As the research firm begins gathering input from vendors and integrators in preparation for the 2012 report, industry consensus is that it will likely have a very different structure and outcomes.
Signs of these developments were already evident in the April report. In it, BMI-T observed that converged PBX (CBX) solutions, otherwise known as Voice-over-IP solutions, had moved beyond the early adopter phase and entered mainstream ICT budgets.
So how far have enterprise evolved in their CBX adoption? Is hosted an option? What forms of hosted solutions - public or private - are preferred, and what vendors will win? Again, the research offers clues to the future:
But hosted solutions are a growing threat to Cisco's strength. In the poll, vendors reported perceiving cloud as a threat.
Platforms like Telviva ( the Connection Telecom PBX platform) offer a high level of local expertise and support, cost-effectiveness, greater choice over system components than proprietary vendors can typically offer, managed service levels, and upgrade assurance. It is these factors that will probably lead to the inclusion of hosted solutions in the next report.
In leaving out cloud, the study excludes perhaps 20 percent of volume shipments in the important CBX market. Indeed, it concedes that in its measurement of handsets, it has left out third-party vendors, such as Polycom (Connection Telecom is a Polycom Field Verified Partner - Open Source Solutions).
Other than the expected increase in the sample group of 14 PBX/CBX vendors and providers for next year's study, the inclusion of cloud may also lead to a change in categories. Traditionally, the PBX market has been segmented into number of ports, but the flexibility of cloud solutions will mean the end of this classification.
Additionally, the tradition of excluding PBX spend from total market spend in telecoms will also fall by the wayside, as PBX/CBXs are an integral part of telecoms spend.
In view of strong new market undercurrents, the accepted view of the PBX/CBX market in South Africa could change significantly in the next year. This is to be welcomed, as new realities inject new vigour into strategic planning in this industry.