December 11, 2006
TeleGeography: VoIP Subscribers Increase 18 Percent During 3Q06, But Growth Slowing
By Mae Kowalke, TMCnet Contributor
VoIP is well on its way to becoming a standard household feature, replacing or enhancing traditional phone service, although the initial surge in excitement about the technology may be waning slightly.
That’s what TeleGeography found in its latest look at IP-based voice services, AP said Friday. The research firm found that U.S. subscribers to Internet-based phone services
U.S. subscribers to Internet-based phone services rose 18 percent (to 18.2 million) during the third quarter of 2006. Impressive as that figure sounds, TeleGeography did note that the growth rate for VoIP services slowed for the second straight quarter.
Regardless of the slowdown, AP said TeleGeography reported that the VoIP market is now more than twice as big as it was roughly a year ago. That claim is backed up by figures showing U.S. VoIP revenues for the second quarter of 2006 reached $732 million, up from $298 the previous year.
Most customers probably know VoIP better as the phone service provided by Vonage (News - Alert) (the biggest provider, with 1.95 million subscribers) or their cable provider. The three biggest cable providers of VoIP, AP said, are Time Warner (1.64 million subscribers), Comcast (1.35 million subscribers) and Cablevision Systems (News - Alert) Corp. (1.10 million subscribers).
By the end of this year, AP said TeleGeography predicts, roughly 8.7 percent of U.S. households will subscribe to VoIP services. If that figure pans out, it will represent the addition of 1.5 million subscribers during the fourth quarter, boosting revenues for providers to $2.6 billion—more than twice the 2005 total, just north of $1 billion.
In another recent report, TeleGeography found that the free Internet phone service Skype (News - Alert) is very popular, but doesn’t look like it will have more than a negligible effect on international carrier traffic in the near future.
Free Internet phone services like Skype may be popular, TeleGeography said in that report, but global switched and paid VoIP traffic still dominates the telecom market. Part of the reason for that is only half of Skype’s minutes are international; the service’s subscriber base of 136 million (third quarter 2006 figure) primarily make calls within the U.S.
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Mae Kowalke previously wrote for Cleveland Magazine in Ohio and The Burlington Free Press in Vermont. To see more of her articles, please visit Mae Kowalke’s columnist page. Also check out her Wireless Mobility blog.