The Seamless Enterprise

Comprehensive news and discussion of enterprise communications and converged network solutions.

SIP Trunking: Sky is the Limit?

on April 23, 2012 by Editor

Enterprises more than doubled their SIP trunking investments in 2011 compared with 2010, but the room for further growth is almost unlimited.

According to the industry analyst firm Infonetics Research, SIP spending was up 128 percent last year, making it one of the fastest-growing telecom services in North America. But even with that kind of growth, SIP Trunking accounted for only one of 10 trunks deployed here. More...


Unifying UC and Mobility

on April 19, 2012 by Editor

When it comes to leveraging the magic combination of Unified Communications and mobility – and you can't deny that UC isn't really unified until it is mobile, especially in today's environment – an enterprise does have to take a few things into consideration

The factors to consider are spelled out well in a recent Tech Notes article by Gary Audin. For instance, a typical IT organization is going to have to support four distinct mobile profiles. They are the road warrior, the person who's always on the road visiting customers, for example; the teleworker, the person who works most or all of the time at home; the campus roamer, who's always at a meeting somewhere or on his or her way to one; and the nomad, who works outside the office but typically at a specific location, such as a client site. More...


What’s With the 19 Percent?

on April 11, 2012 by Editor

Does it surprise you as much as it does us that nearly one-fifth of enterprises are not even considering Unified Communications and collaboration technology now, or planning to in the next three years?

That data point leaped out at us in a piece that Melanie Turek of Frost & Sullivan wrote over at NoJitter, based on a survey that her organization did of 200 top executives. Nineteen percent of the respondents said they aren’t considering UC at all and have no plans to deploy it in the next three years. More...


UC Market Headed in the Right Direction

on March 28, 2012 by Editor

Here at Seamless Enterprise, we don’t usually bother with following the “markets” for various goods and services and solutions. For the most part, we know that isn’t your biggest concern.

If you’ve found a UC solution that really works for you, it isn’t important whether the vendor you bought it from has a 10 percent share of the particular market or a 40 percent share. As long as you can be sure the vendor will be around for a while to provide service and support – and we presume you vetted that pretty well before making the purchase – the details of who sells how much to whom this year or next year are secondary. More...


Pennies from SIP Heaven

on March 19, 2012 by Editor

As wise old Ben Franklin said, “A penny saved is a penny earned.” Of course, a penny had a bit more buying power back in Ben’s day, but let’s not be too literal here. If you can leverage technology to save your company money, then the mere act of NOT spending it in the first place is the equivalent of generating additional revenue.

The technology in this case is SIP Trunking, and while it is a foundational building block for Unified Communications, the truth is, many companies really only look at SIP Trunking initially for the sake of potential savings. More...


The Four-Step Plan to Freeing Up Bandwidth

on March 13, 2012 by Editor

There may not be any such thing as a free lunch, but there just may be such a thing as free bandwidth.

Sound too good to be true? We can’t blame you for being suspicious, but Marty Parker over at NoJitter makes his case for leveraging Unified Communications to modify your mix of traffic in order to accommodate video with no need to add capacity. More...


Blending Two Flavors of UC

on March 09, 2012 by Editor

We’re always interested in business case advice, especially as it relates to Unified Communications. So a recent Webtorials white paper that purported to offer advice about building a comprehensive UC business case, caught our eye.

Turns out that the white paper (free registration required) was less about a business case than it was about a strategic approach to bringing UC into the enterprise. But that’s OK, because it has some good and thoughtful material about how the author – veteran consultant Don Van Doren – segments UC into a couple of sub-categories. More...


Star Power

on February 23, 2012 by Editor

Not too many people, if you stopped them on the street, would recognize the name Iyad Tarazi. At least not yet. Give him time.                                                                     

Iyad, Vice President of Network Development and Engineering here at Sprint, was named one of seven “Rising Stars of Wireless,” in a salute by the good people over at Fierce Wireless. This is an annual Fierce feature, as they single out “the talented people worth watching in the coming year.” More...


Too Much of a Good Thing?

on February 15, 2012 by Editor

We talk a lot here about collaboration, of course, and how Unified Communications technologies make that possible. We’re all pretty much in agreement that collaboration is a good thing.

But it is possible to emphasize collaboration too much, and that’s the point of an interesting column at NoJitter by Melanie Turek of Frost & Sullivan. Think of it this way: let’s say you love strawberry ice cream, as some of us do. But instead of simply enjoying that delightful post-dinner bowl of sweet, creamy heaven each evening, you decide to have strawberry ice cream at every meal. That wouldn’t work for more reasons than we can begin to list. More...


Getting Back to Basics with SIP Trunking

on February 06, 2012 by Editor

It’s easy for tech people to lapse into a false assumption, and that is that people we talk to have a similar understanding of the technologies we’re talking about at any given time.

When you work around other IT and/or communications technology people all the time, it becomes natural to think that “everybody” knows the acronyms, the underlying technology, and essentially how all this stuff works. More...