Nearly 80 per cent of service providers responding to a poll are planning to
offer fixed-mobile convergence (FMC) services by April 2008, a sharp increase
over the number planning to offer such services this year.
A study by
Infonetics
Research suggests that service providers see increased average revenue per
user, and keeping traffic within the network, as the main benefits of offering
FMC services.
Over half the service providers interviewed also expect to have a full IMS
solution deployed in at least some part of their network by 2010, but
interestingly a significant number say they have no plans to deploy a full IMS
offering.
"Despite the fact that 71 per cent of the service providers we interviewed
for a similar study last year expected to use IMS architecture in 2007, we
cautioned that providers were being optimistic with their uptake plans," said
Stéphane Téral, principal analyst at Infonetics for service provider VoIP, IMS
and FMC.
"With this year's study, we now have concrete evidence of IMS adoption
shifting out: just over a quarter are using IMS in 2007 and less than half plan
to do so in 2008."
According to the poll, the main drivers for carriers adopting VoIP continue
to be reducing operating expenditure, growing revenue and adding margin-rich
services, all aided by an increasing broadband penetration and the maturation of
next-gen voice technology.
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