By Paul Travis
When the University of Notre Dame began making plans for a new
But a few things havent changed: Notre Dame likes having the 631 dialing exchange exclusive to the school. It also isnt eager to run its own phone system. And it wants technology flexible enough to adapt to new services and applications.
Thats why Notre Dame decided to stick with SBC, and in early November signed a multimillion contract for a hosted VoIP system that will be deployed over the next several years and eventually serve around 16,000 students, faculty, and staff. It is one of the largest hosted VoIP contracts to date, according to industry analysts and SBC.
With its Centrex contract due to expire at the beginning of 2006, the university looked at other options, including buying voice switches and setting up its own system, or bringing in another service provider.
«SBC convinced us they are very much committed to the digital revolution and that
The SBC PremierSERV Hosted IP Communications Service will be deployed in phases over the next several years, starting with a pilot for a few hundred users in the first quarter of 2005. If that works as expected, the university will begin to cutover buildings to the new system throughout next year and into early 2006. The new contract runs for three years and can be renewed for two more years. Latimer wouldnt provide financial details.
One key element is the ability to provide and charge for tiered services in a changing technology environment where it isnt clear what services students or the university will want. «Im not sure that the traditional model of providing voice services to students is applicable in the future,» Latimer says. The majority of students have cell phones with free or inexpensive
Notre Dame also wants to be prepared in case VoIP shifts into becoming
The more sophisticated features offered by a VoIP system will be used by faculty and university employees who work in call centers or do fund raising, Latimer says. The system will offer a single
Going with a hosted VoIP system lets businesses and organizations move to the latest technology without a lot of hassle, says William Stofega, a senior analyst at IDC. «In some cases it allows the IT staff to retain some control without the headaches of security and upgrades,» he says. «The IT staff can handle the fun part: developing customized applications.»
For the phone companies, which have been selling Centrex service to businesses for decades, a key measure of success will be how well they shift those customers onto newer, hosted VoIP services. Says Stofega: «On one hand, SBC loses a Centrex customer. On the other they gain a hosted customer and are selling managed services.»