Videoconferencing
Around 15 per cent of UK organisations report using some form of videoconferencing

Videoconferencing finally taking off

Green concenrs and falling prices fuelling demand

Written by Ian Williams

Social and consumer sensitivity to carbon footprints is having a marked impact on working practices

Stephen McKenzie Chief executive, ICUGlobal

Combined revenues at videoconferencing firms rose from $308m in 2005 to $607m in 2006, suggesting that the technology may finally be shaking off its 'non-starter' image.

Videoconferencing is becoming increasingly common as the technology improves and more IP-based solutions become available, according to analysts.

"Around 15 per cent of UK organisations report using some form of videoconferencing, an increase of three per cent in just six months," said John Bosnell, senior analyst at Point Topic.

The rise in annual revenues has been accompanied by a slight increase in monthly average revenue per user from $668 in 2005 to $679 in 2006.

This is against a backdrop of rapidly decreasing unit prices. A two-room system to connect two sites was priced at around $30,000 in 2001, but was likely to cost less than $5,000 in 2007.

Service subscriptions are rapidly growing in popularity as prices fell from over $200 per month for a basic package to less than $100.

Green issues seem to be another key driver, according to a survey by unified communications consultancy ICUGlobal.

Seven out of 10 of the companies surveyed cited 'reducing organisational carbon footprints' by allowing staff to meet without leaving their place of work as a reason for adopting videoconferencing.

The study also highlighted increased productivity (62 per cent of respondents) and the need for better internal communication (58 per cent) as other factors driving investment in videoconferencing.

"Social and consumer sensitivity to carbon footprints has now firmly entered the workplace and this is having a marked impact on working practices," said Stephen McKenzie, chief executive at ICUGlobal.

"These environmental goals seem underpinned by other workplace motivations. For example, the time spent not travelling to meetings is more productive and reduces stress."

Point Topic said that, although the drop in price can help customer demand, suppliers are increasingly looking to value-added services to help maintain average revenue per user.

The cost of a basic videoconference room starts at $2,000, and there are good margins to be made from subscriptions to fully-featured conferencing services with high-definition 'video dial tone' and an operator.

"It is a challenging time when prices drop, but there is plenty of room for the market to grow," concluded Bosnell.

reader comments

related articles

Novell

Novell collaborates with SiteScape buy

Purchase to strengthen unified comms and collaboration strategy 14 Feb 2008

 

UK firms 'all talk' on green issues

Firms paying lip service to pressure from customers 12 Feb 2008

Large UK firms turn to VoIP

Two thirds running IP telephony on a local area network 17 Jan 2008

FTSE firms outline green resolutions

More energy efficient buildings top priority 03 Jan 2008

Videoconferencing touted for conflict resolution

Technology can help diffuse tensions at work and at home 16 Oct 2007

Microsoft talks up unified communications

New apps to 'eliminate communications boundaries' 17 Oct 2007

Carbon labels to arrive in China

Carbon Trust to open office in Beijing as UK government steps up plans to address supply chain emissions 02 Jul 2008

Deloitte looks to telepresence to cut costs and carbon

Consultancy signs managed services deal with Nortel for videoconferencing 10 Jul 2008

Telcos failing to develop IP strategy

No clear vision for the future, claims Jajah 02 Jun 2008

today's top stories

General management skills are now as important as technical ability

A selection of leading chief information officers talk about what they see as the most important aspects of the role 28 Aug 2008

Computing podcast 28 August 2008

CIO job satisfaction plummets, and why schools' IT spending is set to top £1bn 28 Aug 2008

Help people protect themselves

Educating individuals on protecting their data will help implementation of new systems, says Richard Steel 28 Aug 2008

Lack of IT students puts future at risk

Computing Comment: This is a tomorrow problem for a today-obsessed government 28 Aug 2008

The definitive guide to collaboration

Five key technologies and five best practice tips to improve your collaborative IT 28 Aug 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Are the economy's problems affecting your IT plans?

Are the economy's problems affecting your IT plans?

Are worries about the economy hitting your IT spending?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

A stressed CIOAudio

Computing podcast 28 August 2008

CIO job satisfaction plummets, and why schools' IT spending is set to top £1bn 28 Aug 2008

Bryan Glick video whiteboardVideo

The definitive guide to collaboration

Five key technologies and five best practice tips to improve your collaborative IT 28 Aug 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Men using mobile phonesAnalysis

CIO morale plummets as crunch hits

Fewer opportunities and less responsibility depress IT managers 27 Aug 2008

Myron HrycykAnalysis

General management skills are now as important as technical ability

A selection of leading chief information officers talk about what they see as the most important aspects of the role 28 Aug 2008

Primary Navigation