A VoIP provider must be committed to working with you to find a resolution to VoIP challenges and able to help you successfully navigate VoIP across multiple calling environments now and in the future. Find a provider who has extensive experience in the VoIP softphone technology landscape. Visit us at Joon.us to learn more.
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How to Optimize VoIP Call Quality Across Multiple Calling Environments
1. joon.us
How to Optimize VoIP Call Quality Across Multiple Calling Environments
Latency’s Role in VoIP:
2. Executive Summary
Part I: The Rise of the Softphone
A Brief Overview of VoIP
VoIP Vocabulary Essentials
Benefits of Softphones
Minimal Equipment
Cost-Savings
Mobilization
Video Calling
Unified Communications
Challenges With VoIP
Conversation Stopper: Latency
Latency vs. Jitter
Measuring Latency
Part II: VoIP Across Multiple Calling Environments
Diagnosing VoIP Issues With Latency
Speed Tests and Ping Tests
Voice Quality Appliances
Solutions to Latency Using VoIP Technologies
Jitter Buffers
Packet Loss Concealment
VoIP Problems, Diagnoses & Solutions
Conclusion & Recommendations
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Table
of
Contents
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3. Since VoIP works over a high-speed internet connection, as
network capabilities improve, adoption of VoIP has grown
alongside. The global market share of VoIP is expected to
reach $55 billion by 2025.1
With the recent rise in remote
working, VoIP has gone from a nice-to-have to a necessity
for businesses.
The foundations of VoIP technology have not changed
substantially since its introduction in the late 1990s. It is
the evolution of how VoIP is used across multiple calling
environments that has revolutionized telephony – especially
when softphone technology is implemented on mobile.
Softphones provide access to all the benefits of a VoIP
deskphone but on a mobile device.
A softphone is not really a phone at all, at least, not in
the physical sense. Rather, softphones are applications
installed on a mobile device or computer that uses VoIP
technology to make calls over the internet.2
The softphone
application requires a SIP connection, that is
provided by a VoIP carrier, to work.
VoIP’s compatibility with mobile devices frees people to work
from anywhere, seamlessly transitioning from the office to
remote without the need to change appliances or phone
numbers. In addition, VoIP is appealing to organizations
because it is cost effective, provides scalability, and helps
to unify communications across the company.
VoIP is a rapidly developing technology. The quality of the
call depends on the speed of the internet connection and
available bandwidth - either of which can cause a delay,
or latency, if overburdened. Tools and technologies exist
today to overcome these challenges and provide quality
conversations across multiple calling environments.
Executive Summary
Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) is a technology that allows phone calls to be made over the internet rather
than through a traditional circuit-switched phone line. VoIP has been in the mainstream for more than a decade;
however, only in the past few years has it really taken off in popularity.
is the amount of time it takes for the sound of the person
speaking to reach the person receiving the sound. It is
a one-way delay that can make it difficult to carry on a
conversation comfortably.
1 VoIP Market Size Forecast 2019-2025, Global Market Insights, 2019
2 https://joon.us/joon-softphone/
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4. The Rise of the Softphone
A Brief Overview of VoIP
VoIP is the process of transmitting voice as data over the Internet equipped with coding/
decoding devices (CODEC series) that helps in converting sound waves into digital
packets so that the packets can be transmitted across a digital line and at the other
end decode back to sound.3
Compared to the traditional public switched telephone networks (PSTN) system, VoIP
is much more flexible, cost-effective, and less cumbersome as it does not require any
additional equipment to make calls.
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3 Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) Market Size By Type, Global Market Insights, 2019
5. is the maximum data transfer rate of a network (internet) connection. It measures how
much data can be sent over a specific connection at one time.
is when one or both parties hear what they just said a few milliseconds later.
is when two devices exchange information without human intervention to establish the
parameters of the communication. Handshaking can occur between two computers, a
computer and a modem, or two mobile devices.
measures the variance of the time the data packets take to get from one person speaking
to another.
is the amount of time it takes for the sound of the person speaking to reach the person
receiving the sound. It is a one-way delay that can make it difficult to carry on a
conversation comfortably.
are the pieces of data (voices) traveling through a network from the source to the destination.
is the traditional telephone system that has been used since Alexander Graham Bell
invented the telephone in the 1800s. It is made up of all the switched telephone networks
in the world that are operated by local, national, or international carriers.
is the unit of measurement, as an average time in milliseconds, used to measure latency.
Ping refers to the signal sent from a device to a server, so while they are slightly different,
latency and ping are often taken to mean the same thing in common vernacular.
is an assessment of the performance of the network and the media involved.
is how the end user perceives the value of the service.
is used for establishing sessions, mainly voice and video calls, between
two or more telecommunications devices over the Internet.
is software that allows the user to make telephone calls over the internet on a
mobile device or computer without the physical hardware of a traditional telephone.
VoIP Vocabulary Essentials
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Bandwidth
Echo
Handshaking
Jitter
Latency
Packets
PSTN
(Public Switched Telephone Network)
Ping
Softphone
QoS (Quality of Service)
QoE (Quality of Experience)
SIP (Session Internet Protocol)
6. Unlike a deskphone, softphones don’t require the purchase of any additional equipment. Since softphones use
devices users already have and use, they are less cumbersome and much more mobile.
VoIP allows workers to make telephone calls through their computers or mobile devices. It eliminates the need
for a physical desk phone and frees people up to work remotely – an important advantage in today’s business
environment. VoIP works anywhere that has a high-speed internet connection with a modem and router.
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Benefits of Softphones
There are many reasons why businesses are trading in their desk phones for softphones. The benefits include: minimal equipment,
cost-savings, enables mobilization of remote working, allows for video calls, and provides unified communications.
In the past, if an employee wanted to work from home, they would actually have to bring their desk phone with them.
The simplicity of a softphone makes it so much easier for a remote-first workforce to be efficient from anywhere
there’s an internet connection﹘even in- flight on an airplane that is WiFi enabled.
Softphones give users the ability to mobilize and have their office phone with them wherever they go. Thereby,
softphones increase worker productivity by integrating voice calls with existing communications systems.
A VoIP platform helps keep remote teams connected better. When employees are softphone enabled, calls can be
forwarded to co-workers’ work phone number, even if the co-worker is on their mobile device.
It means protecting the privacy of employees because they never have to give out or use their cell phone number.
New technology should work within the flow of how employees are used to working, not divert the flow.
VoIP is more robust than PSTN: It works best over a high-speed fiber optic internet connection, which allows it to
handle a great deal of data. Conversely, PSTN was built for voice calls only, and the architecture can’t manage the
convergence of data, voice, and video along with audio.
The cost savings with VoIP can be enormous. Not only do companies avoid having to buy physical telephone
equipment for their employees, the IT is reduced due to the user-friendly interfaces of softphones that employees
can mainly manage on their own.
In addition, VoIP calls themselves are substantially less expensive than PSTN, especially when making long-distance
calls. Companies report up to a 90% cost savings4
on international calling alone.
4 Key VoIP Statistics: 2020 Data Analysis & Market Share, Finances Online, 2020
7. Despite all the reasons to use VoIP, the technology is not
without its challenges. Generally, the problems are not in
making or receiving calls but with the sound quality and
connectivity issues that often hamper optimal dialogue over
the telephone.
Typical negative experiences using VoIP technology include
varying degrees of speech cadence (so that the people
having the conversation start talking over each other), echos,
overlapping noises, and unsynchronized audio or video during
video conferencing.
What causes problems with VoIP voice quality? Once in a
while, a local virus can interrupt a customer’s local area
network (LAN), but this is highly unusual. Most of the time,
problems are caused by the internet provider.
Poor voice quality comes with the degradation of internet
service or poor quality of service (QoS). Either there is not
enough bandwidth to handle the data of a softphone call
or there is a physical fault in the IP equipment like the wiring,
modem, or router.
In today’s work environment, where typing is more frequent
than talking, the phone is reserved for the most important
communications. Regardless of the technologies involved, the
end user’s experience matters most – which is ultimately their
ability to have a fluid conversation. Therefore, it is essential
to ensure as little technical interruption as possible to avoid
slowing down business.
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Challenges With VoIP
8. Conversation Stopper: Latency
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We’ve all experienced the dreaded back and forth on a
call where the sound quality is poor and both parties end
up in a polite game of verbal ping-pong. It makes having
a fluid conversation nearly impossible. This (and most VoIP
problems) can usually be drilled down to one of two areas:
packet loss or latency.
Voice quality can be affected by bandwidth, latency, jitter,
and packet loss.
Packet loss is just what it sounds like: when the data
packets get lost in transmission before making it to the
other person on the call. Latency, on the other hand, is
merely a lag in the phone call that causes immense
frustration for the average user.
Nowadays, complete packet loss is becoming less common
because of improvements in networks’ bandwidths. Therefore,
we focus primarily on latency, and it’s derivative issue, jitter.
This (and most VoIP problems)
can usually be drilled down
to one of two areas:
packet loss or latency.
9. Irregular latency causes a choppy effect in the
conversation, also known as jitter. You could be mid-
conversation with someone when the voice on the other
end suddenly comes in stuttering. Or, the sound is delayed
then comes all at once, making it extremely difficult to
understand the meaning of the speaker.
There’s a point where the lag inherently gets to be too
long, which creates mental discomfort. People tend to take
silence (lag) as a sign that it’s their turn to talk, but in the
confusion, both people end up talking over each other. It’s
incredibly disruptive.
When a sound of voice travels, it has to make a full circle
from person one to person two and then back again.
Inevitably, delays will happen. Latency can be increased by
several things including the physical geographical distance
between speakers, network software firewall configuration,
wireless interference, and network congestion.
Like the other ever-increasing number of devices and apps
used each day to conduct business, VoIP traffic is competing
for its share of network bandwidth. VoIP is latency sensitive
because digital packets need to be delivered in real time for
the expected audio (or video) quality.
Latency, jitter, and packet loss can never be completely
eliminated from real-world networks (until VoIP technology
finds a way to move at the speed of light). Even with sending
emails, there are delays, but a delay via email is not nearly
as noticeable as it is over the phone. Therefore, latency in
VoIP becomes intolerable at much lower levels.
Latency vs. Jitter
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Jitter can be
caused by network
congestion or
queuing
Jitter can be calculated using the
average packet-to-packet delay time
What is VoIP Network Jitter?
Jitter affects the sound quality of
Voice-over Internet Protocol connections
Jitter occurs
when data packets
are slow or lost
10. All transfer of data experiences
latency, but the greater the
delay, the more difficult
conversations become.
Latency is defined in
milliseconds (ms). A delay of
less than 30 ms is considered
acceptable, and anything over
250 ms will result in disturbances
from calls being dropped to
voice distortion. If the latency
goes beyond 500 ms, the call
would be useless.
Likewise, jitter levels become
unacceptable when data
packets travel at different
speeds and reach their
respective destinations at
different times, causing
degradation of the call.
It is important to measure
latency and jitter to be able
to determine from where
the problem stems. Different
approaches are used to
measure latency and jitter
resulting in a range of accuracy
in an organization’s ability
to diagnose and rectify the
problem in a timely manner.
Measuring
Latency
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11. VoIP Across Multiple Calling Environments
In the not-so-distant past, being a global organization meant operating physical office spaces for employees in
numerous countries around the world. Each office had its own local phone system completely disconnected from
headquarters or the other offices and geographically dispersed team members.
The idea that a receptionist in New York City could transfer a call to an employee’s office phone in London, England,
was unimaginable. VoIP has made that possibility a reality and is changing the way global teams and national
multi-branch offices function – for the better.
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With VoIP, all offices can
operate with a single system,
and the concept of a global
company has evolved.
Now, an “office” can be one
employee’s apartment in a
different country without losing
the feeling of being a large-
scale company because of
the unified communications
technologies.
With the exception of call
center agents and receptionists
who use their computers as
softphones, typical office
workers choose to enable VoIP
applications on their mobile
devices. An employee’s “office
phone” just happens to be on
the same handset as his or her
mobile phone but keeps the
mobile number private.
12. Why is latency important to diagnose? Amazon determined a
decade ago that every 100 ms of latency cost them 1% in sales.
Google revealed that a slow load-speed of just one second
could cost the company $1.6 billion in sales per year. Walmart
found that for every 100 ms of latency improvement, they grew
incremental value by 1%. Latency is a big deal.
VoIP technologies can help address excessive latency by
detecting where current issues lie and prevent future problems
from occurring.
Speed Tests and Ping Tests
Speed tests and ping tests are some free tools that can help
you establish the problem with your business phone connection
and determine what is causing the voice quality degradation.
By conducting an internet speed test, you can quickly see if you
have enough bandwidth to support VoIP calling. If not, you will
need to increase your bandwidth with your internet provider.
Voice Quality Appliances
At Joon, we use a testing device that can be used by team
members to determine where the root of the problem is.
Joon’s Voice Quality Appliance is a physical device that
can be plugged into a local network to easily troubleshoot
latency issues.
The device can be used in the office or in remote team
members’ home offices with poor connection to provide
data to the internet service provider (ISP) to fix the problem
long term. It can be distributed as needed, which allows for
maintenance without having to change firewalls with people
who don’t have experience with networking.
Diagnosing VoIP Latency Issues
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Amazon
determined a decade
ago that every 100
ms of latency cost
them 1% in sales.
Google revealed
that a slow load-
speed of just one
second could cost the
company $1.6 billion
in sales per year.
Walmart found
that for every 100
ms of latency
improvement, they
grew incremental
value by 1%.
The best way to deal with latency is to not let it become a problem in the first place.
13. Measuring the length of the lag is important because it
will direct you where to look for the issue depending on the
length of time for which the service has stopped working.
For example, if all packets are lost for a short amount of
time, maybe six seconds, we can assume that the issue is
a faulty connection somewhere in the network and that the
modem requires retraining (a process of equalization).
On the other hand, if we see that packets are lost in both
directions for about 60 seconds, the internet modem may
have rebooted, which means the faulty device needs to
be replaced.
Jitter Buffers
Dynamic jitter buffers reduce the impact of large changes
in jitter. A jitter buffer is a shared data area that temporarily
collects and stores arriving packets to minimize delay
variations. As long as the amount of jitter doesn’t exceed
the range to which the phone has adjusted its jitter buffer,
the voice will sound constant.
Packet Loss Concealment
Packet loss concealment (PLC) is a technique used to help
mitigate the effect of audio degradation when packets are
lost or discarded during transmission.
Solutions to Latency
Using VoIP
Technologies
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VoIP Problems, Diagnoses & Solutions
P R O B L E M D I AG N O S I S S O L U T I O N
Audio latency
Timing of the audio delivery is
awkward, causing users to
overlap or speak over each other
Improve network connection
Lost packets in both directions
for an extended amount of time
(at least 60 seconds)
Internet modem
has rebooted
Replace or upgrade hardware
Packets are lost for a short amount
of time (around six seconds)
Bad connections Retrain (equalize) system
Suddenly phone calls
stop working
Handshaking
Check for firewall blocks that don’t
provide clearance for VoIP data
Packets are lost in translation
or very high jitter
Missing chunks
of audio
Improve network connection and/or
increase internet bandwidth
Latency time varies
Choppy voices
during call
Improve network conection and
enable a jitter buffer
15. With remote work gaining momentum, many employees are
unable to simply walk over to a colleague’s desk and get an
immediate answer to a question. Instead, they’re relying on
technology to communicate, which is wonderfully convenient
– except when it doesn’t work.
As businesses shift to remote work for their employees,
people of all ages and generations are needing to adapt to
new systems quickly. Businesses using softphones for their
communications experience higher employee productivity
because VoIP is a cloud-based system and causes less
disruption to their workflow.
The biggest challenge with VoIP is latency, and recently, VoIP
traffic and usage have increased significantly. As a result,
latency – which is caused by added demand on a network –
is a highly relevant issue for businesses today.
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Conclusion & Recommendations
Latency must be addressed to reduce the negative impacts
businesses face, such as loss of employee productivity,
loss of revenue, and a compromised reputation. However,
with the right diagnostic tools and technology solutions,
VoIP issues can be diagnosed swiftly, and businesses
can achieve acceptable MOS levels for smooth
telecommunications.
Find a provider who has extensive experience in the VoIP
softphone technology landscape. It is essential that your
VoIP provider diagnose problems rather than simply point
blame at your ISP. A VoIP provider must be committed to
working with you to find a resolution to VoIP challenges and
able to help you successfully navigate VoIP across multiple
calling environments now and in the future.
16. Find a provider who has extensive experience
in the VoIP softphone technology landscape.
visit us at Joon.us to learn more.