Posts filed under 'voip'

VoIP Tender Toolkit - Part 1: Preparation

This is the first installment in the “VoIP Tender Toolkit” series. I hope the complete series will provide everything you need to prepare, issue and evaluate a 500 - 5,000 seat VoIP Tender. Template documents will be provided where helpful. This series is based on actual experience and incorporates my lessons learnt over the years. In this first part I will run through the considerations before you start; defining business objectives, activities and expected timelines, budgeting, and resources required.
 
Business Objectives
Start the entire VoIP tender process by defining your business objectives. Too often have I seen people forget that technology is a business enabler and that business objectives provide the focus of a tender not technical objectives. Business objectives provide the reference point to make decisions towards getting the best value for money tender result, this may not necessarily be the best value for money technical result! (indeed it may not even result in a VoIP solution!).  In my experience tenders commenced with a technical objective too often result in a poor business result and are consequently deemed a failure.
 
The following table provides some common business objectives and the potential VoIP tender results. Hopefully this highlights the reason for stating business objectives rather than technical objectives.
 
Example Business Objectives
Potential Tender Results
Provide telephony to a new office site
Installation of a PABX, extension of services from an existing PABX or installation of hosted telephony service.
Lower telephony costs
Renegotiation of call rates, renegotiation of maintenance contracts, installation of lower cost telephony solutions (PABX, extended services or hosted services) or outsource of telephony support
Increase business efficiency
Integration of business software and telephony services (e.g. in call centre environments), solutions to save telephony administration time or new solutions to support under served business functions (e.g. home or mobile workers)
 
Activities and timelines
The activities and related timelines for preparing and releasing a VoIP tender are presented in the following table. In general, the timelines are the same for any size company over 500 ends. Larger or more complex requirements need more work but usually have more people involved. The first step “Preparation” is the focus of this post, and the remaining steps except “await supplier responses”! will be the focus of the next parts in this series.
 
Step
Timeline
Preparation Month 1
Business requirements gathering Month 1
User requirements gathering Month 2
Technical requirements gathering Month 2
Technical environment survey Month 2
Tender strategy development Month 3
Tender development and release Month 3
Await supplier responses Month 4
Tender evaluation Month 5
Contract negotiation Month 6

Yes, the above table provides an elapsed estimate of 6 months! I’ve seen slightly quicker, but never less than 5 months. In an organisation larger than 500 people it just is not possible to get agreement and approvals any faster. It can be up to 9 months if a second stage of tendering is completed. Organisations who try to complete a tender in less time often miss key detail, make mistakes, and end up regretting it.

Budget
Too many organisations spend loads of money on running a tender process only to find they can’t afford any of the resulting proposals. Having a budget to produce the tender will manage short term cost expectations and having an idea on the resulting proposal cost range will manage the medium to long term cost expectations.

Item
Budget range
Tender process  ± 50%
Internal labour (see next section for details) 29 weeks of effort
Consultant labour 5 weeks of effort
Tender result  ± 30%
“no frills” telephony
around £12
(per end per month over 5 years + call costs)
“advanced” telephony
extra £5 for call centre functions
extra £5 for voice recording
(per end per month over 5 years + call costs)
Legacy or existing system integration 10% of the overall solution otherwise not worthwhile
 
Please note I have provided a cost per end point per month over 60 months as this is a reasonable life span of a telephony solution. The estimates include ongoing maintenance costs but do not include call charges. VAT in addition. The budget accuracy of 30% for the tender result and 50% of the labour resources acknowledges differences in solutions and deal size (labour varies significantly more). Vendor finance options will only effect cash flow but not the total cost (there’s no such thing as a free lunch!). The number of sites in a solution wont have a significant effect on the budget accuracy as long as each site has at least 100 users.
 
So as an example using the above table, a 500 user solution including 50 call centre seats including voice recording, will cost over 5 years about £270,000 to £500,000 + call costs + internal and consultant labour + integration costs (500 “no frills” × £12 × 60 months + 50 “advanced” × (£5 call centre + £5 voice recording) × 60 months = £390,000, 70% = £273,000, 130% = £507,000).
 
Resources required
The following table provides a breakdown of the labour estimate in the previous section. As usual the estimate is a guide and will hopefully be useful in preparing your own estimates.
 
Role
Activities
Weeks effort  ± 50%
Project sponsor
(accountable for the tender outcome)
Essential input to Preparation stage, Tender Strategy Development Stage and signoff and steering for key decisions. 3
Project manager
Manage and co-ordinate activities and resources from beginning to end. 16
IT resources
Key input to technical requirements gathering, technical environment survey and tender evaluation stages. 3
Business representative resources
Key input to business requirements gathering and tender evaluation stage. 3
Procurement resources (may include legal and finance representation)
Key input to tender development and release, tender evaluation and contract negotiation. 4
  Total 29
 
Consultant time was estimated at 5 weeks, this covers assistance across all stages of the process, but in particular insight and experience in the tender development and release, the subsequent evaluation and contract negotiation. Unless your company has specific VoIP tender experience I would not recommend excluding this resource as the benefit will far outweigh the cost when compared to the overall solution budget.
 

Summary
Successful preparation for a VoIP tender will mean your business objectives have been clearly defined, a schedule defining tasks, timelines and resources will have been developed and expectations on the approximate financial values resulting from the tender will have been managed with your project sponsor.

Part 2 in this series will cover business, user and technical requirements gathering.

Add comment February 23rd, 2009

How significant are ShoreTel’s claims about the ‘hard’ benefits of its UC solution?

One of the biggest criticisms leveled at UC provider sales pitches is their focus on ‘soft’ benefits, such as time saved for the average office worker and increased productivity. Of course, what most organisations need in order justify a UC purchase decision is reliable evidence of ‘hard’ benefits such as cost reduction and accelerated time to market. ShoreTel’s promotion of the energy efficiency of its solution provides an interesting example of a UC provider trying to address that need.

ShoreTel’s claims are based on a report it commissioned from the Tolly group to investigate the power consumption of its IP switches and IP phones relative to those from other suppliers. These tests were then used as the basis for projections of the typical energy consumption of ShoreTel’s UC solution in various deployment scenarios. These projections estimate that a ShoreTel UC system on a network made up of 350 users at a main site and 19 branch offices would use 45% less power than Cisco’s UC offering. At a single site with 65 users, the saving would be 44%, and that deployment at a main site with 1500 users plus one regional and one branch office site would produce savings of 37%.

On the one hand, it’s shame that the figures that ShoreTel is quoting here are only projections - many customers will only be convinced if they see numbers that originate from real world deployment. On the other, ShoreTel should be commended for having enough faith in its own technology to risk a severe loss of credibility if customers make a purchase on the strength of these energy saving projections, and then fail to achieve a comparable result in the field.

Add comment November 2nd, 2008

News roundup October 29

inrich-roundup.jpg

Cisco has announced a program to provide TelePresence to US universities

Cisco has announced the end-of-life for their Attendant Console product

Avaya has announced the release of its SIP Application Server built on the back of their Ubiquity acquistion last year

Siemens has released a voice/ WiFi/ GSM enterprise mobility solution

Microsoft has announced Azure, its new cloud computing platform

Mitels 3300 platform is now certified with Microsoft OCS2007

Cisco WebEx PCNow has announced 5GB free online storage to compliment the remote access service

Microsoft has announced OCS2007 release 2 with enhanced mobile client and PBX features

Add comment October 30th, 2008

VoIP phone applications; real value or just a novalty?

The variety of applications available to run directly on VoIP phones is quite amazing; world clocks, weather forecasts, stock tickers, room booking systems and even remote surveillance.  These applications definitely provide a novalty value but do they actually provide any business benefits?

At Inrich Consulting we only see true businesses benefits when phone based applications remove the need for more expensive physical alternatives such as a PC, touchpanel or information kiosk. In other words the benefit is cost savings! Generally this excludes applications for desk based office workers as they already have a PC … and lets face it, no matter how cool it is to have a stock ticker on your phone there is no way you will continue to use this once the novalty has worn off.

Example locations that do benefit from phone based applications include; booking systems in meeting rooms, ordering systems in hotel rooms, paging systems in hospital wards, and staff directories in office corridors and reception areas. In these circumstances the phone can provide specific functionality where a more expensive PC, touchpanel or information kiosk would have been required.

The growth of phone based applications is directly due to vendors providing software development kits for third parties. Companies such as Berbee, LiteScape, and Eporta have found the potential development opportunities for customers has grown as the installed base of VoIP phones, with processing power of small PCs, has grown.

A specific and more unusual example from a project we have been involved with is the implementation of an audio visual room control system. The above screen shot shows the interface. Users within this banking client could control everything from the lights, displays, and change channels on an IPTV enabled set-top box by using the touch screen on the phone.

The overall solution used products from Pivod (for the XML applications), Starbak (for the IPTV content delivery) and from AMX (the room control systems which were IP enabled).

1 comment October 29th, 2008

Effective methods for evaluating and selecting an enterprise VoIP solution

I recently had the opportunity to chair the Enterprise VoIP Forum 2008 in London. As part of this event I provided a brief presentation on effective methods for evaluating and selecting an enterprise VoIP solution which is repeated in the below slideshow. The presentation focused on four areas with a proposed checklist to consider for each:

  1. VoIP requirements
  2. Short listing potential suppliers
  3. Tender documentation
  4. Solution evaluation and selection 

 

If you are considering undertaking a VoIP project this may provide some useful information.

Add comment October 5th, 2008


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