VoIP More Than Just Another App On The Network Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Friday, 21 July 2006
Large VoIP pilots often fail first up because corporate IT departments fail to properly understand what affect VoIP will have on their data networks. A lack of due diligence and behavioural factors are the biggest causes.

Nathan Brumby, General Manager - IP Telephony of Integrated Research, explains it is a big jump for a company to move from reliance on a phone company like Telstra to handle its telephony requirements to doing it themselves.

"They are just not aware of the responsibility inherent in taking over their own voice network and it surprises them when they get to the point of testing or turning on the system," he said.

"I think what happens is that large enterprises try to approach IP Telephony from a data perspective. They think that a network that is stable enough for data and the management tools that they have for data should be okay for voice, but they are not."

Brumby says Integrated Research can track the way large companies come to their website, download a few white papers and then refuse help when the company contacts them. Then about 12 to 18 months later they are back saying they can't get it to work.

"Part of the issue is behavioural," says Brumby. There's a mindset that VoIP is just data. The reaction is typically human. You can tell them it's different, but until they experience it themselves they don't understand".

Brumby explained the need for five nines availability on the network has to be achieved after the voice is added not before.

It's only when they get to the point of implementing it that the reality hits. You can have email go down for an hour and it's not critical, but with voice a ten minute downtime is often intolerable, he says.

Because most IT departments see VoIP as just another application on the network there is often not enough due diligence done to ensure success.

"Without question there is a rational process driven way to implement IP Telephony," says Brumby. "We have a whitepaper that documents the generic process. Like any IT process it requires really good design and planning, along with network assessment that can support that. It all comes down to being smart about it."

Often though it's the stupid things that end up causing problems, he says. People do things like assess their network at midnight or on a Saturday. Or forget that everybody gets on the network at 12 o'clock to make lunch plans. We see real world examples where they test on a Saturday and see that it can support VoIP.

Everybody comes in at Monday morning, checks their email, starts making phone calls and it crashes the network, he said.

"The ability to accurately assess the network capability is critical if you spend more time and money you will have more successes down the road," says Brumby whose company sells IP Telephony performance monitoring tools.

"The other thing is that organisations change over time and the use of the network might change, so you have to keep monitoring."

Brumby explained that while the traditional network management tools are getting better they don't' have the features you need to address the voice centric performance metrics.

They can't tell you if somebody picked up there phone and didn't get a dial tone, of if an outside party is trying to call in and it doesn't connect. Integrated Research specialises in developing tools for large IUP Telephony installations starting with a minimum of 1000 seats.

"On one of our major products there are five and half thousand data points monitored," said Brumby.

When you switch over to IP Telephony you are going from using a telecommunications company that has a huge multi-billion dollar infrastructure to managing this yourself. So knowing much jitter and delay there is on a call is important. You have to monitor these metrics in real time and have alarms set , said Brumby.

"You can't go for 24 hours before you find out that the call quality is no good. That's too late," he said.

Related news items
Newer news items
Older news items
 
mobilised

Carrier News

Ructions At Engin Signal Changing Strategy
With the 30 per cent acquisition of pure play VoIP service provider, Engin, by the Seven Network, it was only a matter of time before major upheaval filtered its way to the broadband telephony provider's staff.
Older news items
 

Industry News

Vendor News

Aspect Maps Out UC Product Plans
Contact Centre software specialists, Aspect Software, has embarked on a corporate strategy to educate the market on the part the contact centre plays in an organisation's overall unified communications strategy.
Older news items
 

VoIP Solutions

Product News

WA Dept Education Goes IP With Panasonic
The West Australian Department of Education and Training has chosen Panasonic for the upgrade of all future school telephony systems to IP-capable solutions.
Older news items