India’s rise as a strategic market for global enterprise technology brands is no longer a future story. It is unfolding in real time. This is especially true in the business audio, video and collaboration technology industry, where the quality of everyday meetings has become a direct measure of how well organizations work.
For years, workplace technology was treated as back-office infrastructure. In a hybrid economy, the tools people use to speak, listen, meet and collaborate are part of the business experience itself. A poor audio connection, a delayed meeting setup, or a remote participant who cannot be heard clearly may seem like a minor inconvenience. Repeated across hundreds of meetings and customer conversations, it has become a measurable drag on productivity.
India is at the center of this shift. Hybrid and distributed work models are now embedded across sectors such as IT services, financial services, consulting, manufacturing and government. Teams operate across home offices, shared workspaces, campuses and meeting rooms, often within the same working day. Communication is no longer a support function. It is the foundation on which productivity, speed and trust are built.
The scale of the problem is becoming harder to ignore. Microsoft’s recent Work Trend Index research found that knowledge workers are interrupted roughly every 2 minutes during the workday. At the same time, 57 per cent of meetings are now ad hoc calls without a calendar invite. In such an environment, frictionless collaboration is essential to how work gets done.
This is why enterprise collaboration technology is moving up the priority list for Indian businesses. Professional-grade audio, intelligent video, secure connectivity, easy device management and smooth integration with major collaboration platforms are becoming critical workplace investments. For meeting rooms, technology must serve people in the room and those joining remotely with equal clarity.

For brands operating in professional audio and enterprise collaboration, this creates a significant opportunity. Indian organizations are investing in unified communications platforms, cloud-based collaboration tools and modern workplace infrastructure at speed. Many are moving directly towards integrated, scalable ecosystems designed for hybrid work.
The conversation has also matured. Procurement decisions are no longer driven only by device cost. IT and business leaders are evaluating collaboration technology based on long-term value, reliability, platform compatibility, manageability and user experience. In a distributed workplace, the quality of a headset, speakerphone, video bar or room system directly affects how well teams collaborate and engage customers.
India’s demographic advantage strengthens this trend. With one of the youngest and most digitally fluent workforces globally, the country brings high expectations to workplace technology. Employees are used to intuitive consumer experiences and expect the same from enterprise tools. They want technology that works without friction, supports focus and helps them participate fully, whether they are in a boardroom, at a desk or joining from another city.
India’s role in global business operations also adds to its strategic importance. The country is home to a growing network of global capability centers that influence technology standards, procurement frameworks and vendor choices. Success in India can therefore shape adoption beyond the domestic market. For enterprise collaboration brands, India is not just a sales opportunity. It is a market that can influence global product thinking.
To capture this opportunity, global brands need more than product availability. They need long-term commitment, local expertise, strong channel relationships and a clear understanding of India’s scale and diversity. Brands that listen closely and build solutions around real customer environments will be better placed to earn trust.
The next phase of enterprise technology will raise the stakes further. As AI becomes more embedded in meetings, workflows and customer interactions, the quality of voice, video and room intelligence will matter more. AI can only be as effective as the signals it receives. Poor audio, unclear speech and badly equipped meeting rooms will not just frustrate employees. They will limit what businesses can gain from intelligent collaboration.
For Indian enterprises, this is the moment to rethink collaboration technology as a business performance issue, not a facilities or IT checklist. The hidden cost of work is often found in meeting problems, missed context and bad audio. Organizations that fix these basics will move faster. Those who do not risk falling behind in a workplace where every conversation counts.
– By Peter Jayaseelan

