Hotel PBX: The Road To IP
Hotel guests expect simple communications and efficient services, and IP PBX systems are meeting the challenge, at a lower cost to hotels. Hotels rely on a complex web of guest applications to deliver these services, and hotel IT decision makers should choose an IP migration strategy that takes critical service applications into consideration. With the right tools and equipment, hotels can reap the benefits of IP telephony, while avoiding the risks and pitfalls.
Almost every hotel has one: a private branch exchange (PBX), telephone switching equipment that routes and processes calls using the public telephone network, facilitating commonly available features like voice mail, call forwarding and intercom. In hotels, PBX systems manage the thousands of telephone activities throughout the building each day, and are often integrated with important guest service applications such as Property Management Systems (PMS) and Customer Service Automation (CRM). While these behind the scenes activities are invisible to guests, the PBX is critical to the daily operation of the hotel. Today’s hotel guest expects an ever-increasing array of communication services, from email to fax, and hotels must meet the competitive challenge with the best possible technology.
IP PBX systems, which have taken hold among enterprise users, are becoming the new epicentre of services at hotels. With an IP PBX, features such as real-time billing and intelligent speech recognition are simplifying guest services and check out. As adoption of this technology moves forward, however, hotels are challenged to find the right migration path from a traditional to an IP PBX. Deploying an IP PBX is a significant undertaking, and hotels should consider how their trusted applications will integrate with the IP PBX. The IT and MIS staff of hotels should know that there are several options to choose from when deciding to make the transition to IP telephony.
PBX in Hotels: A Short History
Until recently, hotel phone service was a relatively simple technology, consisting of a service provider, a PBX system that routed calls, a call accounting system for billing as well as handsets in the room. The phone network communicates the price and duration of a guest call to the Property Management System (PMS).
The new generation of PBXs offers CRM, computer telephone integration (CTI), video conferencing, data streaming, content delivery network support, storage area network support, and voice over IP (VoIP).
Based on Frost & Sullivan’s latest report, the demand for IP PBX will continue to soar over the next five years. In 2005, for the first time since their introduction, shipments of IP PBXs in the United States exceeded traditional PBX. The demand for traditional PBX systems will continue to decline as the need to address the convergence of voice and data transmission increases in importance. In-Stat/MDR expects the number of IP lines shipped in PBX systems to grow from 5.5 million in 2003 to 15.9 million by 2008.
The change in the hospitality industry in handling phone service centers around convergence. The definition of ‘communications’ has expanded to encompass voice, fax, data, video and email traffic.
Today, as technology has worked its way into every aspect of our everyday life, people also expect these conveniences when traveling. Expectations for communication services are essential to the majority of hospitality guests. It is imperative for a sophisticated communications management system to account for telephone charges as well as internet usage, equipment fees, surcharges and taxes – all in real-time.
The convergence of voice and data onto a single architecture is occurring mainly on Internet Protocol (IP). The argument being made for IP communications centers on the fact that most hotels have a data network already in place, and the network usually has unused bandwidth, that could be used to carry voice calls.
Understanding PBX Systems
In a hotel environment, the PBX is required not only to process and route telephone calls, but to connect to critical applications. Some of these hotel-specific applications include:
- Station Message Detail Recording (SMDR) – a record of calls originated or switched by the PBX
- E911 alerting – a critical application that ensures EMT personnel can identify which room placed a 911 call
- Call Accounting - accounts for telephone charges, internet usage, equipment fees, surcharges and taxes in realtime, facilitating accurate and efficient guest billing
- Property Management System (PMS) – the property management system is the tracking centre for all guest activities throughout a hotel.
Advantages of IP PBX in Hotels
Since becoming the de facto standard in data communications over the last decade, IP has been heralded as the new frontier for voice communications. While VoIP technology adoption has been rapid amongst enterprise users, hotels are just beginning to see the benefits of bringing their PBX onto an existing broadband connection. What are the advantanges of IP PBX systems in hotels?
COST SAVINGS
MANY FUNCTIONS, ONE ARCHITECTURE
FLEXIBLE INTEGRATION OF APPLICATIONS
SIMPLIFIED REMOTE MANAGEMENT & MAINTENANCE
HOSPITALITY-SPECIFIC FEATURE SETS ADD VALUE
Clearly, the transition to IP PBX systems offers great promise to hotels. IP systems deliver advanced communications that enhance the guest experience, improve customer service and optimize operational productivity and costs.
Speed Bumps on the Road to IP
While the benefits of IP PBX systems have become widely recognized, hotel IT decision makers need to consider the following stumbling blocks to making a successful IP transition:
LARGE INITIAL INVESTMENT
QUALITY OF SERVICE (QoS) IS UNPROVEN
TRAINING REQUIREMENTS FOR IT STAFF
FEATURES LAG BEHIND
LEGACY APPLICATIONS INCOMPATIBLE
Armed with this information, hotels are faced with a choice: retain the status quo, without the benefits of IP PBX, or upgrade to an IP PBX . PBX replacement carries with it the risk of losing trusted legacy applications, while stretching capital budgets. A few innovative hotels have found ways to navigate this dilemma, with results that other hotels can easily emulate.
Maximizing a Legacy PBX: Hotel Telephone Management (HTM) Ltd.
On the path to complete IP migration, there are transitional solutions that maximize existing PBX systems and networks, while delivering the required IP functionality.
UK based telecom service provider HTM Ltd. understands the challenge of dealing with legacy telecommunications equipment. Many of the hotels they worked with wanted to keep their existing PBX, but gain the benefits of IP – remote management, reduced costs, without the investment required to replace the PBX.
In this example, HTM deployed an IP converter, the Ether232Plus, which connected the Mitel PBX to the hotel’s LAN via the device’s Ethernet port. The solution delivered many of the benefits of IP, without the costs and headache of a PBX replacement, facilitating remote management for more efficient operations: "Our customers require simple, reliable & easily installed products", said Mike Vann, Technical Director of HTM Ltd. "Precidia's Ether232Plus allowed us to connect the customer's Mitel 3300 PBX to the Hotel's Call Management Solution using the PBX's telnet port. With no on site support, the hotel's PBX can now be monitored remotely by contract staff, saving thousands of dollars in resource costs and staff time.”
Replacing the PBX, Keeping the Applications: Tharaldson Communications
You’ve researched the manufacturers, selected an IP PBX to meet your needs, and deployed it successfully. Your only remaining problem is the legacy applications your hotel relies on; they don’t work with the PBX anymore, and the IP versions don’t work well either. Is there a solution to this problem? Tharaldson Communications Inc. (TCI) found one.Tharaldson Communications offers telecommunications solutions and services to the hospitality industry throughout the United States. Among their customer base, PBXs are often the first hospitality system to be upgraded, but critical applications, particularly PMS, are not always available with IP capability. The challenge for Tharaldson was to integrate the new PBX with various existing systems to enable information sharing.
Tharaldson deployed the iPocket232, a compact serial to Ethernet converter, with the Mitel SX 200 ICP. It was a simple, cost-effective method to connect their customers' voice mail, PMS and Station Message Detail Recording (SMDR) systems to the IP PBX. Through networking, hotel operators can activate room phones on check-in, provide enhanced voice mail options and improve call accounting. The iPocket232 seamlessly enables data sharing without changing existing processes so that most operators aren't even aware that it's part of the PBX solution.
The device, which sells for under $100 and is verified by leading PBX manufacturers such as Mitel, provides the bridge between legacy equipment and applications, and newer, more sophisticated IP systems.
More Informed IP PBX Decisions
IP PBX transition strategies for hotels centre around cost and application integration. IP adapters respond to both issues, ensuring a successful migration to IP telephony. The best technology buying decisions are made when a full range of options are presented and reviewed, and Hotel IT managers must consider their budget, tolerance for change, and the extent to which the appropriate technical resources can be deployed. The transition to IP can be incremental, or can be rolled out in one large deployment. When making a decision on IP telephony, Hotels should consider the applications they rely on for efficient service and customer satisfaction, and conduct thorough research on the availability of IP capable versions. Whether a hotel favours an immediate roll out or an incremental approach, a compact IP adapter can help ensure that existing applications continue to run smoothly.
Deepak Wanner is a ‘serial’ entrepreneur, with recognized expertise in the point-of-sale technology market. Before founding Precidia Technologies in 1999, Deepak founded Wann Connection Devices in 1992, where he led the development of protocol converters and data concentrators, which resulted in accelerated deployment of debit services across Canada. Since founding Deepak holds a BSEE from the University of Waterloo and an MBA in Accounting from McMaster University
Precidia Technologies Inc. is a global leader in the design and manufacture of IP access devices for a wide range of industries, including retail payments and building automation. With customers in over 75 countries, Precidia’s unique product line of wired and wireless access devices, including the new compact iPocket232, seamlessly migrate stand-alone serial equipment onto more sophisticated IP networks. For more information, visit Precidia on the web at
Tracy King
Marketing Communications Manager
(613) 592-7557 x. 208
Precidia Technologies, Inc.