roll can now be handled remotely by basic support staff.

Steve Weltner, Director Product Development at Excel, is excited about Excel's new SIPpbx Equipment Upgrade Program. He comments, "affordability is a non-factor as the device ends up being virtually free."

"With economic tough times facing everyone there has never been a time where pricing and simplicity have been more important," said Shawn Chute Executive Vice President of Sutus, "Excel and Sutus have come together to deliver on both these fronts, providing the small business customer and the channel that services them with an affordable, comprehensive and straight forward communications and IT bundle. One price, one solution, one contact point, we have made it as simple as it can be to subscribe to a fully integrated solution."

For resellers interested in this Sutus Excel program please contact Sutus at www.sutus.com or 778-371-5286. You may also contact Steve Weltner Director of Marketing at Excel at 972-910-1763.

IBM Finds Telco Changing with SoComm

February 27, 2009 10:39 AM | 0 Comments

IBMIBM

Image via Wikipedia

 
has a study out about how Social networking has co-opted many minutes of traditional talking.

 

People are communicating more things to more people than ever before, and not just by phone anymore. Internet-enabled communication models are gaining audience, attention and market share at the expense of traditional telecommunication providers (Telcos). Can Telcos fight back and find new growth opportunities in this rapidly changing ecosystem? The challenge is not just in understanding the technology, but also the unfolding fundamental shifts in human communication behavior.

Facebook, SMS, twitter, LinkedIn, Ning, YouTube, Ustream, and all the rest of the social media strata are where people are communicating. IM/chat like Skype, Google Talk, Yahoo, and MSN also have taken some minutes out of the system.

If you look at usage of cell phone minutes on the youth, you will see very little talking but lots of texting and web access. (Maybe charging per minute caused that). The primary communication method is social networks not telephony.

Telcos are losing landlines, mainly to cellular replacement. Certainly, cableco bundles have taken some landlines, but studies show that in this economic mess folks choose the mobile phone over a static line. Add in the fact that the next generation doesn't eat up minutes means that long distance revenue will be dipping as well as landline counts.
 

This presents a problem for telcos because the content folks don't want to share the revenue, which in many cases they don't have. Twitter, Facebook and Hulu are all having a challenging time monetizing a rapidly growing platform.

People are communicating in new ways -- and none of these innovations came to you from Ma or Pa Bell. Surprised? I'm not.

NENA 911 for Multi-Line Systems

February 24, 2009 2:59 PM | 0 Comments
In a follow-up to this article, National Emergency Number Association (NENA) announces model legislation for Multi-Line Telephone Systems  (in MTUs, like hotels, offices, etc., where the internal PBX has to add 911 info to the call about what room or suite number).

"On Thursday, February 19, 2009, the Executive Board of the National Emergency Number Association (NENA) approved an updated version of model legislation designed to help states develop statutes and rules requiring sufficiently precise caller location information for 9-1-1 calls made using Multi-Line Telephone Systems (MLTS). The model legislation would ensure that 9-1-1 callers can be located when dialing from a business, shared tenant facility, hotel, or similar enterprise environment. Reflected in the language of the model legislation are technological advancements made in recent years that enable the implementation of Enhanced 9-1-1 (E9-1-1) MLTS capabilities without imposing undue burdens on MLTS manufacturers, providers, and operators.

Currently, there is no federal E9-1-1 requirement for MLTS, and only sixteen states have taken on the issue, each with substantively varied prescriptions to the problem. "It is NENA's mission to ensure that all Americans have the best access to 9-1-1 possible, regardless of where they live, work, or travel," said NENA Chief Executive Officer Brian Fontes. "This model legislation will provide critical guidance for state legislatures across the country to enact measures that will improve the safety of all Americans."

Although recent years have seen significant progress made towards improving 9-1-1 for most consumer telecommunications technologies, little attention has been paid by lawmakers to E9-1-1 for MLTS users. While most MLTS enable the digits "9-1-1" to be dialed and routed to a public safety answering point (PSAP), the vast majority of these systems only provide physical street addresses, not the more granular location information (e.g. building number, floor number, suite) needed by responders to know the actual location of emergencies occurring on academic or business campuses or in high-rise office buildings. This has left millions of Americans exposed to unnecessary risk should they be unaware of, or unable to convey, their exact location to 9-1-1 telecommunicators.

The model legislation was authored by NENA's MLTS Model Legislation Working Group, which brought together MLTS vendors and users, public safety experts, and telecommunications representatives to facilitate a cost-effective and technologically viable solution. "The Working Group has been active since 2000, when the original model legislation was developed, but recent technological advances necessitated the creation of an updated model," said Working Group Leader, and NENA Past President, Mary Boyd, ENP. "By taking into account industry standards; newly available E9-1-1 MLTS technical solutions for all devices, including VoIP; and increasingly affordable implementation options, the newly revised model legislation will serve as an actionable blueprint that states can use to better protect their citizens," added Boyd.

In addition to the Model Legislation, a companion document was developed highlighting location discovery strategies for VoIP telephones. This Technical Information Document supports the model legislation and educates both legislators and the MLTS administrators on the various techniques that can be deployed to solve the user mobility issue. "A key initiative of the Work Group was to assess industry standard, commonly available, and affordable technology for all devices, including VoIP. Significant advances have been made as recently as the last 12 months that easily solve location resolution behind an MLTS," said Mark Fletcher, ENP, Working Group Technical Subcommittee Chair.

The full text of the MLTS E9-1-1 Model Legislation and the companion Technical Information Document, as well as a list of existing state statutes, can be viewed on the NENA website at: http://www.nena.org/pages/ContentList.asp?CTID=41.

About the National Emergency Number Association:  NENA is The Voice of 9-1-1â„¢. NENA promotes implementation and awareness of 9-1-1 as North America's universal emergency number. NENA is the leading professional non-profit organization dedicated solely to 9-1-1 emergency communications issues. NENA serves its nearly 7,000 members in 48 chapters across the U.S., Canada and Mexico through policy advocacy, establishment of technical and operational standards, certification programs and a broad spectrum of educational offerings. Find out more at www.nena.org.

SMB Nation VoIP Survey

February 24, 2009 11:06 AM | 0 Comments
"SMB Nation is a community of over 35,000 small and medium business (SMB) technology consultants, channel partners, sponsors and resellers. With an impressive 10-year history serving as a trusted advisor and mentor to the SMB consulting and  reseller channel, SMB Nation has been able to consistently reinvent itself based upon changing market conditions." SMB Nation did a VoIP survey with NGT. 260 responded (results here).

These are the services they currently provide:

  • Networking infrastructure (91.1%)
  • Mobility sales, services, support (52.7%)
  • VoIP-specific sales, services, support (44.2%)
  • Telephony sales, services, and support (35.3%)
  • Line of business applications (35.7%)
  • Database development/programming/development (32.6%)
  • Web hosting (27.5%)
  • Host e-mail (26.7%)
These are the services they will add:

  • VoIP sales, service, support (56.2%)
  • Security (36.6%)
  • Telephony sales, services, and support (28.1%)
  • Web hosting, hosted services (25.5%)
It's interesting that Telecom Agents sell circuits and very few want to sell non-telecom services, but VAR's and MSP's are marching in to take over the Agent Arena.

Is Broadband No. 1 in America?

February 23, 2009 1:50 PM | 0 Comments
CircleID takes a look at America's Broadband Score

"Leonard Waverman, the dean of the Haskayne School of Business at the University of Calgary, describe a measure he developed called the 'Connectivity Scorecard.' It's meant to compare countries on the extent that consumers, businesses and government put communication technology to economically productive use. Even after deducting the untold unproductive hours spent on Facebook and YouTube, the United States comes out on top..."

What's interesting to me is the comments. How no one can find the US Broadband score is funny. (Heard of Google much?) It isn't so much the score as what the score represents.

We have a few problems to fix:

(1) ISP Competition for one. Many places only have one choice for broadband. Many have two - cable or telco. Few have three. It makes download caps and Net Neutrality a hot button that true competition would eliminate. (And please don't give me that 3G is the third rail because guess who owns that - Ma and Pa Bell in the majority just like they own the Internet backbone and the PSTN structure in more than 70% of the country).

(2) A definition of broadband. Is it 256k one way as the FCC has defined it for years? Is it now the new FCC definition of 768k? Or is it 1M x 1M minimum? Or is it 100Mbps? This would certainly help.

(3) Deployment versus Penetration. "When you look at the 2008 ITIF Broadband Rankings report ...the U.S. ranked 15th among industrial nations at a composite score of 10.25. The U.S. is reported to have an average download speed of 4.9 Mbps, which is a far distant behind Japan's 63.6 Mbps. In addition, the report states that the US broadband penetration comes in at 0.57%." [source] Here's the detail: "Composite Score: Each nation's overall score is the sum of its standard deviation score for each of the three indicators: Household penetration or subscribers per household, average download speed in Mbps and price at the lowest monthly cost per Mbps." 

We may have "broadband" deployed in a large swath of America, but the speed is low compared to other countries. Because we are a suburban and rural country, it takes more infrastructure to hit everywhere with broadband, especially very high-speed Internet Access (greater than 3Mbps). And because most places hit are single family homes - we do live in suburban sprawl consisting of McMansions filled with Yuppies and 2.2 kids - it also affects our score at the ITIF.  According to a CWA study, the speed in the US is just over 2Mbps.

(4) Cost! We probably pay more per MB than any other G8 country. We get less speed and pay more for it. That hurts us. Surprisedly, in Wilson NC, the Muni fiber sells 100MB symmetric while TWCable and Embarq just gape at the speed and price. Well, not gape, so much as sue that it's unfair that a city would provide services it refuses to.

So we have cost, penetration, subscriber per household (density), and speed. Can't do much about density, but you can improve speed and cost. Also, there is a Digital Divide in America. Poorer families do not have computers, so do not have a need (or a budget) to buy broadband. It poses a problem that funding broadband for libraries and schools is supposed to throw a rope at. The Pew Report reflects this chasm.

BTW, the Connectivity Scorecard study has been analyzed here and by my favorite snarky blog, TechDirt.

Commission Dinging

February 19, 2009 12:32 AM | 0 Comments
Should an agent's commission get dinged when the carrier issues a credit over an outage or SLA issue? I have two cases of this happening right now.

In good faith, I sold a circuit that the carrier gave me permission to sell. But on a performance issue - months post-sale - the carriers ding my commission when they have to issue a credit for SLA violations.

Do they do this to their direct people? Unlikely.

Here's the other issue: because these sales were made through a Master Agent, I don't even know how the contract reads between the Master Agency and the Carrier. Nor can I take the carrier to court without taking the Master Agency to court (and destroying that relationship along with the revenue stream).

It was bad enough when I had to act as collections for carriers. If the carrier  wasn't getting paid by the customer, I would get dinged and then pinged to go collect the money. The carriers have a collections process and departments for this. It just seems like more and more is heaped on the indirect agent with less and less money. (Let's not even talk about the risk increasing as reward decreases).

Is anyone else having this issue? Please let me know.

Hot off the Twitter Press

February 18, 2009 5:51 PM | 0 Comments
It's amazing the news feed you can get from Twitter.

Broadband Stimulus Plan: High-Speed Access coming to Rural America

Ask our CIO about our UC implementation at Aspect on a Frost & Sullivan webinar tomorrow:

Telefonica, Microsoft Offer Windows Live Services to Latin America

AboveNet is connecting 4 Telx facilities in NY/NJ

Recession is slowing the Death of Dial-Up.

RackSpace is using the Green label to market its hosting service. (IPO's will do that to you).

Apparently, BPL is still a viable option. Go figure.

This is all in about an hour. There's a lot going on. How are you keeping up with the Industry?

Level3 Profits

February 16, 2009 4:34 PM | 0 Comments

L3 released 4Q08 numbers last week. Remember at Christmas, rumors swirled about a possible bankruptcy. Now it rings up a profit.

Level 3 Communications has recorded its first quarterly profit in six years for the fourth quarter of 2008. The operator reported a $44M profit for the three months to 31 December; although it also reported lower revenue at $1.05 billion for the quarter than it did for the same period in 2007. Level 3 had a $290M net loss for the full year but this was considerably less than the $1.1B loss incurred in 2007. Full year 2008 revenue was $4.3B [about the same as 2007][.telegeographyg]

Even when you hit some numbers, The Street kicks your ass. But when you say, "For 2009, the company said it expects continued revenue weakness over the short term but is also working to cut costs" in Forbes, your stock is taking a hit.

Full disclosure: I rep for 20+ carriers and Level3 happens to be my biggest carrier. Pricing pressures are driving rates down on everything from Transit to Transport. Not everywhere mind you, but in the top 10 Metro areas, where L3 competes with Cogent, HE, and NTT/Verio, it is pressured to lower rates.

XO competes with it in many markets because XO has IRU's on L3's cable, so about 60% of where L3 is, there's XO. Surprisedly, pricing pressure is also coming from Qwest on longhaul routes, especially on Waves. (I rep for XO and Qwest as well, but not Cogent, HE or Verio). But the real competition comes from its own Resellers, like WBS Connect. Lately, Scott's company has gone underwater to take a deal from me, I mean, from L3 directly. I don't know where all this ends but I do expect HE, Cogent, WBS and others to start seeing more bad debt and late payments. The people who fight for price the most are also usually (not always) the ones who pay late. We'll keep watching.

Nuvox and Google Team Up

February 12, 2009 12:24 PM | 0 Comments

Nuvox says that they are all set for this economy. It looks like they have $30M in the bank, re-financed their debt, and are looking for a possible acquisition.

Nuvox is now offering Google Apps to its customers.

NuVox business customers can now access Google's popular Web applications on their own domain such as Google Docs to create, share, and collaborate on documents, presentations, and spreadsheets in real-time and can even gather a variety of business information in one place from Google Sites which brings forth videos, calendars, presentations, attachments, and text -- and easily share it for viewing or editing with teams or as a company intranet. NuVox's customers can also get access to Gmail with up to 25GB of storage per user, mail search tools, and integrated chat. Gmail also interfaces seamlessly with popular email clients. And also Google Calendar, which helps to coordinate meetings and company events with sharable calendars that work with your company's directory. Schedule meetings, manage conference rooms, and receive "large company" services for small to medium enterprises. Google videos for business and Google Message Filtering are also part of the deal which NuVox's customers can take advantage of.

It seems that when they mention Google Apps comes with the T1 service, Nuvox gets more appointments.

"The power of Google standing behind email and other essential applications gives our customers a bold edge in the marketplace. Additionally, this is a major advance in NuVox's strategy of offering innovative managed services that are not currently available through other providers." [TMCnet]

Nuvox is a Sylantro shop that is now making a push into SIP trunking, but I just don't see why. Nuvox is one of the most inexpensive CLEC's, selling T1's in many markets for sub-$400. I don't see where its customers would migrate to SIP trunking as a cost savings. As with any SIP trunk, interoperability with the PBX is essential.

"NuVox SIP Trunking is compatible with a variety of premise-based IP-PBX systems including Cisco, Avaya, Ingate, and Digium to date." [TMCnet]

More Agents or Lift the Ones You Have?

February 11, 2009 11:51 AM | 0 Comments
If you are a carrier or a Master Agent, do you need more agents or do you need to give a lift to the ones you have?

There's a sales management theorem that when you use Pareto's Principle, you should spend you time with the Top 20% of your sales force not the bottom 20%. Why? Because the people bringing 80% of your sales are the ones you want to keep happy. Also, the more efficient and less bumpy you can make the sales process for them, the better for all the sales team, but especially the top dogs.

If you have a bunch of agents who signed up, what are you doing with them? Is your Channel Manager talking with them? What's he saying? The more you know about their business, the bigger the opportunity for you to actually work together.

Knowing the goals and strategy of your agents can help you target training, leads, case studies, white papers, and tips to them. The more relevant, the better.

Right now, I would be looking to add value to my agent channel. How?
  1. Seminar with a tax specialist right now.
  2. Seminar with a Financial Planner about IRA and the market
  3. Seminar with a sales trainer for improvement in Consultative Selling
What? None of this has to do with telecom, you say? No kidding. But it shows that you value them as business people and want them to be successful. Sure. You could give them more webinars on MPLS or whatever the new acronymn is for cloud-based WAN connections, but are you really adding value? Do you know the Kawasaki 10-20-30 Rule? Do you survey your channel anonymously to get feedback on any training you give -
  • one week later what do they remember;
  • was it valuable time spent;
  • what can they directly apply;
  • any clients in the database that might be a fit now?
  • do you know how to pitch the service/product?
  • do you know who we target? and why?
  • have you looked at your notes since the call?
  • is working with you "easy & enjoyable"?
A couple of years ago, one carrier asked me what they could do to make working with them easier. Since I am rather direct, I answered explaining about the poor follow up. Sadly, it was never addressed. If you are going to drop the coin on a channel, don't set it up for failure.

As we head into Channel Partners Expo in Vegas, carriers and master agents will be looking for new agents and visiting with old ones.
  • What are you specifically looking for in your next agent?
  • What questions will I ask a prospective agent?
  • Are we a quoting machine or lowest priced carrier?
  • Does the agent already have a carrier like us? If so, why is he looking?
And I know some of you are thinking, "We just want to sign up agents!" Sure, but it isn't about numbers. It's about Enrolling partners into your Program." (or maybe it is just a Numbers Game - lots of agents, thousands of quotes, hope for the best, why aren't they selling my stuff?).

Right now, wholesale VoIP providers are looking for me to help them train their customers to sell more SIP trunking and Hosted PBX. They want their client ITSP's to be more successful. If you are a VOIP company and you have 75+ partners, is that a successful channel? Not unless 15 of those partners are selling a deal every week.

I'm not saying don't add new agents. I'm saying look at your current agents and figure out how to make them more successful so that they can create more revenue for you. It is a partnership after all.
Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next

Recent Comments

  • Hosted VoIP PBX Fan: I agree that it is a good idea. It will read more
  • Peter: John, It was designed for a specific target - which read more
  • Hosted VoIP PBX Fan: Interesting to see such a targeted VoIP market appear. I read more
  • John E Lincoln: There are a lot of VoIP providers out there right read more
  • Jose: Great !!!!!!!!!!! read more
  • justin.goldberg.myopenid.com: Toll-free numbers may be the reason why no one wants read more
  • Roger: Personally, I think Lightyear Wireless is not such a bad read more
  • FormerAISCustomer: As a former AIS customer that has experienced major downtime read more
  • Tom Keating: Great point. What's the point of separate data and voice read more
  • Dan Morford: TEM, where the "E" stands for Expense is an incomplete read more

Subscribe to Blog

Blogroll

Recent Entry Images

  • IMG00097.jpg
  • one-on-one.jpg