Survey Finds QoS Not Managed Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Wednesday, 30 January 2008
The reliability and quality of enterprise VoIP networks globally is suffering because corporates fail to invest in Quality of Service management and monitoring tools, says NetIQ.

The research While companies see VoIP performance and reliability as a top concern, many are failing to invest in the right management tools according to a survey of more than 240 VoIP users in North America.

The research has highlighted a global trend by finding that less than 50% of enterprises have considered a management or monitoring solution for their VoIP deployments, despite a staggering 90% stating that performance and availability is a top priority.

Boris Ivancic, regional director, Asia Pacific, Attachmate, said: “As the local region continues to improve broadband capabilities, the uptake of VoIP is increasing. But businesses want reliable VoIP services, and while pre-implementation planning is a good place to start achieving this, many enterprises fail to properly manage their networks ongoing, which decreases Quality of Service (QoS).

“Local enterprises are crying out for more reliable VoIP services, but what they have to realise is call quality and voice network issues are more difficult to identify and resolve without adequate monitoring and management tools.  VoIP can achieve tremendous cost savings and increased user productivity, if you have the right tools to identify and resolve issues ongoing,” said Boris.

As VoIP adoption increases, NetIQ in Australia is confident that enterprises will simultaneously take a more stringent approach to managing their networks. “There’s no doubt that there are local companies already enjoying the benefits of a properly managed VoIP network, it’s just surprising how many more experience problems because of poor performance management,” Boris added.

Additional findings from the survey include:
- 57% cited the pre-deployment planning and assessment phase of a VoIP deployment as the most critical aspect of their implementation.
- 58% stated that achieving the defined service level is one of their top three concerns.
- 57% noted that secure configuration and provisioning is also one of the top three concerns.
- 64% said that Denial of Service (DoS) attacks are the greatest threats, while viruses, worms and call spoofing are also placed among threats of highest priority.


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