Computerworld
Deloitte picks Nortel for managed videoconferencing
Nortel cites rising fuel prices and airfares as factors in customer win
Matt Hamblen  09 July, 2008 08:09

Global consultancy Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu has chosen Nortel Networks as its managed service provider of telepresence and videoconferencing capabilities in a three-year deal valued in the millions of dollars.

The deal, announced Tuesday, was signed last month, and many independent Deloitte members in 140 countries are likely to sign on to take advantage of the unified videoconferencing capability, said Rick Sullivan, national director for business services at Deloitte Canada.

For Nortel, the deal is recognition that the Canadian network equipment provider has grown in its capabilities for supporting videoconferencing, said Mike Jude, an analyst at Nemertes Research. However, Nortel uses a different model than rival Cisco Systems and provides equipment from well-known videoconferencing vendors Polycom and Tandberg instead of making and selling its own, he said.

Nortel spends US$23 million a year on travel can use telepresence and videoconferencing to recover 385,000 hours of lost productivity, reduce its carbon footprint by up to 4,200 tons and save up to $7 million in US dollars

Sullivan said Deloitte already had Tandberg and Polycom cameras, monitors and related gear with plenty of life left in them that Deloitte wanted to continue to use with Nortel. But primarily, Nortel was picked because it is one of only a few other vendors offering a managed videoconferencing service on a global basis, Sullivan said in a telephone interview.

Sullivan wouldn't reveal the other bidders, and wouldn't comment on the terms of the deal, other than to say that Nortel was right in describing the contract as in the "multimillion dollar range" for managed services and equipment.

Deloitte Canada, with 8,000 workers and 55 offices, has signed on to the global agreement with Nortel. Deloitte Canada previously had a "hit or miss" usage of videoconferencing, with some offices using it very little and finding it unreliable, Sullivan said. "We believe a managed service was the route to take," he said, to gain the use of Nortel's global infrastructure for Multimedia Network Operations Centers.

Under the agreement, Deloitte Canada may build three more high-end telepresence rooms, in addition to one in Toronto already used by board members. Such systems usually require built-in lighting and sound and multiple big-screen, high-definition monitors. "In a high-end telepresence room, people in the other office appear very close and the experience is as close as you can get without being there," Sullivan said. "After you are in a meeting for five minutes, you forget you are in a telepresence meeting."

Nortel will also be called upon to support more typical room-sized systems with one large monitor, as well as desktop videoconferencing.

Deloitte believes videoconferencing can save on travel costs, but the primary savings comes from reducing "wear and tear" on workers who travel, as well as greater productivity. "There's not a huge hard dollar savings if you talk about just cutting out travel costs for air fare and hotel," Sullivan noted, since videoconferencing on a global basis can be expensive. "However, if you count productivity savings and the cost of wear and tear on people, [videoconferencing savings] is a no brainer."

Nortel said in a statement that a company that spends US$23 million a year on travel can use telepresence and videoconferencing to recover 385,000 hours of lost productivity, reduce its carbon footprint by up to 4,200 tons and save up to $7 million in US dollars.

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