Skip Links

Avaya, Juniper work to secure enterprise telephony

By Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service
January 25, 2006 07:20 PM ET
  • Print

Avaya and Juniper Networks have tightened a partnership to bring security together with the next wave of enterprise telephony.

Avaya will resell Juniper security products alongside its own IP telephony gear and offer integration and support for both, the companies said Wednesday. Some channel partners of the two vendors will also be able to offer that package, said Lawrence Byrd, director of IP telephony and mobility at Avaya.

Many large enterprises are phasing in IP telephony, but security is the number one concern of IT administrators and has to come into play with any deployment, according to Frank Dzubeck, president of consultancy Communications Network Architects, in Washington, D.C. The Juniper-Avaya partnership is a clear competitive move against Cisco, which provides integrated security and IP telephony capabilities in gear such as the popular ISR (Integrated Services Router) platform for small and midsize businesses and branch offices, Dzubeck said. Many in the industry have been expecting a new product jointly developed by Juniper and Avaya that would compete directly with the ISR, he said.

The partners did not announce any new products on Wednesday. Instead, they unveiled the fruits of cooperation and of integration work that began last May. As a result of that work, they know Avaya IP telephony gear will work smoothly with Juniper capabilities such as security and WAN optimization, Byrd said. Among other things, that interoperability can head off problems that IP calls have run into on secured networks, he added.

"A lot of early firewall products did a lot of damage to voice," Byrd said. In the process of protecting networks from harmful data packets, firewalls sometimes degraded call quality, he said.

Specifically, the companies want to help enterprises set up distributed IP voice capabilities throughout their facilities worldwide, including branch offices. Using the Juniper products, Avaya can provide for firewalls, VPNs and intrusion detection tools to secure the network while supporting IP calls, Byrd said. The partners also can provide features beyond security, such as WAN optimization to make sure there's enough bandwidth for calls, he said.

Also with the combined offerings, enterprises can help employees work at home and on the road, as well as distributing call-center capabilities to multiple offices and even home-based workers, Byrd said.

Avaya's 7,000-strong service force, Avaya Global Services, will offer network and security assessments as well as full service and support for the combined deployments of Juniper and Avaya gear, he said. It can also provide management and maintenance of the networks as a managed service.

Avaya is the biggest threat to Cisco in IP telephony and Juniper is its key rival in high-end routing, so it's not surprising that they're taking on the dominant LAN vendor together, analyst Dzubeck said. One thing Cisco doesn't have is a services organization that can work with gear from multiple vendors, he said. Avaya's Byrd played that up as a key advantage on Wednesday: Avaya can set up and secure IP telephony for an enterprise even if it uses a network from another vendor, he said.

  • Print
What is Tech Briefcase?
TechBriefcase is a new, free service where IT Professionals can Search, Store and Share IT white papers and content like this. Learn more
Bookmark content
Speed up your research efforts with content across the web.
Search and Store
Find the white papers you need. Create folders for any topic.
View Anywhere
Open your briefcase on your iPhone, tablet or desktop. Share with colleagues.
Don't have an account yet?

Videos

rssRss Feed