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Business Cases for Lync Server 2013 : Return on Investment (part 2)

12/29/2013 8:45:42 PM
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5. Realizing ROI with Audio Conferencing

It is common for many large organizations to spend millions of dollars a year on audio conferencing from a third-party provider. When deploying a UC solution that includes audio conferencing functionality, these organizations tend to see a significant cost savings. This cost savings is typically the largest UC ROI factor for businesses.

When deploying a UC solution like Lync, organizations can bring all of their audio conferencing to the internal UC system. Previously, organizations would pay per-minute audio conferencing charges for services that provided a dial-in conferencing bridge and audio conferencing. When this is brought in-house, those costs are reduced. The costs for audio conferencing are replaced by the costs to maintain the UC system and the inbound PSTN trunks for dial-in conferencing users. Many organizations are leveraging SIP Trunking for this functionality to even greater reduce costs. On average, organizations will reduce their dial-in conferencing usage by 85%. That 85% reduction accounts for users who are now leveraging a UC client to join a conference using IP Audio. The remaining 15% accounts for users who are still dialing in to the audio conference through the PSTN.

When the RIO of a UC solution is being evaluated, it is important to not completely remove audio conferencing costs from the total cost of ownership (TCO). A small portion of the costs that are removed are replaced by new costs. This can include PSTN trunks, PSTN gateways, bandwidth, and additional server hardware if needed. Additionally, many organizations require the use of a third-party audio bridge for advanced conferencing scenarios. This functionality is often referred to as managed conferencing. These scenarios include operator-assisted meetings, or very large audio conferences with more than 1,000 participants.

6. Realizing ROI with Centralized Telephony

As mentioned in earlier sections, most organizations have a distributed PBX system. When an organization is considering UC, one option is to replace the distributed PBX systems with a centralized UC Telephony platform. The centralization of the telephony platform can have many benefits.

7. Reduced Hardware Footprint

When an organization chooses to centralize its telephony platform, the hardware footprint is greatly reduced. This can provide ROI by reducing hardware purchase costs, hardware maintenance costs, and facility run costs.

8. Reduced Support Costs

Often when organizations move to a centralized telephony environment, the costs to support the environment are much smaller than the costs of a distributed system. UC telephony systems, although they are modern IP-based systems, are much less complex to manage than legacy systems. If support of the legacy telephony solution was outsourced before, the outsourcing contract might be reduced. If this was completely supported by internal staff, staffing can often be reduced, or allocated to other tasks.

9. SIP Trunking Opportunity

SIP Trunking is a relatively new trend in telephony. It is the capability to purchase PSTN services and have them delivered over IP connections rather than traditional T1/E1 PRI connections. Although SIP Trunking does not require a centralized deployment model, a centralized telephony deployment does introduce the opportunity to deploy SIP Trunking more easily. The combination of centralized telephony and SIP Trunking is ideal for realizing cost savings in PSTN Trunking.

Many organizations have a vast number of PRI connections delivering PSTN services. The problem with PRIs is that they come in only one size (23 voice channels per trunk in the U.S.). SIP Trunking allows organizations to have more control over how many channels are purchased. In simple terms, if you were a mid-size organization that needed 25 voice channels to support your call load, this would result in two PRIs. Those two PRIs would require two T1 connections. The end result is double the cost for a very small capacity increase.

These are the two ways in which SIP Trunking allows you to reduce your PSTN costs:

Reduction in the Number of Voice Channels—Organizations that deploy SIP Trunking typically see a 40% reduction in the number of actual voice channels, because the capacity is much easier to predict and control. This reduction in voice channels also comes with a cheaper, more flexible delivery method: IP. Many times this is delivered through an MPLS connection from the provider directly to the organization’s data center, but there are services that target small to mid-market customers that will also deliver these services over the Internet.

Shared Usage—Organizations can reduce their voice channels even more in a centralized telephony model. When the PSTN trunks are centralized, they can be shared across all of your sites. This works very well in organizations spread across multiple time zones. In fact, SIP Trunking services can be tweaked based on time zones to provide capacity where it is needed, resulting in a large amount of cost savings.

Flexibility—SIP Trunking introduces the ability to increase or decrease capacity as needs change. TDM connections would often require additional physical line configurations to accommodate capacity changes. With SIP Trunking, this simply becomes a matter of provisioning by the provider in many cases. SIP Trunking providers are also able to offer advanced functionality including failover routing, and multiple area codes and international numbers on the same connection, something that TDM trunks are simply not able to do.

The areas previously described are the most common areas in which organizations can realize cost savings and ROI from deploying a UC Telephony Solution. The level at which ROI is realized will depend on how willing the organization is to adopt the centralized and shared model for the telephony infrastructure.

 
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