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Premises PBX Is the Largest Selling UC Platform in 2021Premises PBX Is the Largest Selling UC Platform in 2021

The PBX industry is past the stage where premises PBXs are just for big companies and UCaaS just for small ones.

John Malone

November 15, 2021

4 Min Read
Premises PBX Is the Largest Selling UC Platform in 2021
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For a decade, unified communications media coverage has focused on unified communications as a service (UCaaS) while mainly ignoring other platforms like hybrid-cloud and server-virtualization. Premises PBX, a fourth platform, has hardly gotten a second look from the press.

 

UCaaS, the purportedly inexpensive (one might challenge this assumption), all-singing-all-dancing, award-winning UC platform , will finish 2021, having captured a third of all new PBX sales for the year. However, UCaaS sales are upstaged by premises PBX shipments.

 

The Eastern Management Group analyzed 2021 PBX sales across 19 vertical industries and its new report "Worldwide Hosted and Premises PBX Market 2021-2027," finds premises PBX sales were good across all markets this year:

 

  • Among enterprises with more than 1,000 employees, 61% of those that acquired a new UC system in 2021 purchased a premises PBX, which outsold UCaaS by more than one third.

  • Small businesses with less than 300 employees that acquired a phone system in 2021 bought a premises PBX 25% more often than UCaaS.

  • While some verticals like retail have embraced UCaaS with avidity , not all are in this camp: the banking sector purchased premises PBXs four times more often than UCaaS; schools did so three times more frequently, and healthcare businesses twice as often.

  • As the data above shows, the PBX industry is past the stage where premises PBXs are just for big companies and UCaaS just for small ones.

Customers had compelling reasons (purchase drivers) for acquiring a premises PBX solution in 2021 over other alternatives. In one of the many surveys for Eastern Management Group’s PBX report 1,000 IT managers identified the influential factors as:

 

  • Security features

  • Productivity Improvement features

  • Self-serve provisioning

  • Dealer provided security and regulatory support

  • Dealer provided system and network support

IT managers that bought a premises PBX also rated price and total cost of ownership as top purchase drivers.

 

There is a lot of future opportunity in the premises PBX market. New PBX sales, including premises PBX, will exceed 50 million seat/line licenses every year for the next several years, and that's just if the average installed system remains in place for 8-9 years. Should turnover increase to 5-6 years, which the Eastern Management Group thinks it should, total sales will be more significant.

 

Where PBX Vendors Need to Invest

Several premises PBX vendors have proven equal to the task of growing their business and sloughing off concerns about the growth of UCaaS. Here's how some are doing. All premises PBX providers should invest in the following areas:

 

  • Research & Development - R&D is the lifeblood of product innovation. In our opinion, the minimum premises PBX vendor R&D investment should be 10% of revenue. The latest financial reports show Cisco spends around 13%; Sangoma, a premises PBX provider for SMB customers, clocks in at 15%. Given the many premises PBX providers, some may spend more on R&D especially in the business startup phase.

  • Dealer Support - Good support is expensive. It can cost $10,000-$30,000 to add a new dealer to a vendor's channel. A global dealer training program can be more than a half million dollars. World-class dealer support requires continuous training, promotions, best-in-class discounts, deal support, and substantial discounts so dealers can grow their businesses . Dealer support can amount to five to 15% of revenue. In our opinion, Cisco dealer support is a gold standard.

 

In addition, those premises PBX vendors most likely to be around in 10-years will surround themselves with channel partners that are highly trained, well-compensated, financially established, and receptive to best-in-class support from their vendor partner.

 

Vendors at the Forefront

According to Eastern Management Group's annual IT manager satisfaction surveys, dominant PBX providers like Cisco, Avaya, Atos, and Alcatel-Lucent Enterprises get good customer-satisfaction scores, as do small-business-first specialty firms Sangoma and Yeastar. To an enterprise customer, Cisco is a deep-pocketed dominant provider, and it shares PBX shelf-space with players like Avaya, Atos, and Alcatel-Lucent Enterprises. Sangoma and Yeastar do an excellent job addressing the SMB market.

 

Premises PBX Headwinds

The premises PBX industry faces headwinds due to competition from hundreds of UCaaS competitors and has had departures among its ranks. Panasonic announced it will close its PBX telephone systems business by 2023 citing:

 

  • A sharp decline of the market and rapid shift to cloud-based solutions

  • A technological mismatch between factory and future market needs and trends

  • Lagging behind their competitor's R&D activities

  • Constant financial deficit due to the reasons above

  • Shift to new types of demand (e.g., Teams, Zoom) significantly accelerated by COVID-19, which makes the future of our business untenable and unpredictable

 

Final Thoughts

Despite challenges, the premises PBX industry will be around for a long time to sell and support large enterprises and small customers. How long? In 2025, another Eastern Management Group survey shows 55% of businesses will use premises PBXs to account for most company communications.

 

While new vendors have not been queuing up to enter the premises PBX market, this is a missed opportunity. We'd like to see more new premises PBX companies, which should be welcome by all PBX customers.

 

For more information about the Eastern Management Group report "Worldwide Hosted and Premises PBX Market 2021-2027," contact John Malone at 212-738-9402 Ext. 2201 or [email protected]

About the Author

John Malone

John Malone is the President and CEO of The Eastern Management Group. He heads one of the world's premier communications industry research companies. He is also the author of three books.

In addition to Eastern Management, he founded two other software and database management companies. He has served on the board of directors of numerous publicly traded, and private technology companies.

At The Eastern Management Group, he has managed thousands of the company's research assignments for major technology businesses and service providers worldwide.

John Malone is a former executive with AT&T. While there he developed the first call center.

He has advised Members and Staff of The US House of Representatives, US Senate, Department of Justice, FCC, National Telecommunications and Information Administration, State Legislatures, State Regulatory Commissions and the European Commission. He has testified extensively before the US Congress, state legislatures, and regulatory agencies on technology matters. His research and analysis of telecommunications and Internet policy have been presented at the Cato Institute and FreedomWorks.

His insights and views have been frequently reported in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and Business Week. Fortune magazine called John Malone the leading analyst in the industry.

John Malone has served on the Board of Directors of American Fiber Systems acquired by Zayo, Valere Power acquired by Eltek Energy, In Motion Technology acquired by Sierra Wireless, Phaethon Communications acquired by TeraXion, Applied Digital Access acquired by Dynatech, VINA Technologies acquired by Larscom, and Larscom acquired by Verilink. He also served on the University of Dayton Alumni Board of Directors. He holds a BS and MBA from the University of Dayton.