For Subscribers

Meet Market Are we ready for a Web-conferenced world?

By Eric Brown

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

Ah, the business trip: delayed flights, air rage, lines for rental cars, road rage and overpriced hotels.

No wonder Web-based conferencing services are taking off. With a typical service, you link to the site with a standard Web browser and use online tools to host your meetings. You can upload PowerPoint slide shows and create annotated whiteboard presentations, and participants respond via text chat and a linked-in voice-conferencing service. The latest packages support file transfers, audience polling, streaming media, videoconferencing and software sharing.

According to Collaborative Strategies LLC (www.collaborate.com), a management consulting firm in San Francisco, the data-conferencing market will grow from $550 million in 1999 to $1.2 billion this year. Web conferencing service providers include 3Cube (www.phonecube.com), Astound Inc. (www.astoundinc.com), Evoke Communications (www.evoke.com), PlaceWare (www.placeware.com), MSHOW.com, WebEx Communications Inc. (www.webex.com) and WebSentric (www.presentation.net).

Web services have come to dominate the conferencing market because they're cheaper and easier to use than the alternatives. Mainstream dial-in audioconferencing companies often make you schedule far in advance or use a special conferencing room. On the low end, you can often get by on a conference call combined with a fax machine, but that usually leads to meetings that are as confusing as they are boring. Marketing pitches in particular cry out for a graphical treatment.

A typical conferencing service offers a limited version or the first few meetings for free, then charges a per-minute, hourly or monthly rate, usually for less than 30 cents per minute or $15 to $40 per month, depending on the services used and the number of participants.

Web-based confer-encing has been around for several years, but only recently has it approached the dependability and feature depth required for business use. The latest services have managed to easily synchronize audioconferencing sessions with data presentations and scale them up to business-class capacities.

"We've built our own automated voice platform," says Paul Berberian, co-founder, president and CEO of Evoke Communications. "We can join 95 regular voice users and add another thousand using streaming technologies, and the link is seamless." Some companies partner with existing audioconferencing services to handle the voice side. Others, such as WebSentric's Presentation.Net service, avoid the phone networks altogether and use the Internet via voice-over-IP (VoIP).

While VoIP is the wave of the future, it may be a bit premature, says Lewis Ward, senior research analyst at Collaborative Strategies. "VoIP just isn't there yet," Ward says. Web conferencing, however, most certainly is.


Eric Brown, a regular contributor to pcworld.com, is a freelance writer living in the Boston area.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Science & Technology

OpenAI's Latest Move Is a Game Changer — Here's How Smart Solopreneurs Are Turning It Into Profit

OpenAI's latest AI tool acts like a full-time assistant, helping solopreneurs save time, find leads and grow their business without hiring.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Social Media

How To Start a Youtube Channel: Step-by-Step Guide

YouTube can be a valuable way to grow your audience. If you're ready to create content, read more about starting a business YouTube Channel.

Money & Finance

These Are the Expected Retirement Ages By Generation, From Gen Z to Boomers — and the Average Savings Anticipated. How Do Yours Compare?

Many Americans say inflation prevents them from saving enough and fear they won't reach their financial goals.

Starting a Business

I Built a $20 Million Company by Age 22 While Still in College. Here's How I Did It and What I Learned Along the Way.

Wealth-building in your early twenties isn't about playing it safe; it's about exploiting the one time in life when having nothing to lose gives you everything to gain.

Science & Technology

AI Isn't Plug-and-Play — You Need a Strategy. Here's Your Guide to Building One.

Don't just "add AI" — build a strategy. This guide helps founders avoid common pitfalls and create a step-by-step roadmap to harness real value from AI.