|

Source: Florida Business
& Technology
Florida's Digital Newsmagazine
Title: Meetings Made Easier
Technology Driving Change in Videoconferencing
Business
By Jeffrey D. Zbar
......Technology
is making H. Allen Benowitz change the way he
has run his high-tech business for the past
eight years.
......Benowitz,
who runs one of Miami's oldest court reporting
firms, established a videoconferencing arm in
1989. He is credited with being one of the first
court
reporters to tap the growing demand for taped
depositions and computer-aided transcriptions.
......
Now he is re-tooling Worldwide Videoconferencing.
Instead of just offering videoconference services
to customers who use his facilities, Benowitz
has begun selling equipment to companies that
want to run their own videoconferences.
......It's
a big change-the market is highly competitive,
but it seemed necessary in light of technological
advances. The price of equipment is coming down,
making it possible for companies to set up their
own conferencing centers.
......Further,
advances in PC technology and networks, including
the Internet, are making it far easier for companies
and people to hold their own videoconferences,
right from their desktops.
......As
Benowitz himself puts it, "With a PC-based
system, you have PC functionality in the middle
of your audio video conference."
......Desktop
videoconferencing on a broad basis is probably
a ways off, although those TV commercials from
MCI suggest otherwise.
......Still,
it's a far cry from the early days - less than
decade ago - when Benowitz ran videoconferences
from his downtown Miami offices. He'd bring
a lawyer, court reporter, doctor or pharmaceutical
rep into his video suite, put them in front
of a camera and link them up via satellite with
peers or a deposition subject in another studio
in another city. His clients include Holland
& Knight, Stroock & Stoock & Lavan,
Baker & McKenzie, Shutts & Bowen, Vincam
Human Resources, Citicorp, J. Walter Thompson,
Coopers & Lybrand, and Pediatrix.
......The
emergence of inexpensive PC hardware with simple
videoconferencing attachments has forced Benowitz
to change his business model. The new advances
have begun to make videoconferencing, or at
least video calls, available to a wider audience.
The PC industry also has pushed "open standards"
for the technology that have made it easier
for different PC's and video systems to work
together.
......While
there still are bugs in the systems, videoconferencing
has become a more affordable option for small
and mid-sized businesses. Consider that Worldwide,
which charged $650 an hour a few years ago,
now charges as little as $325 an hour today,
depending upon bandwith, services and number
of sites included in a videoconference.
......Those
$650-per-hour fees reflected the high cost of
entering the business. When Benowitz launched
Worldwide Videoconferencing and the LINC Videoconference
Network, or Legal Image Network Communications,
a court reporting videoconference association,
to band together a slew of host sites around
the country, a single conference center cost
upward of $100,000. And it still takes two sites
to create a conference.
......With
prices down, more players are getting into the
act. Industry statistics reflect what is happening.
At the end of 1995, sales of videoconferencing
systems had increased to $2.42 billion, up 58
percent from $1.53 billion in 1994, says Benowitz,
whose company experienced a burst of activity
this year. "It seems like the world has
awakened to it overnight."
......"This
used to be something just for Fortune 100 corporations,"
adds Jim Perretty, vice president with Boca
Raton-based Stratosphere Multimedia Corp., another
videoconferencing firm that competes with Benowitz.
......Benowitz,
who started out in 1989 by specializing in legal,
medical and corporate videoconferencing, says
he has not experienced a significant drop in
business; in fact, he says 1996 revenue was
up 50 percent, although he won't release numbers.
......But,
since January, Worldwide Videoconferencing has
been selling equipment and servicing it on behalf
of businesses setting up their own facilities.
......The
company represents systems such as VTEL, Sony
and PictureTel, which was considered the industry
leader, until standards-based platforms opened
up its technology to others. VTEL, for example,
offers an upgradable PC-based, application-specific
system designed for medium-to large- businesses.
The company, whose product works with LANs and
the Internet with its Windows 95 graphical interface,
is ideal for telemedicine, legal, banking, and
finance because it allows for imaging. VTEL
has since garnered upward of 55 percent of the
telemedicine market, says Benowitz, PictureTel,
meanwhile, offers a product ideal for small
and large businesses.
......The
switch in strategy poses an interesting question
for a 55-year-old Brooklyn native. Will the
desire to sell equipment cannibalize the business
he now offers at his own facilities?
......Benowitz
doesn't believe that will be the case. He sees
what he is doing as just another advance, similar
to what happened when he began using videoconferencing
to take depositions-a strategy that could have
cut into his core business but didn't, thanks
mainly to overall demand for a wider range of
services.
......Manufacturers
themselves are not yet convinced that even PC-based
systems are the near-term answer or competition
for dedicated videoconferencing companies. Though
Sony offers a stand-alone system that can be
used within a large office environment as desktop
videoconferencing over a LAN, WAN or private
intranet, a single station starts at $21,500,
says Roger Ralston, director of sales MPC Business
Communications, a Pompano Beach-based distributor
of Sony videoconferencing systems in Florida.
......Mr.
Benowitz' company is a comarketing partner with
VTEL, PictureTel and Sony in the sale of videoconference
systems through its resellers, such as MPC.
......Sure,
the price has dropped in recent years, and the
Sony system requires only one high-speed line
to conference with no lag time. The Sony system
even has a built-in "quartet" feature
that can create a conference call between four
sites and present it in a "Hollywood Squares"
image upon screen, says Ralston.
......"People
are buying it for themselves instead of going
to centers," Ralston says. But, he adds,
"It's still a large investment to get started."
......Benowitz
himself is not convinced that off-the-shelf,
store-bought systems are without limitation,
most pressing of which is the lack of bandwidth.
Assuming the systems meet certain transmissions
standards, the "myth" of desktop videoconferencing
still will frustrate people, he says. Even with
applications that double transmission speeds,
"it's still not ISDN," Benowitz says.
......"They'll
say, 'Hey, I have a $600 software program, I'm
into videoconferencing.' The reality is it's
'Max Headroom,' with between two and seven frames
per second," says Benowitz. Television
and traditional video spins at between 25 and
30 frames a second. "But people get disappointed
when they don't have what they expect. If you're
going to share documents, voice and video, you've
got to have bandwidth," he says.
|