people telecom takes first steps into VoIP
Nadia Cameron, ARN
25/03/2004 10:01:22
people telecom is in the process of
fine-tuning both residential and business voice over IP (VoIP) services to
launch this year.
people telecom CEO, Ryan O’Hare, said while
the business-oriented VoIP service was still four to five months away, the
carrier planned to launch a basic residential IP-based voice service from next
week.
O’Hare was hopeful the carrier could sign
up around 10,000 residential customers to its forthcoming IP-based voice service
through its affiliation with Perth-based ISP Swiftel.
Business interest in VoIP would, however,
take a lot longer, he said.
Citing recent market findings from
Macquarie Research, O’Hare said it could take up to five years for there to be
significant growth of VoIP services in the business sector.
“As a CEO, I wouldn’t go to IP now – I
wouldn’t know that it [the technology] works," he said. "You have to give it
time to work,” he said.
In addition, most business are not yet
ready to throw away their traditional PABX systems.
O’Hare said people would most likely run
its business grade VoIP service on a different platform to the residential
service. “There’s a big distinction between business grade and residential IP
voice services,” he said.
For example, residential users weren’t
interested in managing 400 extensions in an office through a consolidated
telephony system, O'Hare said. As well as IP-based voice, O’Hare said people
telecom would also announce a new services-oriented product for the business
market on April 14.
While coy on details, O’Hare said the
product, to be called customernet, would deliver the carrier’s value-added
services skills and tools to its customers via a “real-time business product”.
“It will supersede what is available now,”
he said.
The carrier is also working on plans to
integrate the Swiftel business into its own sales and customer service
infrastructure following the announcement of a proposed merger between the two
companies earlier this month.
Commenting on the combined Swiftel/people
telecom business, O’Hare said the deal would push people telecom into emerging
telco markets such as broadband, while also allowing the carrier to compete with
larger telco players Optus, Primus, Telstra and AAPT.
On the flip side, the merger would give
Swiftel the managed services backing it needed to expand its broadband and
consumer-focused ISP business, he said.
A Swiftel general meeting to vote on the
Swiftel/people telecom merger has been slated for May 17.