The VAR claims less than 10 per cent of NHS organisations have piloted
location-based tracking, which can enable the rapid location of crucial
equipment, such as wheelchairs and defibrillators.
With this in mind,
ANS
is this Wednesday hosting a seminar for 60 NHS organisations to showcase its
technology. The offering is based on applications that are developed on
Cisco’s
new Unified Applications environment and Cisco’s 2700 location appliance.
Scott Fletcher, managing director of ANS, said: “We are hoping to get about 20
to 30 rollouts this year. Four or five customers are already testing or have
agreed to test the technology. Our understanding is that we are leading the way
and that no one else is talking about this.
“If Cisco partners fail to progress in these areas, they will get left behind.
It is no good just selling
kit; you need to sell applications that drive the infrastructure sales behind
that.”
Jess Thompson-Hughes, managing director of Aruba distributor
React
Technologies, said: “It is a good potential market, but I am not sure the
NHS is in any financial position to spend the kind of money the channel wants it
to and it is a sales cycle of 18 months.”
Keith Reading, managing director of wireless VAR
QoLcom,
said: “We have been pushing this for two years and our experience in health is
that you cannot sell tagging on its own. That is the reason uptake has been
slow.”
ANS
doubles interim profits
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