Twenty-four million pay for VoIP

Key to success? Don't call it VoIP

By Sylvia Carr, 17 August 2006 14:55

NEWS

Twenty-four million people worldwide pay to use retail voice over IP (VoIP) services, new research has shown.

The number of retail VoIP subscribers jumped more than 80 per cent to 18.7 million during 2005 - or 24 million if you add users of PC-to-phone services such as Skype, according to Point Topic's IP Telephony report.

Based on reported revenues, the analyst estimates that one-sixth of VoIP subscribers used Skype in the fourth quarter of 2005.

The Asia-Pacific region has the largest share of VoIP users but the fastest growth is seen in Europe and the US.

The number of VoIP subscribers in Europe grew nearly threefold to 5.3 million during 2005 and is expected to pick up even more in 2006.

France has the highest VoIP adoption in Europe with 2.8 million paying subscribers, led by new carriers Free and neuf selling easy-to-use VoIP services - though incumbent France Telecom's VoIP push has also proved fruitful as it raised subscriber levels more than fivefold in 2005.

In the UK, BT's VoIP offering had "relatively few" subscribers by the end of 2005 but was picking up in early 2006, said the analyst.

One key success in the US, according to Point Topic, is marketing the service not as 'VoIP' but describing it in simple terms customers understand such as 'digital telephone'.

Comments

There is 1 comment. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Andrew Lewis

    Hardly suprising BT are lagging behind. They offered me call rates for PSTN which were less than their VOIP rates!
    Apart from this they are still 3 times the price on VOIP as my current provider (legend.co.uk). With Legend call quality is very good and at only 0.9p/min uk landline and 1.1p/min most landlines in europe! Well worth looking at. I use this service with Draytek VOIP routers. This is all hardware based. I have tried softphones before and the call quality is not so good as well as being tied to a pc.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ