Report: VOIP, Security Features Shore Up Router Revenue
Aiming to make up for a revenue drop, the global enterprise router market is adding VOIP and security features to boost selling prices per unit, an Infonetics report finds.
After suffering a 10 percent drop in revenue over the past quarter, the global enterprise router market is pinning its hopes on added VOIP and security features to shore up selling prices per unit, according to a report from Boston-based Infonetics Research Inc. Report author Jeff Wilson, who pointed to Cisco Systems Inc. and Vanguard Managed Solutions LLC as router vendors that are incorporating voice gatewaying into their products, predicted that more vendors would follow suit. Infonetics predicts that VOIP ports will enjoy a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15 percent over the next five years in the high-end enterprise router category, defined as modular platforms switching OC-3 (optical carrier level 3, equal to 155.52Mbps) to OC-12 (three OC-3) speeds. In the midrange categoryhandling bandwidth between T-3 and OC-3 speedsit sees a 22 percent, five-year CAGR. Overall router ports, in contrast, are expected to grow by only 10 percent over that period."The overall revenue opportunity is pretty much stable. CAGR for the overall market is zero percent," said Matthias Machowinski, VOIP specialist with Infonetics. "With decreasing selling prices for some of the data-only ports, vendors maintain the revenue level with VOIP and security features."
Another Infonetics report predicts the near doubling of IP PBX sales over the next year. Click here to read more.
Ayotte estimated that 40 percent to 50 percent of Vanguard routers in North America ship with voice, adding that the figure is closer to 70 percent outside North America and as much as 90 percent in Latin America.
Vanguard has a special niche among retail and financial services firms, where their routers support legacy terminal emulation protocols from POS (point of sale) registers and ATMs and convert them for IP transport across the WAN. This presents retail chains with a chance to run a few phones worth of voice to each branch over the data link.
Check out eWEEK.coms VOIP & Telephony Center at http://voip.eweek.com for the latest news, views and analysis on voice over IP and telephony. 








