view link


print this page

 

 

 4/26/2004 With $10 million in hand, Performix looks to expand
 4/6/2004 Merging Performance Optimization With Workforce Management
 4/5/2004 The Lure of Offshore
 2/26/2004 IEX Offers Advanced Solution for Contact Center Performance Management
 12/15/2003 Local company turning customer relationship management into a profit-maker
 12/11/2003 Aspect Communications Named WFM Software Market-Share Leader
 11/18/2003 Blue Pumpkin Named as the Competitor to Beat in New Industry Analyst Report [RealMarket]
 11/18/2003 Blue Pumpkin Named as the Competitor to Beat in New Industry Analyst Report [TMCnet]
 10/30/2003 BellSouth Delivers the Package
 10/3/2003 Performance optimization holds complex appeal
 September 2003 The 2003 Influential Leaders
 8/27/2003 CRM Magazine Announces Its 2003 CRM Leader Awards
 8/21/2003 Performance Optimisation Technologies will fuel next wave of Contact Centre Growth
 August 2003 21st Century Communications: An Executive Guide to Communications in the Enterprise
 6/13/2003 Performix buys US firm
 6/11/2003 Performance Optimization Technologies will fuel next wave of Contact Center growth
 2/26/2003 Aspect Scheduled Callback Makes 'Callbacks' More Convenient
 2/12/2003 eBay Signs On with Blue Pumpkin to Enhance Customer Service
 12/3/2002 SaddleTree Research Confirms IEX as Workforce Management Leader Strong Customer Service, Scalable Solution and Single-Server Architecture Expand Market Share
 7/1/2002 Call Center Technology: What's New?
 March 2002 Rockwell brands itself anew with name, product
 3/26/2001 Readying the workforce for CRM
 2/5/2001 Workforce Management Software Gaining Market Momentum According to Recent Saddletree Research Study
 12/8/2000 Calling Call-Center Managers
 November 2000 Unified What?!
 4/11/2000 Report hails future for ICA
 12/8/1999 Rockwell Electronic Commerce Unveils the Most Cost-effective Media-Blending Technology Available



BellSouth Delivers the Package
Baby Bell unveils packaged solutions with a voiceover IP migration path for SMBs.

David Myron
destinationCRM


BellSouth yesterday announced it is providing packaged communications solutions to provide businesses with voice capabilities, including a migration path to voiceover Internet protocol (VoIP). The number-three local phone company (behind Verizon and SBC Communications) is targeting small and midsize business (SMB) customers with its latest offering. Furthering this effort, the Baby Bell will include network transport, professional services, and Cisco Systems and Nortel Networks equipment.

The integrated network, equipment, and professional services offerings are designed for SMBs with as few as 12 user stations. The services can scale up to provide support for as many as several hundred users at multiple locations. By partnering with Cisco and Nortel, BellSouth can provide preconfigured voice platforms for traditional PBX and key system-based, and IP-based telephony as the customer business needs evolve.

Businesses are seeking to maximize voice and data investments, converge networks, and reduce total communication costs," according to Dick Anderson, president of Customer Markets for BellSouth. "BellSouth has added packaged IP-telephony solutions to create a more robust and innovative portfolio of voice options, from which customers can choose to help drive their business operations."

These packaged solutions are a component of BellSouth's plan to continually grow its voice solutions portfolio. Other portions of this initiative include current Centrex IP market trials and network based VoIP services (softswitch enabled), which are expected to rollout in 2004.

The sluggish telecommunications industry and poor clarity issues facing VoIP have traditionally plagued the industry, spawning the perception that VoIP is "something that's still blue sky and way out there," says Paul Stockford, lead analyst at Saddletree Research.

Yet, VoIP and Internet telephony have raised eyebrows for their ability to communicate through an organization's WAN and avoid the tolls charged by ordinary telephone service providers. By converging PCs with telephones, IP technology enables capabilities like unified messaging, XML applications, interoffice voice-networking, and plug-and-play workstation functionality for mobile workers.

Customer care centers are beginning to understand the benefits of IP technology, according to Stockford, particularly in centers with 250 or fewer seats where IP deployments are starting to gain traction. Larger companies, he adds, have already made significant investments in their legacy public switched telephone network infrastructures prior to Y2K.

 

© 2002 Saddletree Research