20 8 2002
While telecommunications industry officials say they're interested in
establishing a range of advanced IP-based messaging products, especially in the
wireless area, many don't see a clear path to profitability by using the
technologies, according to a new study from the
International Engineering Consortium (IEC).
The IEC interviewed more than 100 telecom executives at companies involved in
both domestic and international telecommunications. The study, Advanced
Messaging: Killer App or Niche Market?, found most carriers, telecom vendors
and analysts agree that service providers will have to deploy some form of
advanced messaging among their consumer and small-business feature sets over the
next two years. The providers would introduce such services to open up new
revenue streams beyond simple voice transport.
That same group, though, believes that messaging will not produce one single
"killer application," and that carriers should instead look at messaging as one
more tool with which to create value for the customer.
Respondents were asked about deployment prospects for such messaging products
as short message service (SMS) text messages, instant messaging for wireless
calling, multimedia messaging service (MMS), unified messaging and unified
communications, and the reach of presence and availability services into
wireless. Responses to all queries centered on the near-term future --
deployment over the next two years.
Some of the specific results released by the IEC include:
- 62% of the total response group says that two years from now, North
American SMS will still not have achieved the large take-up rates it has
already earned in Europe and Asia.
- 63% of carriers say that unified communications (UC)-- picking up and
responding to messages in whatever medium the receiver chooses -- will be a
"killer app." Only 35% of vendors and analysts agree with the killer app
analysis, though.
- Asked to point to obstacles to UC in today's marketplace, vendors and
analysts most often cite the lack of an interoperable UC-ready infrastructure.
For carriers, the most frequent concern is the absence of a clear path to
profitability from UC.
Companies and organizations that participated in the May, 2002 study include
Alcatel, AT&T Wireless, Cisco, Ericsson, George Washington University, Nextel
and Verizon.
More information on the report -- the first of its kind for the IEC -- can be
found on the Web.
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