Skip to main content

IMS & Wireless Help Marginalized LECs

According to In-Stat, wireline carriers are under attack from every direction these days. It seems the future is wireless and fixed-line operators are becoming marginalized. To compete, their networks must be upgraded, new services introduced and a whole new carrier business model embraced. IMS may be the vision of the NGN, but it's too early to tell. All of this may be true, but there are near term opportunities that wireline carriers can pursue without a forklift replacement to their existing business.

In-Stat research confirms that the enterprise branch office and SMB market segments prefer buying from service providers. They prefer a single supplier. Some favor hosted services, most don't. Remote monitoring may be a requirement, but on-site management is very common. Across nearly all sizes of business, there is universal agreement that a multi-service voice/data gateway device should be part of the solution.

The creation of a new product segment that In-Stat calls the "Multi-Service Business Gateway" represents an opportunity for wireline carriers to expand their SMB market presence by offering a pre-engineered, on-premise, multi-service device, bundled with broadband transport and managed services. Such a hybrid CPE/hosted solution can help bridge the gap between traditional SMB bundles and next-generation carrier services that extend business system functions across the WAN.

Popular posts from this blog

AI Investment Drives Semiconductor Demand

The global semiconductor industry is experiencing a historic acceleration driven by surging investment in artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure and computing power. According to the latest IDC worldwide market study, 2025 marks a defining year in which AI's pervasive impact reconfigures industry economics and propels record growth across the compute segment of the semiconductor market. Semiconductor Market Development IDC’s latest data reveals an insightful projection: The compute segment of the semiconductor market is on track to grow 36 percent in 2025, reaching $349 billion. This segment, which encompasses logic chips powering CPUs, GPUs, and AI accelerators, will sustain a robust 12 percent compound annual growth rate (CAGR) through 2030. These numbers underscore not only current momentum but a structural shift driven by large-scale adoption of AI workloads spanning cloud, edge, and on-premises deployment models. The scale of investment is unprecedented. As organizations ...