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Will Companies By-Pass UC?Will Companies By-Pass UC?

The need for a UC client on the PC desktop will decrease, since fewer employees will use a PC on a regular basis, if at all. And UC clients on a desk phone will all but disappear.

Melanie Turek

November 1, 2011

2 Min Read
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The need for a UC client on the PC desktop will decrease, since fewer employees will use a PC on a regular basis, if at all. And UC clients on a desk phone will all but disappear.

Recently, Frost & Sullivan released our latest research on the unified communications market. One of the more interesting findings was that, although we expect the UC market to show double-digit growth over the next five years, the number of UC clients expected to ship by 2016 is only around 30 million. That's 20 million fewer than we thought would ship in earlier studies of the market, and it represents less than 10 percent of the total number of office workers worldwide.

There are a couple of explanations for the new findings. The economy, of course, put a damper on buying over the past several years, so the market saw relatively slow growth between the time true UC clients were made available, around 2007, and present day. But that will have a negative impact on the long-term market, too: By the time many companies will be ready to spend on UC, they may also be ready to leap-frog the technology altogether in favor of mobile clients that deliver many of the same capabilities, but in different ways.

Consider the fact that when we recently surveyed more than 200 C-level executives about their use of enterprise communications technology, we learned that mobile devices are a primary communications endpoint in 68 percent of organizations. Furthermore, our research shows that almost 10 percent of tablets purchased today are used for business purposes; we expect that to reach about 70 percent by 2016--and by then, desktop phones will go from representing 37 percent of the enterprise endpoint market to only 20 percent.

What does this mean for UC? Well, that depends on how you define the term. Certainly, mobile devices such as smart phones and tablets will continue to run applications, including soft phone clients, that will support enterprise communications in ever more advanced and, presumably, cost-effective ways. But the need for a UC client like Lync or Sametime on the PC desktop will decrease, since fewer employees will use a PC on a regular basis, if at all. And UC clients on a desk phone will all but disappear.

About the Author

Melanie Turek

Melanie Turek is Vice President, Research at Frost & Sullivan. She is a renowned expert in unified communications, collaboration, social networking and content-management technologies in the enterprise. For 15 years, Ms. Turek has worked closely with hundreds of vendors and senior IT executives across a range of industries to track and capture the changes and growth in the fast-moving unified communications market. She also has in-depth experience with business-process engineering, project management, compliance, and productivity & performance enhancement, as well as a wide range of software technologies including messaging, ERP, CRM and contact center applications. Ms. Turek writes often on the business value and cultural challenges surrounding real-time communications, collaboration and Voice over IP, and she speaks frequently at leading customer and industry events.Prior to working at Frost & Sullivan, Ms. Turek was a Senior Vice-President and Partner at Nemertes Research. She also spent 10 years in various senior editorial roles at Information Week magazine. Ms. Turek graduated cum laude with BA in Anthropology from Harvard College. She currently works from her home office in Steamboat Springs, Colorado.