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VoWLAN solution and Customer case study

VoWLAN solution and Customer case study. Feb 2006. Our vision on mobility. Enterprise communication goes mobile User experience is key to adoption: profiles, vertical segments Open standards increases interoperability and lower costs Security is not an option. Outline. The solutions

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VoWLAN solution and Customer case study

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  1. VoWLAN solution and Customer case study Feb 2006

  2. Our vision on mobility • Enterprise communication goes mobile • User experience is key to adoption: profiles, vertical segments • Open standards increases interoperability and lower costs • Security is not an option

  3. Outline • The solutions • Infrastructure • Campus infrastructure • Wired and wireless convergence: on & off site • Terminals • Applications • Horizontal • Vertical

  4. Needs/Challenges Cost optimization and cost effective on site mobility Mobile Users are on the increase across all kinds of organizations Extend existing applications for greater value

  5. Foundation for wireless Voice&Data • OmniAccess WLAN Switches • Scalable to dozens of Switches • Scalable to 1000’s of Aps • Integrated IDS/Firewall • Integrated and external captive portal • OmniAccess WLAN Access Points • IEEE 802.11a, b and g support • Internal and external antennae • WEP, WPA, WPA II • IEEE 802.3af, Qos • Featuring • Comprehensive Secured Wireless Solution • Scalable to thousands of Aps • Both switch and air-cell redundancy support

  6. Foundation for wireless Voice&Data • Centralized architecture: the solution for efficient voice mobility support • Fast handover • Light Access Points (APs) • All within a single Wireless LAN system • Security • Functionality • Management • High performance and scalability

  7. VoWLAN OmniPCXEnterprise • End to end solution from infrastructure to terminals • Voice service continuity and quality • Quality of service supports voice and data • Handover and Roaming intra&inter-subnet • Various WLAN topologies (L2 or L3) • Open to run on non-Alcatel infrastructure WLAN Switch SVP Server QoS 802.11e OmniSwitch/Satck Light APs

  8. VoWLAN MIPT 300 MIPT 600 • Strong partnership with Spectralink • Mobile set is an other IP set • Access to all voice services • Integration with applications partners • Ability to integrate XML applications partners • Adapted terminals for different profiles & environments

  9. Wired and wireless convergence: campus infrastructureSecure and easy to manage Authentication QoS Per Service • Service • Telephone (Fixed/Mobile) • Welcome Center • Patients Records • ERP • Intranet • Extranet • Internet • Medical Images • Medical Video • Medical Monitoring • Broadcast TV • Public Video • Games • CCTV/Security • Profiles • Management • Resident Doctor • Nurse • Admin • Support Staff • Teacher • Student • Patient • Visitor • External Doctor • Supplier Access Rights Manageable Point-and-click

  10. Because Voice is not just “another packet” on the WLAN • Quality of Service • In building roaming requirements and management • Laptops and wireless phones • Graceful handoffs • Security

  11. Benefits of WLANs that carry Voice&Data Customer Care User Eficiency ROI Increased Business value Increase accessibility -> productivity =>customer care =>cost savings & control

  12. Case Study and Applications

  13. Case Study: University of North Carolina Hospitals • Four hospital, 684 bed facility with 19 remote community clinics • 5,900 full-time employees • 6,800 wired phones behind 5,300 Centrex phone lines • 44 separate nursing units • Approximately 40,000 patients annually

  14. Goals of Wireless Phones for UNC Hospitals • Help make Nurses and Nurse Assistants more efficient • React faster to patient needs • Reduce overhead paging • Free up Hospital Unit Coordinator (HUC) • Integrate wireless phones with existing Nurse Call system • Must be compatible with integration software • Nurses sign-in for phone and patient rooms • Allow non-anchored departments to communicate remotely • EKG Team • Telecommunications • Facilities

  15. Decision Factors and Details • Wireless technology and infrastructure • Cellular signal does not penetrate most of hospital building • Cellular use discouraged around hospital equipment • Cisco WLAN installed on all nursing floors for Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE) • Handset requirements • Phones must be very rugged • 24-hour usage and very physically tough environment • Evaluation process • Looked at proprietary systems and VoIP offerings – tested four vendors • Conducted four week test with one of the hospital’s most demanding nursing unit • Decided on winning system along with nurses

  16. Healthcare Return on Investment Source: Journal of Nursing Administration, June 1995

  17. The Industrial Environment • Business challenges • Maximize uptime and minimize downtime • Difficult to reach technicians and supervisors in large facilities • High-noise levels impair overhead paging systems • End-user devices need to be rugged and durable • Applications • Manufacturing • Distribution centers • Benefits • Key personnel are available in real-time • Eliminate paging delays • Leverage wireless infrastructure

  18. Manufacturing Return on Investment • Pre-installation on-site user survey found that: • 50% of overhead pages went unanswered because personnel could not hear the page • Technicians lost 39 minutes on average due to unanswered calls and time spent traveling to a phone to answer a page • 30 out of 50 customer service calls were abandoned as a result of long hold times • Estimated $5,000 savings per month calculating all personnel time saved • Based on average salaries in a manufacturing plant and 40 hour work week • 10 shop managers • 8 maintenance technicians • 1 customer service representative

  19. The Retail Environment • Retail challenges • Raise customer service levels • Increase store productivity • Competitive advantage • Applications • Store managers and directors • Department supervisors • Loss prevention • Buyers • Benefits • More responsive to customers • Callers spend less time on hold • Managers are always accessible • Eliminate overhead paging for a better shopping environment

  20. The Hospitality Environment • Business challenges • Customer service is critical to the bottom line • Develop and retain customer base for ongoing revenue • Applications • Guest services • Meeting planners • Support staff – security, housekeeping, facilities • Benefits • Faster response to customers • Faster issue resolutions for higher customer satisfaction • Differentiation and competitive advantage • Leverage Wi-Fi infrastructure

  21. The Corporate Campus Environment • Business Challenges • Large environment with diverse needs • Integrating legacy and emerging technologies • Increase productivity • Decrease costly overhead • Applications • Large enterprises • Colleges and universities • Benefits • Eliminate communication barriers • Reduce voicemail and phone tag • Support hoteling and hot-desking environments • Leverage existing communication technologies

  22. Application Summary • Wireless telephony has benefits in all enterprise applications • Improved communication • Employee mobility • Faster response • More productivity • Competitive advantage • Additional factors contribute to Return on Investment • Leverage wireless LAN and IP telephony infrastructure • More efficient utilization of network resources • Reduce cost of telephone moves, adds and changes

  23. Toward a Global Fixed/Mobile ConvergenceA sight to theFuture Common services • Growing mobile use • Push from carriers to convergence coming from network evolution (NGN) • Enabling technologies • IP, SIP, IMS (IP Multimedia Subsystem) • Access: WiFi, xDSL, 3G, BWA, … • Dual-mode phones IMS SIP Service Network Fixed Network Mobile Network NGN SIP IP PBX Application servers IP WLAN Enterprise

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