The survey was carried out as part of a market development plan for Creative's
ShareVision personal conferencing product. Companies who took part in the
survey included Pirelli, Hilton International, British Gas, Great Universal Stores
and Granada.
ShareVision, the only full VC system to run on ordinary telephone lines, was
launched in the UK twelve months ago. Since then, it has garnered an estimated
10% of the UK market with an installed base including Plymouth College, Rank
Xerox and Shell.
To support the increasing demand for ShareVision, Creative recently appointed
Ingram Micro who will launch a reseller marketing campaign to key vertical
sectors.
"ShareVision was quite a departure for us," said Mandy Birtles, Creative's
marketing manager. "It required an entirely different approach from the
traditional Blaster range, so we're thrilled with the inroads we've made so far.
ShareVision now has a dedicated team behind it and a new distribution deal. We
commissioned the survey to identify market hot spots. The findings, particularly
the demand for a non-ISDN solution, are very encouraging."
Corporates' Plans for Use of Video Conferencing
What's Driving the Growth of Video Conferencing ?
ISDN Seen as Video Conferencing Inhibitor by Many
A typical comment came from Kevin Coleclough, Information Systems Officer
for Arab Bank, who took part in the survey and is now evaluating ShareVision.
"Arab Bank decided to evaluate a system that could be used over standard
telephone lines," said Coleclough. "As a worldwide operation, we support and
train users as far away as New York and Sydney. ISDN does not yet have the
coverage or the standards that we would need from a videoconferencing system.
ShareVision provides the ideal solution without being too expensive."
Team Work is Key Business Benefit
Buying Criteria - Price is Paramount
Future ShareVision Developments
About Creative ...
Creative Technology was founded in 1981 and is based in Singapore. The
company's subsidiaries include Creative Labs in China, Europe, Japan, Taiwan
and the US. The European head office is based at Ruscombe, near Twyford. In
January 1994, Creative opened its technical support group in Dublin, which
provides telephone support to French, German and English-speaking customers
across Europe. Creative's stock is traded on the NASDAQ exchange, with sales
in FY 1995 of $1202.3 million - a 83% increase on 1994.
Of the 200 respondents to the survey, 70% are considering the implementation of
video conferencing products, 9% are already using them and the remaining 21%
have no plans.
The Creative Labs' survey went on to ask about the primary business driver for
installing video conferencing. 33% of corporates intend to use the technology as
part of a teleworking strategy, 55% see video conferencing as a means of cutting
travel budgets and time spent in meetings, the remaining 12% are large sites,
such as manufacturing plants, who plan to use video conferencing to improve
internal communications.
48% of the companies with firm plans to implement video conferencing do not
have ISDN lines installed. Those organisations who intend to use the technology
as part of a teleworking strategy see the installation of ISDN lines as an inhibitor
to their plans. Creative Labs has identified this as a particularly strong niche for
its ShareVision product - the only video conferencing system that can run on
normal telephone lines.
When corporates were asked which features of desktop video conferencing were
considered most important, face-to-face communication was pipped to second
place with 60%. The most useful feature was considered to be application
sharing, with 63% of the vote.
Respondents were asked which factors were most likely to influence their ultimate
choice of product. 73% considered price the most important factor, with a figure of
£1000 per head most widely noted as 'the right price' for large scale (5 units and
above) installations. This view is endorsed by market research company Ovum
who recently identified £1000 as the critical price point to give video conferencing
mass market momentum.
Creative Labs is expanding the ShareVision range to include ISDN systems
(interim product due April '96, multi-party version due October '96) and fully
networked desktop conferencing which will offer a comprehensive range of
products.
Creative Technology Ltd. develops, manufactures and markets a family of sound,
video, software, telephony and multimedia products for PCs under the Blaster
family name, and the ShareVision line of desktop video conferencing products for
PCs. The company's Sound Blaster sound platform enables PCs to produce high-
quality audio for entertainment, educational, music and productivity applications,
and has been accepted as the industry standard sound platform for PC-based
software.
Copyright ©1995, 1996
Creative Labs, Inc.