Feb. 1, 2003 Issue of CIO Magazine | Emerging Technology
Net Talk Gets
Real
Voice over IP isn't an if; it's a when
BY
FRED HAPGOOD
On
Sept. 11, 2001,
the phone company's central switching station serving the headquarters of New
York City's Department of Sanitation (DSNY) was crushed by the collapse of the
Towers. The very agency with line responsibility for the Herculean cleanup
effort that would soon be required suddenly found itself unable to communicate
with its offices and personnel. Even worse, DSNY headquarters soon learned it
was on its own so far as restoring service was concerned; its telecom provider—Verizon—had
its own wounds to look after. But the Sanitation Department's commissioner made
his needs clear to MIS Director Steven Stam: He wanted his telephones back
immediately, whether it was possible or not.
Fortunately Stam had a few functional assets, including a reasonably robust LAN
and the knowledge that there was a fiber data line running through the building
that did not terminate at the destroyed Verizon facility. Strictly speaking, the
fiber didn't belong to his department (it was leased by the Department of
Health), but these were unusual times ("I begged, I borrowed, I was accused of
stealing," Stam remembers), and by Monday, Sept. 24, he had started to lash
those together to support a voice-over-IP (VoIP) network—using the LAN to carry
phone calls and support a gateway into the public switched telephone network (PSTN).
By the following Monday he received the go-ahead for the rollout, and the new
phones began to ring one week later. With technical help from Dimension Data (a
networking infrastructure services company in Reston, Va.), Stam had 285 VoIP
phones running throughout the department's headquarters. Today, with 600 phones
in three buildings on the new system, Stam is beginning to refocus on more
traditional IS issues, such as tracking the reduction in costs. "Fifty percent
of our phone calls are internal," he says. "The savings we get from putting
those calls on the network are already substantial."
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It is widely
accepted that sooner or later VoIP (also widely referred to as IPT, for Internet
protocol telephony) will sweep the board, offering the promises of simpler
management, lower costs and voice-application integration. The analysts predict
it. The hardware and software vendors promote it. Even the telcos have begun to
get in on the act. However, even the most enthusiastic advocate for the
technology has to concede that at least for the moment, old-fashioned switched
connection telephony is pretty good at its core mission: quality calls at high
levels of reliability. VoIP features such as point-and-click dialing, integrated
voice mail/e-mail management and CRM-to-caller-ID integration would be nice to
have, no doubt—but none are yet mission-critical.
Further, VoIP is inherently demanding on the underlying network. Packet delays
and losses that no one would even notice during Web surfing can make voice
applications unusable. At the same time, telephony is perhaps the most important
infrastructure service. From a network services point of view, supporting VoIP
means becoming extremely dependable about delivering very high levels of
performance. Moving to such a demanding technology can mean lots of network
upgrades, acquiring smarter traffic monitoring tools and practices, organizing
end user training sessions, and managing the delicate business of integrating
two service groups (telecom and data services), each with its own culture.
Timing such a labor-intensive step can be a difficult call.
One
Toe at a Time
To date most VoIP transitions seem to be triggered by major changes in the
corporate environment, such as a significant divestiture, acquisition or
relocation. Some companies, however, are finding alternate paths: incremental
transition strategies that move the enterprise toward VoIP one step at a time,
minimizing up-front costs and risks while maximizing education.
FedEx Freight, headquartered in Memphis, Tenn., is the part of FedEx devoted to
the delivery of fairly small ("less than a truckload") units of freight between
businesses. By nature it is a highly distributed operation, with 335 facilities
scattered around the United States. Jeff Amerine, managing director of
Communications Network Services, says that when the impending arrival of VoIP
became obvious, he decided to concentrate on transporting calls among PBXes over
the company WAN, putting desktop telephony and other end user applications on
hold. About two years ago he set up a series of lab tests and field trials. Once
those were completed, he defined a group of offices that were smaller than
average ("Where you could cut your teeth with less risk," he says) and whose
PBXes were nearing the end of their useful lives. He equipped the more than 30
offices that met both criteria with a VoIP-enabled PBX system from a large
global manufacturer and watched WAN traffic behavior for six months. Then he
rolled out the service to another 40 locations. Amerine says he expects to have
all FedEx Freight's facilities sending phone calls over the WAN by 2004.
He notes that the big surprise and lesson of his experience is the large number
of tweaks—mostly hardware and software upgrades—needed to bring network quality
of service up to the level required for voice. He adds that these tweaks are
sufficiently sensitive to local features that an IT department would be
well-advised to develop the necessary network expertise in-house. And
incremental VoIP introductions give the IS department the time to master those
skills.
Even companies with considerable experience with VoIP move cautiously into this
new terrain. Halliburton Energy Services, the Houston energy giant, has been
experimenting with WAN-based VoIP since 1996. (Currently about 15 percent of the
company's more than 100 sites can place calls over the Halliburton WAN; there
would be more, but VoIP is restricted by law in many of the countries where
Halliburton operates.) In late 2000, Andy Knight, who is responsible for
Halliburton's network communications (his actual title is Chief Gadget Guy),
decided to begin moving to IP telephony. His first step was to install an
experimental system that ran in parallel with a conventional PBX and carried
calls only among members of a single office (with no PSTN gateway). He used this
system to support experiments with features and build bandwidth utilization
models.
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By late
2001, Knight had gained enough experience to move the technology into a
production setting. Once again, he picked the site that would deliver the most
education for the least risk, specifically Landmark Graphics' (a wholly owned
Halliburton subsidiary) London office, which was then moving into a new
building. "We had all the business groups there but in a smaller package than in
Houston," Knight says. (The London installation came to about 150 phones.) Like
Amerine, he found that VoIP networks are picky about where they choose to work.
"Laying a cable over a light might not affect performance in a conventional
network, but even low levels of electrical interference can be a problem for
voice," he says. Knight also agrees with Amerine that companies need to have
their own expertise on the technology: "VoIP is still too new to expect
contractors to know all these details themselves."
When Landmark moved to new offices this January, Knight provided desktop
telephony services for procurement, IT, and shipping and receiving, but drew the
line at moving senior management onto the system. "Given the value of the people
and processes involved, we didn't feel we could do justice to an IP installation
at the moment," he says, though a switchover to an all-VoIP system is still
scheduled during the next 18 months. Meantime, Knight is moving on another issue
just as incrementally: introducing a small number of "softphones" that ring
right on laptops or notebooks. "You can check into a hotel, plug in the laptop,
start up the phone, and so far as anyone can see, you're right in your office,"
he says.
Building on Voice
Some systems offer structural points of entry. Recently Bruce Elkington, CIO of
Overlake Hospital in Bellevue, Wash., began thinking about the expense of
installing conventional telephony in a building Overlake was planning to erect.
VoIP seemed a logical alternative, so Elkington looked for a controllable
installation that would give him some experience with the new technology. At one
point he heard that the nurses on the general surgical unit were looking for
cordless phones to supplement the unit's noisy and inefficient paging system.
Elkington knew a wireless data network was already available (and used to serve
the data devices carried by clinicians making their rounds), so he decided to
take advantage of it to carry wireless VoIP.
His experience reinforces the points made by other VoIP implementers: 1. Network
provisioning and configuration requires lots and lots of fine tuning; 2.
Installation partners and contractors seldom know as much as they think they do;
and 3. Once the system is working, it works very well indeed. "It just took a
few days before everyone said, We want one of those things too," he says. Today
Elkington is planning an expansion to 150 VoIP phones and is quietly confident
that he is going to save a lot of money for his employer when the new building
goes up without need for telephone cable. But he strongly endorses the strategy
of defining an "educational" VoIP project before jumping into a major makeover.
"If you don't find a way to get comfortable with the technology first, you're
going to end up with a tin cup," is how he puts it.
These examples illustrate ways to design an incremental strategy: smaller versus
larger offices, peripheral versus central enterprise functions, IS versus the
rest of the company, WAN versus LAN (or vice versa), limiting the number of
initial users, picking the offices with the oldest equipment or by capitalizing
on a preexisting hardware base.
The particular strategy matters less than having one. The reason Steven Stam was
able to work so fast that September, for instance, was that he already had run a
VoIP project for months—in his case, a system that ran off the department LAN
was distributed to headquarters but ran parallel and redundant to the PSTN
system. People could use it as they pleased. And as they drifted on to the
system, Stam was able to cut his teeth on VoIP.
Stam launched his experiment because of trends in the underlying economics. "I
could see that prices kept coming down on the data side and not coming down on
the telecom side," he says. But because he had done so, he was ready when his
world changed in the most unexpected way. It's a useful lesson in this era, when
the world might change as much for any of us at any time.
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Fred Hapgood is a freelance writer based in Boston. He can be reached at
hapgood@pobox.com.
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