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Frost & Sullivan Releases Market Data for SIP Trunking and Voice Access TechnologiesFrost & Sullivan Releases Market Data for SIP Trunking and Voice Access Technologies

The North American VoIP access and SIP trunking services market reached $717.3 million in 2009, growing at 22.3 percent year over year.

Melanie Turek

May 27, 2010

3 Min Read
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The North American VoIP access and SIP trunking services market reached $717.3 million in 2009, growing at 22.3 percent year over year.

My colleague Subha Rama recently released Frost & Sullivan's latest research on the North American VoIP Access and SIP Trunking Services Market. Given how popular the topic of SIP trunking is today, I thought I'd share some of the highlights here.* The North American VoIP access and SIP trunking services market reached $717.3 million in 2009, growing at 22.3 percent year over year.

* Between 2009 and 2016, the market is expected to register a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 27.3 percent to reach $3.9 billion.

* In 2009, the user base expanded at a rate of 40.1 percent and reached 3.8 million users. Over the forecast period, the installed base is expected to experience a CAGR of 42.8 percent to reach 46 million users in 2016.

* Over the last few years, there has been a definite shift from circuit-switched telephony to IP-based voice services. On-premises deployments, too, are making the transition from TDM PBXs to IP-based systems, as businesses look to realize benefits including lower costs, flexibility, ease of integration, greater productivity, consolidated network management, self-service mechanisms, and robust features.

* Subject to bandwidth availability, a SIP trunk can carry unlimited voice calls (though service providers are known to restrict the number of simultaneous calls to anywhere between 28 and 41 per SIP trunk), versus a traditional PSTN/PRI trunk that can accommodate only 24 calls per channel (realistically, 17.5 calls).

* Although businesses of all sizes can benefit from the access-line and toll savings offered by VoIP services, SMBs have emerged as an attractive niche for VoIP access services. SMBs either deploy IP trunking as an overlay service to their existing broadband access (wireline/wireless, DSL, cable, T1/E1, Ethernet, etc.) or buy pure SIP/H.323 trunks, leveraging the IP trunking provider's network and IP delivery architecture.

* Larger enterprises want to consolidate trunks and voice platforms, centralize management and administration, and reduce costs by leveraging self-service options instead of relying on third-party technical support.

* The VoIP access and SIP trunking market continues to evolve, driven by time-to-market pressures and a constant need for delivering best-in-class services at lower costs. The market is seeing intense competition from competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs), virtual network operators, and resellers of complex, globally deployed networks. Incumbent PSTN providers are increasingly fighting to protect their customer base against the onslaught of SIP trunking providers.

* Few vendors offer soft switches and application servers that can support VoIP access/SIP trunking and hosted IP telephony services. Due to the slow uptake in these nascent services markets, the vendor market experienced premature consolidation, limiting service provider choices in terms of technologies and suppliers.

The study contains more detailed information on market driver, challenges and restraints, market share data, pricing trends and best practices and recommendations. Clients can access it at www.frost.com.The North American VoIP access and SIP trunking services market reached $717.3 million in 2009, growing at 22.3 percent year over year.

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.