4D Tip Report
4D Tip Report
A vision of the opportunities and risks for telecoms operators in 2013 and beyond
www.tekcomms.com www.tekcomms.com
Executive Summary
Service shifting
Mobile operators will not be short of challenges in the year ahead. Industry observers often talk of the changing landscape of the industry; using the phrase simply to provide readily understood analogies about how things are going to look different; subscribers are going to expect better quality of service and experience, together with the reassurance of robust security. Services are going to evolve, technology will affect major changes yet again as it always does and the overall network environment will somehow assume a different appearance. As the network changes, operators will look to deploy technologies for both analytics and troubleshooting that enable them to deliver new services, improve performance and bring down costs. They will also be looking for greater opportunities to monetise the activity in the network, rather than seeing such opportunities continue to flow into the bottom line of the OTT player.
What is a Telecoms Intelligence Provider? A Telecoms Intelligence Provider (TIP) offers the technologyagnostic solutions and tools that create meaningful observations from actionable data end-to-end across networks, legacy and new generation technologies, services utilization and subscriber journeys; real-time data collection and analysis that enables operators to leverage monetisation opportunities from the wealth of data available to them - to deliver the experience and service their customers want. Locate. Learn. Lead: A TIP enables operators to locate the data, learn from its insights, and lead the market through optimised customer experience management.
There will be multiple transformations - the deployment of new technologies to unwrap, understand and unleash the insights of rich data streams.
...the digital universe will grow by a factor of 300, from 130 exabytes to 40,000 exabytes, or 40 trillion gigabytes (more than 5,200 gigabytes for every man, woman, and child in 2020). From now until 2020, the digital universe will about double every two years
Operators will look to the emerging Telecoms Intelligence Providers (TIPs) of the new world order to help them leverage the unprecedented volumes of data flowing through their pipes to improve quality of service and security, to deliver customer experience in line with smart customer expectations, to increase their competitive proposition, to reduce both churn, and lower operating costs.
Telecoms in 4D
A Telecoms Intelligence Provider helps operators understand their entire environment and what goes on in it. Technology-agnostic solutions and tools are available that create meaningful observations from data across networks, legacy and new generation technologies, services utilisation and subscriber journeys. Winners in the new environment should expect to cover the four dimensions of the telecoms landscape: Subscriber behaviour, the Services and applications they consume, the Network environment itself, and the Technologies in play. These are the cornerstones of what we refer to as the entire environment. Real-time end-to-end data collection and analysis across each of these four dimensions can give operators the critical visibility they need, to deliver the experience and services their customers want, and create a more level playing field between themselves and the OTT players. Services offered by network operators will shift. They will become more personal, reflecting the behaviours of subscribers more intimately and faithfully than ever before. They will shift in the way that tectonic plates shift grinding together with such force, power, and velocity that the mobile communications industry will never look the same again.
Contents
Section Section Section Section 1 2 3 4 - The five key challenges and opportunities facing mobile operators - The 4 dimensions of the telecoms world - Harnessing the big data asset in the network Into 2013: conclusions
Tektronix Communications is uniquely placed to offer the vision and predictions contained within this paper, having an entirely agnostic positioning. The company has recently augmented its traditional assurance and monitoring business with intelligence solutions precision-designed for each of the four dimensions of the network operators landscape. These are Subscriber behaviour, the Services and applications they consumer, the Network environments they occupy and the Technologies they use. This report shares Tektronix Communications insight into the opportunities and risks facing the telecoms industry, based on patterns and shifts it has witnessed among its global network operator partners.
Section 1 2013: The Five Key Challenges and Opportunities Facing Mobile Operators
Challenge 1 Over The Top Integration Turning dumb pipes into profitable funnels
On the assumption that a mobile operator fully grasps the new data reality that the realisation of new profitable commercial models depends on the deployment of new, profit-enabling analytics and troubleshooting tools, techniques, and approaches then the days of being the mere provider of a dumb pipe are over. They are over as soon as 2013, since there should no longer be any unsolved mysteries, or un-deciphered subscriber actions, lurking in or flowing through the pipe. OTT providers have had a relatively unobstructed run at the market. They should by no means be considered the villains of the piece however, since they have pioneered the provision of a limitless array of services, partly in response to subscriber needs and partly several steps ahead of them, which has created the market in which mobile operators can now flourish. To put it another way, operators can now regain lost territory that could be considered to have been rightfully theirs all the time. The mobile space has matured enormously as OTT providers have learnt from each other; often emulating and then streamlining competitor propositions (the same competitors having then reemulated and re-streamlined the proposition). The data to which operators have access has become an asset of unprecedented value. If an operator does nothing with it, the data will still be there, growing, mutating, multiplying and gathering momentum every second of every day. Its one of those opportunities that sounds too good to be true and one of those even rarer commercial opportunities that actually is true. Operators simply need to leverage the asset. Doing nothing is not an option.
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However, the data that subscribers produce in their journeys provides the key to an operator at least sharing in the rewards and once an operator understands the subscriber journey, a limitless number of commercially attractive avenues opens up for exploration. Mobile operators can take the many lessons learned from OTT operators, emulate them, build upon them and welcome their subscribers back on board with an altogether more enticing service proposition.
The growth trend observed by Ovum and others will continue. Compound annual growth rate of global mobile data traffic will run at 66% up to at least 2017, suggests Ciscos Visual Networking Index Global Mobile Data Traffic Forecast. This implies a 13fold increase by 2017, reaching 11.2 exabytes per month. Smarter subscribers want OTT services. They want constant access to social media, and to be able to send and receive photos and videos on the move; they demand a modern, connected lifestyle and expect their mobile device to deliver the wide variety of entertainment, information and connectivity options that help them live it. CSPs can now provide this, and more, since they can embellish and enrich the customer experience because they have, or can get when they deploy appropriate analytics technologies, the full visibility of the four dimensions of the network environment described in SECTION 2.
68% of the information in the digital universe in 2012, was created and consumed by consumers watching digital TV, interacting with social media, sending camera phone images and videos between devices and around the Internet, and so on. IDC The Digital Universe in 2020.
Challenge 2 - RCS Compliance A richer customer experience drives a richer bottom line
Gartner estimated smart device sales worldwide in 2012 to be over 820 million. The smart estimate for 2013 is in the order of 1.2 billion. The growth in data that accompanies such exceptional market expansion is both a cause for concern for CSPs (will it overwhelm?) and a platform for revitalised monetisation. Big data should be viewed as a world of opportunities, coming at just the point in market evolution when all-time-low margins were starting to take on a disturbing look of permanence. The high-performing next-generation network will exceed subscriber expectations but operators should look to dynamic strategies to make sure their own business models reflect and optimise the opportunities. The GSMA Rich Communication Services initiative (RCS) has a potentially pivotal role to play in such strategies. RCS, first launched in 2007, has been subject to a number of false starts. Detractors
Seamless service, seemingly obvious Deutsche Telekom, KT, LG U+, Movistar Spain, Orange Spain, SK Telecom, and Vodafone in Germany and Spain are signed up to Joyn and its influence is extending. SK Telecom acquired one million users for its Joyn service within just 50 days of its launch in late December 2012.
suggest that the processes involved in reaching international agreement on standards hamper rapid developments for the very organisations that endeavour to implement them. Such processes, however, have their supporters; and the support is growing. The consumer-facing brand of RCS, Joyn, is attracting significant players to the party. Deutsche Telekom, KT, LG U+, Movistar Spain, Orange Spain, SK Telecom, and Vodafone in Germany and Spain are signed up to Joyn and with organisations such as these on board its influence is extending. Such operators are leading by example. They have grasped one of those significant new realities of owning the business that flows through the pipe; a reality further driven home by the harsh observation that if operators fail to leverage the business thats so close at hand to them, somebody else will.
RCS output will redefine Big Data across networks as carriers mine a constant stream of information, revealing subscriber location and behaviour.
At the current time, February 2013, one operator is receiving and interpreting 40 billion records per day. The same operator estimates that volume will rise to 100 billion by the end of 2013.
RCS compliance will help provide an uninterrupted view of the subscriber journey and, rather than providing an overwhelming bigness of data will feed into precision targeting the isolation of most-used services and the identification of mostencountered issues to address subscriber needs and allay subscriber concerns.
purchases of tablets by business will triple by 2016, reaching 53 million units. Some readers might remember the days when smart devices were called PDAs personal digital assistants. Wikipedia says PDAs are largely considered obsolete with the widespread adoption of smartphones. As phones and devices merge, and one assimilates the characteristics and capabilities of the other, the line between personal and work-related use of the device loses something of its definition. The smart device has become, once again, the personal digital assistant, except that it can now make phone calls, on the move. BYOD policies are in the ascendant throughout the commercial world and are gradually being embraced in certain areas of the public sector. Security issues are high on the agenda. Quality of service is right up there alongside them. So the market presents - at one and the same time - distinct user/subscriber segments combined with indistinct subscriber usage landscapes. Is a subscriber merely going social to share the latest hilarious video clip or birthday snap or is she/ he sending an important business document or checking out important information on the companys database while sitting in a client meeting?
Users are getting smarter Worldwide sales of mobile phones declined 3% in Q3 2012; smartphone sales increased 47% (Gartner)
A contractual obligation to safeguard data already exists between telecoms providers and their users, making carriers the most natural place for sensitive data to be held and used. Driver 2: The second driver is growing enterprise mobility; increasing numbers of the workforce being away from their home offices and connecting in via smart devices. Once again, security issues prevail. Driver 3: Better technology, and more of it. Consumers are becoming, through increasingly more highly-specified and capable devices, more demanding as their onthe-move agility becomes more liberating. They can do, see, access, watch, send and receive anything. They expect their device to be omnipotent and they expect it not to offer unknown parties (or even known parties) easy access to their sensitive data, unless they are expressly involved in granting permission for such access. During the course of 2013 consumers will come to view their network operators environment as a far safer environment in which to transact than the open, regulation-light world of the OTT player. LinkedIn was hacked last year and 6 million encrypted passwords were stolen; the safety of WhatsApp has been continually scrutinised; Facebook has had security concerns.
Juniper Research found that Android malware is up more than 3,325%, and other sources have suggested that 92% of the top iPhone apps have been compromised - across messaging, banking and ecommerce apps.
Mobile networks have robust security protocols in place to support hosted services; operator branded or with OTT partners. Security will become a key competitive advantage.
Anything less than the adoption of a 4 dimensional view of the telecoms world turns the data into nothing more earth-shattering than isolated code; jumbled, random and merely glancing moments of clarity.
Subscriber behaviour Services and applications The network environment Technologies used
Subscriber behaviour
Technologies
Network
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the lifestyle of individuals than Google or Amazon. The use which these two digital giants make of interactive data is well-known as any internet user or online shopper will attest to. The immediate cross-sell or upsell pitch delivered in response to any interaction may, by some, be considered intrusive, but to millions upon millions of others its simply the way of the world and they respond.
Operators can leverage this two-way data stream on two significant strategic fronts:
Dynamic service enhancement: to improve customer interactions through smarter marketing initiatives. The delivery of packages that address identified usage patterns; whether its an all-day-long social media user, a peak-hour business user, an anticipated spike in demand such as the London 2012 Olympics, greater roaming requirements or any of a number of other common usage characteristics that represent huge returns if operators work the data to identify them. Ultra-dynamic customer care: to energise faster responses in resolving subscriber issues, turning them into revenue opportunities. Subscribers complain when they cannot access voice or data services. Operators can keep subscribers satisfied by using subscriber events to trigger proactive messages. By examining network signalling, operators can trigger appropriate actions at the point of customer impact; real-time information enables operators to inform customer care departments in advance so they are prepared for calls as they come in and can impress subscribers with immediate solutions. Such actions turn potentially negative scenarios into positive selling opportunities.
Make network connectivity easy A focus on customer experience, including the implementation of better self-care platforms and better use of customer data in analytics, can help CSPs to reduce the OPEX associated with customer care. CSPs should improve customer experience by making network connectivity easy for customers. CSPs must meet the changing demand for content consumption by improving service availability and quality. Analysys Mason, Worldwide telecoms market forecast 20122016
The deployment of agnostic service assurance and monitoring solutions that mine data across multiple network and technology domains reveals what subscribers are doing, when theyre doing it and why. It enables operators to improve their understanding of customer experience and activity across their network, and provides the opportunity to adopt a true one-to-one approach to marketing. It also underpins better customer care policies.
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importance of having a window that affords a clear and uninterrupted view into subscriber behaviour patterns. In some regards its the same window that Amazon looks through when it delivers personalised recommendations based on a purchasers history: If you liked thisyoull love this. So, a crime reader is presented with associated crime titles, a laptop purchaser is presented with portable computing accessories, a clothes purchaser is introduced to an exciting new world of fashion options, and the list goes on to address every identified purchasing pattern and to nudge the site visitor creatively in the direction of the next purchase. Operators have a greater edge in that their data and insights are real-time and constant, reflecting entrenched behavioural patterns among their subscribers. This is the dimension of the telecoms world where the line can truly be drawn under further encroachment into the pipe by OTT players. Operators can observe the most-used services and deliver better, more relevant, more integrated versions, backed up with the quality of service guarantee that OTT players cannot provide. This is where the tectonic plates shift.
A subscribers first experience with a new device on the network is the most critical moment in a successful launch.
Network and device management solutions make the difference between great success or increased churn. With thousands of devices coming onto the network at the same time, the impact cannot always be comprehensively understood simply through lab testing. When a device such as the iPhone5 hits, it hits big; impacting the signalling network and bandwidth requirements and bringing in new apps. Customer experience management solutions can track soft launch subscriber behaviour and performance to detect performance problems which may surface before launch. Device management solutions track device integration from testing to launch. The tendency of device manufacturers and network equipment manufacturers to play fast and loose with telecommunications specifications often leads to failures which are hard to recreate and troubleshoot. The burden of proof invariably falls on the carrier to push a working solution between two vendors. Using solutions which identify the points of failure and capture the proof makes the process of vendor troubleshooting faster and easier. Deep packet solutions provide the ability to track new application behaviour, so that carriers can determine the impact of signalling and media on the network. This gives them the ability to plan network expansions for areas and regions which may see congestion issues at launch.
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(Source: IDC)
The network you can see versus the one you cant
Real-time end-to-end data collection and analysis across each of the four dimensions of the network gives operators full visibility; making sure there are no hidden issues that may detract from an otherwise impeccable service. They are in an ideal position to focus strategically on customer experience management not least because the security issues often affecting OTT players (identity theft) do not affect core networks. As well as offering subscriber reassurance on security a concern which is growing and subdividing with almost every new capability a smart device delivers - operators can ensure greater interoperability through initiatives such as Joyn, the commercial brand of the GSMA Rich Communication Suite compliance (see below). Herein lies one of the big data crunch-points for the mobile operator; problems in the network, no matter where they lurk, can now be easily located to drive better experiences. The technology exists to do it and the data exists ready to surrender up its insights. Without a view of precisely whats going on, from a user perspective, there can never be a truly end-to-end solution that eradicates the glitches. With the heightened demands of LTE, glitches will become inefficiencies, which will turn into complaints, which will become a negative and time-consuming drain on resources, and ultimately lead to churn and lost revenue opportunities.
Where does all that data come from? The GSMA predicts that the total number of mobile connected devices will grow 100% from more than a billion in 2013 to 12 billion in 2020.
The days of one dimensional and two dimensional passive monitoring are over. In 2013 and beyond, operators will look deeper into the rich insights carried in a wealth of data stored across their networks.
They will follow and analyse every path of the data journey not only because they now can, particularly by partnering with a proven and reliable TIP, but because such an approach is the survival strategy for the modern age and certainly the competitive advantage in the LTE environment. Valuable insights reside as much in those parts of the network that operators cant currently see as in those that may be more obvious, but will never deliver the full story. As the migration to 4G gathers pace operators can now gain full visibility: seeing everything and being everywhere, gaining a real competitive advantage over OTT players and mitigating their current risk to revenues and ownership of the customer relationship. The ability to extract information historically, and in real-time, provides the operator with an unparalleled breadth and depth of insight into the subscribers behaviour, the services and applications theyre consuming, the performance of the network theyre using and the different technology standards it supports. In 2012 Tektronix Communications shipped over 17 Petabytes of data, which is a 5th of Facebooks stored data capacity. The combination of Big Data and the
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granular detail that we can provide has presented the carriers with more actionable intelligence about their business, and their customers, than they have previously had access to. Operators are using this information to develop new business models rooted in security and quality of service.
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The race is on
4G mobile networks supported by the LTE standard will become more pervasive over the next decade, but they wont all come at once. Juniper Research estimates that the number of LTE subscribers will reach 428 million by 2016 with a surge in growth taking place in 2012. This year promises to be a watershed for LTE, as some wireless operators take stock of the economic and competitive environment in their respective markets; and consider their rollout options. The development of the LTE industry in global markets will vary according to the competitive environment in addition to an operators ability to deliver data efficiently. The race is on. Its a race both against time and against the continuously firmer footprint that OTT service providers are stamping across the network. Data is the fact. Using it to benefit the network is the issue. The two-way data stream the network now serves has implications on improving how carriers interact not only with customers, but also with businesses and major organisations looking to harness the capabilities of mobile devices. Operators can consider a rich source of business intelligence that can be used in two ways, both equally valuable in helping them to monetise their assets - particularly as LTE takes over and generate significant returns on their investment in network infrastructure. (1) The network needs eyes to look inside its own operations to provide service assurances, guarantee accuracy, security and the quality of new data sets coming on stream; total visibility and control to streamline the services it provides. The performance of the infrastructure is pivotal as new users come on with an expectation of nothing less than the highest quality of service. Users early experiences of voice, video, and data have to be good if operators are going to avoid churn. A connected world offers enormous choice to mobile device users and theyre becoming increasingly promiscuous between service providers and ever more agile in their competence in switching from one provider to the next. (2) CSPs appreciating and realising the value of big data as a marketing tool will be the ones that stay ahead of the pack in 2013. It provides potential flexibility to enable a wide range of personal services which will soon impact daily life far more fundamentally than just by making shopping easier or serving as tools for social contact. The critical driving force is that networks have the data. The focus is both on keeping it flowing through the pipe successfully and then taking it out of the pipe and using it as a platform for intelligent marketing. The network has end-to-end control of the connected device. The new business model is based on accepting that data, big though it may be, smart as it certainly is, is not a problem that operators have to contend with, but an opportunity they can maximise.
About Tektronix Communications Tektronix Communications is uniquely positioned as the communications industrys first Telecommunications Intelligence Provider (TIP) offering both service assurance and monitoring and network intelligence solutions that uniquely cover all four dimensions of the service providers environment: subscriber behavior, the services and applications they consume, the network environments they occupy and the technologies that enable them. Our comprehensive set of assurance, intelligence and test solutions and services support a range of architectures and applications such as LTE, HSPA, 3G, IMS, mobile broadband, VoIP, video and triple play. Tektronix Communications is headquartered in Plano, Texas. For Further Information Tektronix Communications maintains a comprehensive, constantly expanding collection of white papers, application notes and other resources. Please visit http://www tekcomms. com/ ServiceandSupport/ Literature Contact Tektronix Communications 3033 W President George Bush Hwy, Plano, TX 75075, U.S.A. Phone: +1-469-330-4000 Fax: +1-469-330-4001 Please visit www.tekcomms.com 02/CMW-28949-0
Inc. All rights reserved. Tektronix Communications products are covered by U.S. and foreign patents, issued and pending. Information in this publication supersedes that in all previously published material. Specification and price change privileges reserved. TEKTRONIX and TEK are registered trademarks of Tektronix, Inc. All other trade names referenced are the service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies.
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