IP telephony lifts voice market

14.8 per cent growth in IP phones boosts global telephony market in Q1, according to Synergy Research

Written by Sam Trendall

Growth in revenues from IP telephony helped the global enterprise voice market to a modest four per cent year-on-year growth during 2008's first quarter, research has revealed.

Market research firm Synergy Research's Q1 Enterprise Voice Market Share report indicates that Q1's biggest growth market was IP phones, which grew 14.8 per cent on Q1 2007, while enterprise IP telephony as a whole grew 11.7 per cent. Western Europe's leading vendor was Alcatel-Lucent, although its revenues increased less than half a per cent on the same period last year.

Advertisement

Siemens was in second after displaying a 10.1 per cent growth on last year's revenues, while Cisco swelled revenues by 30.2 per cent and was in third. Avaya was in fourth with a year-on-year revenue growth of 12.8 per cent and Aastra completed the top five, despite a 9.9 per cent decline in revenues from last year's first quarter.

Synergy's chief executive Jeremy Duke said: "Enterprise IP telephony and IP phone equipment remain the key growth drivers for the overall enterprise voice market. This continues to translate into dollars for those vendors who are able to provide solid IP migration for legacy TDM environments, especially in the SME market where IP penetration remains minimal."

Comments

White papers

Related jobs

More Accounting jobs

Spotlight

Ted Bell, Abel and Cole FD

Profile: Ted Bell, FD of Abel and Cole

The combination of the online shopping boom and a hunger...

Top 30 Accounting Networks and Associations 2008

The race to become the biggest firm on the planet...

Barack Obama Accountancy Age cover October 2008

Obama: asset or liability?

What an Obama presidency could mean for you

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Job of the week

More finance jobs

Newsletters

Sign up here for the very latest news delivered to your inbox. Choose from the following options:

Your next job

Have your say

Will proposed tax cuts help to stimulate the economy?
Yes
No

Advertisement

Search white papers

Search white papers

Advertisement