Nortel

Is the end in sight for Nortel?

by alec on January 14, 2009

Nortel’s stock price dipped 20% yesterday to a mere 38.5 cents, amid rumours that the company would declare bankruptcy in the face of a $107 million interest payment.  This morning’s Globe and Mail confirms that the Nortel board met last night, and has apparently decided in favour of bankruptcy.

It marks the beginning of the end of a long and painful process – a death by strangulation – that has cost the Ottawa community dearly.  Tens of thousands of jobs have evaporated since Nortel ran into trouble eight years ago, and many more people have lost their life savings as well.

Much like the poorly performing Ottawa Senators, as Nortel’s woes became more apparent, the local tech community lost its swagger – the hubris that led Ottawa to declare itself Silicon Valley North in the late 1990’s. The exodus of employees from the tech sector became a raging torrent, as talented people chose secure government jobs over start-ups throughout the desperate downturn that followed.  With Nortel’s end in sight, perhaps the rest of the community can shake its malaise, take advantage of the enormous and inexpensive talent pool here, and put Ottawa back to work as the Canadian tech center it once was. 

{ 3 comments }

2008: The Year that VoIP died

by alec on December 30, 2008

It seems highly likely to me that at some point in the future we’ll all look back and say that 2008 was the year that the VoIP industry finally died.  With all due respect to my very good friends Jon Arnold, and Andy Abramson, it’s about time.

Voice over IP is just a transport and signalling technology. It’s plumbing.  It may come as a surprise to some of you to know that in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s there was a TCP/IP industry as well. TCP/IP is inarguably plumbing.  As the IP stack became common on all computing devices, TCP/IP went from being a differentiator to a commodity.  The short lived TCP/IP industry was a footnote in the events that spawned the global web. The fact that a VoIP industry has existed is a similar historical footnote to the transformation of the communications industry as a whole.  The VoIP industry was a necessary phase in that transformation; John in the wilderness announcing that the real action is still to come.

And what is the evidence that the VoIP industry is at that turning point?

Where have all the pure play VoIP companies gone?  The last of any consequence still standing is Vonage.  The S&P is down about 40% for the year, and Vonage a whopping 70% save for a miraculous gasp in November at the point of the announcement of their debt having been refinanced.  The fact of the matter is that Vonage is in an impossible place.  Phone calls are cheap enough, Vonage is undifferentiated from any other phone service, and … the cable guys have television.

Will this be the Vonage’s last year for the zombie shuffle?  Or can they pull it off again, and come back from the dead once more?

VoIP events are suffocating too.  VON was a spectacular flameout, despite the best efforts of Jeff Pulver and his band of merry men to transform it from a voice only show into a voice, video and more show.  At least the Pulverites understood where the future was, even if unable to craft a profitable event around those varied interests.  There’ll be more of the same next year, I fear.  Initial reports from this fall were that VoiceCon was an understated and quiet affair.  Lawn bowling anyone?

Another sure sign of the ill health of the VoIP industry is that the feature companies are heading to the deadpool, as well.  2008 started as a year full of VoIP companies trying to make their mark with free “products” that were features in disguise.  Needing to find a revenue model, many turned to advertising and cheap minutes and ran smack into the same wall that Vonage is heading toward at light speed.  Bye bye TalkPlus, Jangl, and so many more.  And suddenly, late in the year, Jaxtr lurched back from the dead with another free calling service…

The smart vendors have learned that consumers don’t want another telephone company built around a complicated piece of technology in their lives and those vendors have done one of three things – they have transformed themselves into a platform play (think Mobivox), into a wholesale player (think Jajah) or into a full-on competitor in the traditional telecom space (think TruPhone and the build-out of their global network).  Taking their cue from BT’s $105 million buyout of Ribbit, these companies are positioning themselves as players that are part of the communications ecosystem, rather than apart from the ecosystem

Why?  Well, the big VoIP stories this year were that ecosystem of applications, and platforms. 

  • Irv Shapiro’s IfByPhone ingeniously connected IVR and Google Analytics, allowing deep measurement and statistical analysis of call center traffic. 
  • Mashup king Thomas Howe demonstrated over and over that with the right tools, building communications applications can be as simple as building web sites. Tom stood on stages in front of audiences, built applications and won contests and plaudits by concretely showing that voice is now just software.  The subtext?  The magic of software lets you embed voice into any application that you like.
  • Like Tom, we at iotum used modern platforms to release Calliflower in record time. We can turn around code on a two week cycle not because we’re smarter than everyone else, but because of the tools we use to do the job. 

Building communications applications with today’s infrastructure compared to what was available even five years ago is comparable to digging a ditch with a backhoe instead of a pickaxe. 

Most interesting, perhaps, is the fact that the service provider and the equipment manufacturer seem to be blurring at the moment.  As the equipment industry has become mired in the complexities of defining and delivering a common application standard (think IMS), carriers are starting to go their own way – BT’s acquisition of Ribbit is an obvious case, but what of Orange’s developer camps (now in their third year) and the way in which the mobile industry has rushed to imitate Apple’s success with iPhone, both platform and store.  These moves betray an understanding that the future is in software, in applications, and in building products that deliver end user value rather than shaving the corners off pennies.

And what of the companies that are failing to make that transformation?  Pity the Nortel shareholder as Nortel has seen over $250 billion in market cap erased in the last five years. 

Ding dong, VoIP is dead.  Let’s dance on its grave and get on with the business of transforming communications in the twenty-first century.

{ 25 comments }

Welcome John Roese

January 28, 2007

Nortel’s CTO John Roese has a blog.  Three entries to date, but it promises to be meaty and interesting. Welcome!

Read the full article →

Microsoft's PBX ambitions?

January 2, 2007

In Microsoft’s tryst with VoIP, Pushpa Sathish describes a preview of Microsoft’s new Communications Server.  Capabilities in the private beta of Office Communications Server 2007 include  placing and receiving voice calls; advanced call routing; streamlined integration with the new unified messaging capabilities in Exchange Server 2007; multiparty conferencing; call holding, forwarding and transferring; and compliance [...]

Read the full article →

The Nortel / Microsoft Alliance: A Savvy Move

July 19, 2006

“ with this alliance agreement … I think you can clearly say that Microsoft with Nortel is in the business not just of unified communications, but in the business of VOIP” Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer I must have had a half dozen people (including my Mum!) draw my attention to the Microsoft (MSFT) / Nortel (NT) [...]

Read the full article →

Pawn to Queen 4

July 18, 2006

The chess pieces have been moving around the VoIP board for the last couple of hours.  I’ve recently gotten mail on: The Comcast Cablevision announcement that it has passed 1,000,000 VoIP subscribers.  Om Malik observes that this is putting pressure on the incumbent carriers, but also makes life much more difficult for Vonage.  Indeed, Cablevision [...]

Read the full article →

Bell Canada Digital Voice

September 10, 2005

Bell’s new Digital Voice offering is a good indication of where they are going strategically with VoIP.  Dismissed by many as too little too late, Bell’s offering is much more than it first appears. First, it really is the first salvo beyond the basic telephone service being offered by Virtual Network Operators like Vonage, or [...]

Read the full article →

Nortel Dumps Location Based Services

August 30, 2005

Spotted this on the news this morning: Nortel Sheds Location Technology.  Andrews Corporation has purchased location services assets from Nortel.  Does Nortel have any other location services businesses, or are they out of this business altogether?  What does this imply for other applications businesses that Nortel is trying to build?

Read the full article →

Nortel: Cutting, cutting, cutting!

August 27, 2002

Nortel issues warning.  More job cuts.  My heart goes out to everyone at Nortel.  

Read the full article →
Alec on LinkedIn Alec on Twitter Alec on Facebook Calliflower on Youtube RSS Feed Contact me