DECT: a viable alternative to walkie talkies

Manish Punjabi
August 08, 2016

Walkie-Talkies are a great communication tool for a variety of businesses.

Walkie-Talkies are a great communication tool for a variety of businesses. One sees walkie-talkies in Hotels, Hospitals, Factories, Restaurants, etc., to serve a simple and single purpose – communicate quickly with a small ecosystem of similar devices. I.e. a press of a button and the user can broadcast message in short bursts to its group of connected devices.

However, while walkie-talkies are cheap to implement and offer simplistic usage, they only afford communication (as its sole feature) over the publicly available radio spectrum. This spectrum often comes with an annual licensing fee as is the case in the UAE, where the local agency, Telecom and Regulatory Authority (TRA), charges AED 500 per device. That is approximately $150 annually to use a single device! Furthermore, messages on walkie-talkies are often accompanied by background static due to the very nature of communication technology. And finally, as walkie-talkies use the publicly available spectrum, they are insecure for anything but mundane exchanges.

The benefits of DECT or Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications technology are many fold when compared to those of Walkie-Talkies, especially for large campus networks such as factories and warehouses.

• DECT phones bring the power of the desk phone to employees in the field – i.e., mobile and remote workers on a campus can make and receive calls on their palm sized device, listen to voice-mail, call-by-name, etc.,
• DECT devices offer safety alarms such as Man-Down notification where if a worker falls on the ground, the system alerts supervisors and/or others,
• When remote workers enter different facilities (geographically distant from the main site but interconnected), the system automatically identifies and authenticates the users to use the phone,
• and finally, there are no annual licensing fees for DECT devices to the local telecom agency.

The preliminary financial implication of a DECT system is considerable because it includes a PABX that provides the vast array of features outlined above. Versus that, a stand-alone Walkie-Talkie system offers minimalist features for a consequent lower capital outlay and simple set up. However when compared to the walkie-talkies licensing cost over 4 or 5 years and feature set, any DECT investment makes a valuable business case for itself. Find out for yourself today!

Manish Punjabi

Manish Punjabi

Channel Sales Manager

Manish joined Alcatel-Lucent Enterprise as the Channel Marketing Manager for Middle East & Africa  in Sept 2013 and is based out of Dubai, UAE. In April 2016, he moved into a Channel Sales role for UAE and in this role, he closely works with partners to create positive customer experiences. Prior to ALE, he has worked across Europe, Central Asia and India and based on these experiences, he speaks French, Russian and some Arabic. 

About the author

Latest Blogs

Guest at hotel service desk
Hospitality

Growing Needs Demand Effective Differentiation for Hotels

Growing needs demand effective differentiation for hotels to optimize operations and enhance guest experiences.

A driverless train in a city
Transportation

Onboard Communications for Secure and Efficient Driverless …

The metro and light rail shift to driverless trains makes onboard communication systems vital for safe, efficient operations.

a train on the railway tracks
Transportation

What Buyers Must Know About Vendors in Transportation Proje…

In transportation projects, products matter, but what does the buyer need to know about the vendor to make the right choice?

A roadside fire
Transportation

When Infrastructure Gets Tested by Fire—Literally

OmniSwitch 6865 proves its reliability during a real roadside fire, keeping critical infrastructure online without failure.

Chat