Push voice is the next mobility must-have

Push voice, coupled with mobile email, has the potential to make the smartphone a true mobile office.

Push voice, incorporating PBX functionality into mobile devices, is the next big step in mobility and will be the cornerstone of a true mobile enterprise, according to recent research by J.Gold Associates, a research and advisory firm.

According to Jack Gold, the firm's principal and founder, companies have embraced push email for workers on the go to the point where for many it has become an absolute necessity. Push voice, however, has been somewhat dormant.

Gold said companies need to think about mobilising forms of communication other than email, especially since he estimates that roughly 75% of enterprise workers are mobile at least 25% of the time.

"While email is deemed mission-critical by most companies and users, it is not the only communications medium that is needed," he wrote. "Despite the popularity and growth of email generally, voice is still the dominant form of workplace communications, especially for mobile workers."

Gold estimated that roughly 10 million to 12 million enterprise users employ mobile push email, but between 250 million and 350 million mobile workers use a cell phone for voice communications.

"Most communications in business today are still via phone, especially with a mobile device," he said.

Companies and users have grown accustomed to desk phone functionality, he said, and while the transition to similar functionality on a mobile device may not be easy, it is a natural progression.

"Like push email, which keeps mobile users in touch by providing data, the need exists for pushing additional forms of corporate communications to mobile users wherever they are located," Gold said. "Voice is a mission-critical function in nearly all organisations, which makes the features and functions of the ubiquitous telephone PBX compelling."

Gold said such features as call monitoring, speed dialling, leased lines, call flows and conferencing have been available within office environments for years but have yet to be easily configured for and available to mobile users.

But enterprises will soon embrace push voice for mobility, he said, estimating that within three to four years more than 25% of highly mobile enterprise users will employ a mobile phone as their sole telecom device. Push voice will accelerate that trend by integrating with corporate systems and complementing other communications such as email and instant messaging.

Integration of PBX functions into the BlackBerry user base is the reason BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion last year purchased Ascendent Systems, which provides enterprise PBX integration with mobile devices. The Ascendent acquisition could make push voice as important as push email, Gold said, since RIM can now use the BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES) for email and enhance it with voice and PBX functionality. That combination, he predicts, will provide many enterprises a path to follow.

"Functions such as receiving direct dial calls; using company designated extensions; utilising leased lines and negotiated rates, especially for international and roaming; full tracking and regulatory compliance records; [and] the ability to limit call origination [and] duration will offer both payback to the organisation and attractive user features and functions," Gold said.

Ascendent is aligned with BlackBerry devices but also works with others, he said. And all major smartphone players -- such as Nokia, Motorola and Palm -- are sure to follow suit and offer similar compatibility, whether through partnership or acquisition.

Push voice and email, combined with other applications such as IM and presence on mobile devices, have the potential to transform a typical smartphone into what Gold called a "communications central" device.

"The new mission-critical nature of the device, together with more forms of collaboration -- email, voice, IM, apps, presence, Web access -- will create a new model," he said, "making the enterprise mobile smartphone device even more mission-critical than it is today."

Gold said smartphone makers such as RIM, Nokia, Motorola and Palm must transition from the notion of a phone that includes push email to "a fully featured communications hub, with push email, PBX connectivity, VoIP, IM and presence clients." Couple those features with seamless roaming across 3G, Wi-Fi and (soon) WiMax networks, and devices become the core component of the mobile enterprise, connecting to virtually all corporate communications systems and data.

Overall, he said, companies should evaluate and deploy push voice features now, especially if they can be incorporated easily into existing infrastructure like BES. He cautioned, however, that it will be several years before all features are fully available and integrated.

Gold concluded: "Companies that ultimately fail to deploy these capabilities will lose not only productivity enhancements enabled by such systems but will also lose a competitive edge that can provide greater efficiency and lower cost."

 

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