Shopping Cart


List All Products
Download Area
Show Cart
Your Cart is currently empty.

Email us or call
(813) 963-5884

Testimonial

“Peter possesses a keen sense and insight for turning telecom services and products into customers and dollars. He is passionate about this industry, his work and the people he serves. Visit his site, read his blog and sign up for his newsletter at marketingideaguy.com and you will discover what makes Peter a sought after marketing consultant.”

Cynthia de Lorenzi, CEO, Patriot Computer Group

Caught My Eye at VoiceCon
On Rad's Radar
Wednesday, 08 April 2009 05:18
At VoiceCon, Grandstream had some new SIP-based gadgets including the video telephony units that VidTel is using and video surveillance gear. As TMC's Erik Linask reports here, "The first products in the new line include one- and four-port video servers/encoders -- its GXV3501 and GXV3504 -- and an IP video camera -- the GXV3601.... All three products leverage Grandstream's experience with H.264 real-time video compression, providing clear video while optimizing bandwidth usage, and SIP-based VoIP technology for providing two-way audio and video streaming to mobile phones and desktop video phones."

But the other hardware surprise for me was Aastra's Clearspan. It's basically an Aastra branded version of Broadsoft on a blade server for enterprise. (One review here). Taqua is also reselling Broadsoft to smaller service providers but under the Broadsoft umbrella.

Meanwhile at CTIA, WiMax gadgets were launched, including the Nokia N810 tablet and the Samsung Mondi.WiMax gadgets WILL be key to WiMax actually taking off - although Nokia called WiMax BetaMax. I guess no one at Nokia knows that professional videographers and studios were using betamax up until the HD upgrade recently.  Anyway, if Sprint, Claerwire and others are going to get the most out of the billions in deployment money, there will need to be gadgets that consumers can use with WiMax (even at 3650 MHz). Why? Because handsets drive mobility - even if you define a handset as a Kindle or a mini-PC or other gadget.

Read more... [Caught My Eye at VoiceCon]
 
Are You Still an ILEC Agent?
On Rad's Radar
Tuesday, 07 April 2009 13:51
This from Telephony online and the Convergence Consulting Group:
The latest in an annual study of the bundled services market shows US telecom service providers are losing wireline voice customers at a faster pace and being transformed in the process into companies that will look very different from their traditional telecom roots. The Battle for the American Couch Potato: Bundling, TV, Internet, Telephone, Wireless, released this week by the Convergence Consulting Group, shows maintaining a broadband connection is increasingly important to telecom providers, as wireline voice services become much less important.
If you look at the numbers in that PDF report and you still think that the QBPP is a viable option or that the last 400K businesses in the BellSouth region will somehow see the light and convert, I have some land for you in South Florida.

I have written about this in years past: the telcos have finally hit the wall. Everything is flat or down now: TV, wireline, cellular, and broadband. Granted most numbers are for residential, not business accounts which agents sell, but this will affect the entire telco business. Telco moved from the most profitable service - Voice - to Internet (the 2nd most profitable) - into TV, which is te least profitable. Why? Set-top boxes cost $400 per pop. How do you recoup that $5 per month rental? Most of the pricing goes straight to the content. You know, Disney and ESPN want their dough. Then there's the network upgrade for TV (and high-speed internet), which although VZT says is under $900 per home passed, the numbers I see are closer to $2000. Let's factor in the advertising. I get something almost everyday from VZ. At even $0.75 per mailer that's $15 per month. Times how many homes passed?  See how that may slow the telco engine? Plus MSO's moved from the least profitable service (TV) to the most profitable (Voice). And MSO's are getting into mobile data and maybe cellular voice with Sprint.

When you look at the summary from Convergence Consulting Group, it looks bleak.
  • We estimate Cable's double play base of TV and Internet subscribers YE2008 at 61% (we forecast 79% YE2011). The RBOC/Telcos residential telephone to broadband overlap was 33% at YE2008 (we forecast 54% YE2011). Hence, it's easier for Cable to add voice customers off this overlap than for the RBOC/Telcos to add TV customers.
  • 2008 RBOC/Telcos residential wireline telephone line loss was 10%.
  • Wireless Substitution was responsible for about half the loss and Cable for the other half.
  • We forecast Cable will have 23% of residential telephone subscribers by YE2009.
  • We estimate wireless-only households at 20% at YE2008.
  • Wireless annual subscriber additions continue to slow, 2008 saw 15.6M (2007 saw 22.4M) and we forecast 13.9M in 2009.
  • Data continues to drive wireless ARPU growth (voice ARPU is declining). We forecast that price competition, which intensified in 2008, will continue to increase going forward.

Telcos are building out high-speed networks for TV and Internet, which is costing a bundle, at the same time that they are forklift upgrading the cellular networks to 4G. Have they even paid off the debt from constructing the 2.5G and 3G systems? Meanwhile, Charter is bankrupt and the rest of the MSO's have to upgrade to DOCSIS 3.0 while also constructing WiMAX networks. All while the ARPU is decreasing and the customer acquisition costs are increasing.

With these kinds of pressures on the RBOCs, imagine the pressure on the ILECs without a cellular division like QWEST, Embarq, Windstream, Frontier and Fairpoint. Landline losses that cannot be off-set by TV or cellular revenues. Yikes! Basically, the EarthLink strategy right? Cost cutting as the primary executive decision. Right out the knitting until its over.

Where do you think Agents come into that play? With losses, an easy cost cutting measure is to stop paying agent commissions. Think about your Channel Partners in 2009.

Read more... [Are You Still an ILEC Agent?]
 
FAX for Asterisk
NSP Strategist
Tuesday, 07 April 2009 13:46
VoIP Speak writes about Fax for Asterisk:Fax For Asterisk inter-operates with standards-compliant fax machines connected to Asterisk 1.4 and 1.6 on x86 Linux systems. It provides low-speed PSTN faxing via DAHDI-compatible telephony interface cards as well as VoIP faxing to T.38-compatible SIP end points and service providers. Fax For Asterisk operates at speeds up to 14.4kbps and supports V.17, V

Read Full Article
 
How Many Minutes?
On Rad's Radar
Tuesday, 07 April 2009 13:31
Telecomweb has an interesting set of stats:
Last year, U.S. wireless subscribers burned through 2.2 trillion minutes and 1 trillion worth of SMS. As such, mobile data accounts for 25 percent of a carrier's revenues, and all that from 270 million users.

Indeed these are huge numbers. No wonder AT&T says its a wireless company. TDM LD must be shrinking by the minutesmile

Read more... [How Many Minutes?]
 
Merger Rumors Abound
On Rad's Radar
Tuesday, 07 April 2009 12:45
Well, it is conference month with the industry gathering at CTIA and VoiceCon (and other shows). And when we get together we tend to gossip. The latest rumors (some thanks to Telecom Ramblings) involve XO, TWTC, and Qwest.

Apparently, Qwest longhaul business - the original Qwest - is for sale, but who has that kind of money to buy it? Likely, a foreign carrier would make a play for it. But Telefonica has a deal with Level3; T-Systems (DT) has a network here that T-Mobile utilizes; NTT has the Verio network; Telia also has some fiber routes in the US. Sprint can't come up with the $2B or so for the acquisition. Maybe Orange (FT) can. But isn't Global Crossing a better bang for the buck for these same prospective buyers?

Now that XO has converted all of its debt to preferred shares for Carl Icahn, speculation is if they will buy something or get bought. Now that tw telecom has showed a profit, maybe they will take a swing. After all, twt has the most on-net buildings and the 2nd most route miles (next to L3). (Thanks to Rob Powell for the data).

Level3 just borrowed some money - $200M+. But that's just for operating expenses according to analysts. And what could you buy for $200M? And if you are Level3, why would you buy another company? You still haven't finished teh ongoing integration issues.

Read more... [Merger Rumors Abound]
 
WiMax Operator in a Niche
NSP Strategist
Tuesday, 07 April 2009 12:11
WiMAX Operator Nth Air Finds It's Niche Serving Business Customers.US operators are leveraging 3.65Ghz WiMAX solutions to offer broadband service at lower costs and better customer service. Interview with Craig Niemeyer, CEO & President of Nth Air.Currently, Nth Air sells and services two types of digital private line replacement services:T1+ replacement via Fixed WiMAX, at an average speed of 3

Read Full Article
 
Top 5 ways Sales are made!
NSP Strategist
Tuesday, 07 April 2009 10:24
At the last seminar, someone asked me for the top 10 sales speeches in movies. I couldn't come up with more than 5. You can see lists of these speeches (w/links) here and here. The Boiler Room with Ben Afflect was a good one, even though he swears a lot he makes the points: (1) have answers to objections; and (2) a sale is made on every call - it just depends on whether you are buying his

Read Full Article
 
<< Start < Prev 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 Next > End >>

Page 113 of 164