ASIA
17 December 2015
Enterprise Messaging Apps in Australia
Enterprise Messaging Apps will be the Next Big Thing in Australia’s UC Market, says Frost & Sullivan.
An emerging class of start-ups in the areas of voice, video and messaging are set to disrupt the Australian UC market, according to Frost & Sullivan.
Australia’s mature, on-premise Unified Communications (UC) market experienced growth of 3.6% over 2013 to 2014, contributed largely by revenue increases from contact centre solutions and
conferencing. The main applications that contributed to growth were IP telephony and email.
As on-premise UC solutions loses out on account of the capital intensive equipment and infrastructure it requires, Frost & Sullivan expects organisations to gradually deploy a combination of on-premise solutions and hosted, managed and cloud based UC solutions.
Frost & Sullivan’s new report, Australian Unified Communications (UC) Market 2015, forecasts that with hosted, managed and cloud based UC solutions gaining preference, the on-premise UC market will decline at a CAGR of -0.9% from 2015 to 2021, with a decline rate of -1.3% in 2021.
IP telephony, IM/Presence and Conferencing and Collaboration solutions will remain the largest applications in the overall UC market. Instead of using email, SMS or voice, workers are using IM platforms as a communication channel. Many large and medium sized organisations have set up WhatsApp’s groups to communicate and small and medium businesses use OTT applications that bypass telcos for free voice communications, said Wonjae Shim, Research Analyst, ICT Practice, Australia & New Zealand, Frost & Sullivan.
“Enterprise messaging platforms will become the new primary interaction channel for enterprise users. Similar to consumer messaging platforms like WhatsApp, WeChat and Line revolutionising the messaging market over the last five years, IM is expected to become a critical communication tool in enterprises. Frost & Sullivan expects emerging enterprise messaging
platforms, such as Slack, Atlassian’s HipChat and Soma, to make an impact in the messaging, IM and collaboration market amongst SMBs,” Shim added.
Skype for Business is expanding its capabilities as a UC platform to address conferencing, collaboration, IM and voice communications. The highest adoption rates are from the corporate, government, education and medical sectors and the customer base now includes traditional UC vendor customers, which use Cisco, Avaya and Alcatel-Lucent, as well as users of
other Microsoft products. Microsoft has made a number of key wins in the BFSI, healthcare and public sector, demonstrating its growing strength in this area.
Audrey William, Head of ICT Research, Frost & Sullivan Australia & New Zealand said the UC applications where revenues declined the most over the past three years are video conferencing and collaboration. Traditional vendors in video infrastructure and end-points, such as Cisco and Polycom, have been most affected by the market slowdown. “However, the introduction of a multicontroller unit or a video bridge, and its ability to integrate endpoints from different vendors, is driving new avenues of growth. Through deploying managed video services, or using self-service video conferencing solutions, companies are realising the benefits of saving on business travel and increasing productivity through greater collaboration and utilisation of remote workers. The most notable providers of the software-based video bridge are Acano and Pexip. Cisco’s recent announcement of its intended acquisition of Acano will allow Cisco the
ability to integrate a wide number of endpoints and strengthen its position in the video and collaboration markets,” explained William. Cisco, Microsoft and Avaya dominate Australia’s UC market with a combined market share of 49.1%. In 2014, Cisco and Microsoft recorded minor revenue increases, while Avaya recorded a minor decline in revenue. Other active market players are Alcatel-Lucent, Mitel, NEC and Shoretel, as well as upcoming UC players such as Interactive Intelligence.
Established service providers in the Australian UC market are Telstra, Dimension Data, Optus and UXC Connect and these channel partners have the largest presence with proven deployment capabilities over several verticals. “Telcos are able to be competitive in providing hosted, cloud and managed service offerings due to their ability to provide carrier services and wireless network services. They are also investing in areas such as IoT to increase dominance across the entire ICT landscape, “stated William.
Other emerging competitors in the channel market include systems integrators; namely Generation-e, Icomm, Modality and Kloud. These integrators specialise in providing integration services for Microsoft UC solutions, endorsing the traction Skype for Business is gaining amongst vendors, channels and enterprise customers.
UC solutions form the foundation for many enterprises’ future way of working and organisations are beginning to think about an ‘Office of the Future’. The four main pillars in the Office of the Future - UC, Mobility, Wearables/IoT and Physical Workspace Design are merging to shape how enterprises and employees will communicate and collaborate in the future. Frost & Sullivan sees UC at the centre of this transition as while new technologies emerge, communication and collaboration will always be a critical requirement for businesses. As the market is impacted by
disruptive technologies, UC solutions will evolve to stay relevant in order to service the core need for enterprise communications within all organisations.
Frost & Sullivan Australian UC Market Report 2015, forms a part of the Frost & Sullivan Enterprise Communications Research program. All research services included in this subscription provide detailed market opportunities and industry trends evaluated following extensive interviews with market participants.
the investment community. Is your organization prepared for the next profound wave of industry convergence, disruptive technologies, increasing competitive intensity, Mega Trends, breakthrough best practices, changing customer dynamics and emerging economies? Contact us: Start the discussion
Corporate Communications – Asia Pacific
P: +61 (02) 8247 8927
F: +61 (02) 9252 8066
E: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Australia’s mature, on-premise Unified Communications (UC) market experienced growth of 3.6% over 2013 to 2014, contributed largely by revenue increases from contact centre solutions and
conferencing. The main applications that contributed to growth were IP telephony and email.
As on-premise UC solutions loses out on account of the capital intensive equipment and infrastructure it requires, Frost & Sullivan expects organisations to gradually deploy a combination of on-premise solutions and hosted, managed and cloud based UC solutions.
Frost & Sullivan’s new report, Australian Unified Communications (UC) Market 2015, forecasts that with hosted, managed and cloud based UC solutions gaining preference, the on-premise UC market will decline at a CAGR of -0.9% from 2015 to 2021, with a decline rate of -1.3% in 2021.
IP telephony, IM/Presence and Conferencing and Collaboration solutions will remain the largest applications in the overall UC market. Instead of using email, SMS or voice, workers are using IM platforms as a communication channel. Many large and medium sized organisations have set up WhatsApp’s groups to communicate and small and medium businesses use OTT applications that bypass telcos for free voice communications, said Wonjae Shim, Research Analyst, ICT Practice, Australia & New Zealand, Frost & Sullivan.
“Enterprise messaging platforms will become the new primary interaction channel for enterprise users. Similar to consumer messaging platforms like WhatsApp, WeChat and Line revolutionising the messaging market over the last five years, IM is expected to become a critical communication tool in enterprises. Frost & Sullivan expects emerging enterprise messaging
platforms, such as Slack, Atlassian’s HipChat and Soma, to make an impact in the messaging, IM and collaboration market amongst SMBs,” Shim added.
Skype for Business is expanding its capabilities as a UC platform to address conferencing, collaboration, IM and voice communications. The highest adoption rates are from the corporate, government, education and medical sectors and the customer base now includes traditional UC vendor customers, which use Cisco, Avaya and Alcatel-Lucent, as well as users of
other Microsoft products. Microsoft has made a number of key wins in the BFSI, healthcare and public sector, demonstrating its growing strength in this area.
Audrey William, Head of ICT Research, Frost & Sullivan Australia & New Zealand said the UC applications where revenues declined the most over the past three years are video conferencing and collaboration. Traditional vendors in video infrastructure and end-points, such as Cisco and Polycom, have been most affected by the market slowdown. “However, the introduction of a multicontroller unit or a video bridge, and its ability to integrate endpoints from different vendors, is driving new avenues of growth. Through deploying managed video services, or using self-service video conferencing solutions, companies are realising the benefits of saving on business travel and increasing productivity through greater collaboration and utilisation of remote workers. The most notable providers of the software-based video bridge are Acano and Pexip. Cisco’s recent announcement of its intended acquisition of Acano will allow Cisco the
ability to integrate a wide number of endpoints and strengthen its position in the video and collaboration markets,” explained William. Cisco, Microsoft and Avaya dominate Australia’s UC market with a combined market share of 49.1%. In 2014, Cisco and Microsoft recorded minor revenue increases, while Avaya recorded a minor decline in revenue. Other active market players are Alcatel-Lucent, Mitel, NEC and Shoretel, as well as upcoming UC players such as Interactive Intelligence.
Established service providers in the Australian UC market are Telstra, Dimension Data, Optus and UXC Connect and these channel partners have the largest presence with proven deployment capabilities over several verticals. “Telcos are able to be competitive in providing hosted, cloud and managed service offerings due to their ability to provide carrier services and wireless network services. They are also investing in areas such as IoT to increase dominance across the entire ICT landscape, “stated William.
Other emerging competitors in the channel market include systems integrators; namely Generation-e, Icomm, Modality and Kloud. These integrators specialise in providing integration services for Microsoft UC solutions, endorsing the traction Skype for Business is gaining amongst vendors, channels and enterprise customers.
UC solutions form the foundation for many enterprises’ future way of working and organisations are beginning to think about an ‘Office of the Future’. The four main pillars in the Office of the Future - UC, Mobility, Wearables/IoT and Physical Workspace Design are merging to shape how enterprises and employees will communicate and collaborate in the future. Frost & Sullivan sees UC at the centre of this transition as while new technologies emerge, communication and collaboration will always be a critical requirement for businesses. As the market is impacted by
disruptive technologies, UC solutions will evolve to stay relevant in order to service the core need for enterprise communications within all organisations.
Frost & Sullivan Australian UC Market Report 2015, forms a part of the Frost & Sullivan Enterprise Communications Research program. All research services included in this subscription provide detailed market opportunities and industry trends evaluated following extensive interviews with market participants.
About Frost & Sullivan
Frost & Sullivan, the Growth Partnership Company, works in collaboration with clients to leverage visionary innovation that addresses the global challenges and related growth opportunities that will make or break today's market participants. For more than 50 years, we have been developing growth strategies for the global 1000, emerging businesses, the public sector andthe investment community. Is your organization prepared for the next profound wave of industry convergence, disruptive technologies, increasing competitive intensity, Mega Trends, breakthrough best practices, changing customer dynamics and emerging economies? Contact us: Start the discussion
Contact
Donna JeremiahCorporate Communications – Asia Pacific
P: +61 (02) 8247 8927
F: +61 (02) 9252 8066
E: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.