The-5G-Guide GSMA 2019 04 29 Compressed PDF
The-5G-Guide GSMA 2019 04 29 Compressed PDF
The-5G-Guide GSMA 2019 04 29 Compressed PDF
INTR
THE 5G ERA
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NSIDERATIONS
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THE 5G GUIDE
A REFERENCE FOR OPERATORS
APRIL 2019
The GSMA represents the interests of mobile operators GSMA Intelligence is the definitive source of global
worldwide, uniting more than 750 operators with over mobile operator data, analysis and forecasts, and
350 companies in the broader mobile ecosystem, publisher of authoritative industry reports and research.
including handset and device makers, software Our data covers every operator group, network and
companies, equipment providers and internet MVNO in every country worldwide – from Afghanistan
companies, as well as organisations in adjacent industry to Zimbabwe. It is the most accurate and complete
sectors. The GSMA also produces the industry-leading set of industry metrics available, comprising tens of
MWC events held annually in Barcelona, Los Angeles millions of individual data points, updated daily.
and Shanghai, as well as the Mobile 360 Series of
GSMA Intelligence is relied on by leading operators,
regional conferences.
vendors, regulators, financial institutions and third-
For more information, please visit the GSMA corporate party industry players, to support strategic decision-
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is used as an industry reference point and is frequently
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of analysts and experts produce regular thought-
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For more information, please visit
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Legal notice
5G rollout remains a critical competitive differentiator This report, and its associated models, is for information
between operators which must be decided at an only and does not constitute a recommendation or
individual level, based on prevalent market conditions advice. Readers of the report and users of the model
in the relevant country and operators’ individual are obliged to verify themselves if the resources are fit
business decisions. Only the continuation of inter- for their purpose or are compatible with their systems,
operator competition can ensure the degree and pace services, operations of practices.
of innovation, value and quality of service customers
rightly expect. The information and content in the report and models
are provided on an “as is” basis without any express or
Please note that it is not the role of the GSMA to implied warranties, fitness for purpose, undertaking,
recommend any particular commercial model nor guarantee or assurances attached.
to give any instruction on the timing, intensity or
structure of operators’ investments in new technologies Use of this report and its models is at the user’s own
and networks. Rather, the purpose of this report and risk, and save in the case where UK law stipulates
models is to describe common factors all operators otherwise, the GSMA disclaims any and all liability in
will probably need to consider in elaborating their relation to its distribution or use.
individual strategies to ensure efficiency of their
investment in 5G, and which will help to accelerate Additional legal disclaimer applies to, and is included at
innovation in the best interest of customers. the start of, Chapter 5.
THE 5G GUIDE
Acknowledgements
The 5G Guide and its associated business case model In addition, the Task Force wishes to acknowledge
and 5G Readiness tool were developed by the GSMA’s the insights from the ecosystem (especially Ericsson,
5G Task Force. Facebook, Google, Huawei, Nokia, Qualcomm, Samsung
and VMWare), the over 30 enterprises that participated
The team is grateful to all the organisations, institutions, in the study and the universities that have supported
companies and individuals who provided insights to GSMA 5G activities - especially Kings’ College London
help develop these resources. In particular, we thank and University of Surrey.
the GSMA Board for providing the direction and
guidance for this work, and appreciate all the insights Members of the GSMA 5G Task Force were drawn from
from the discussions at the GSMA Policy Group, Strategy, Technology, Policy, Mobile for Development,
Strategy Group and Technology Group. Legal, Marketing and GSMA Intelligence.
KDDI KPN
KT LG U+
Megafon MTN
Orange SK Telecom
Softbank STC
Telstra Turkcell
Verizon Vodafone
Acknowledgements 1
THE 5G GUIDE
Contents
List of Figures 6 2 5G Readiness and Enabling Conditions 50
List of Tables 9
2.1 Technology Readiness 51
Glossary 10
2.1.1 Standards completion schedule 52
Foreword 12 2.1.2 5G deployment models 53
2.1.3 SA vs NSA 5G 54
Executive Summary 14
2.1.4 Equipment readiness: 5G NSA 54
1.1 What is the expectation for the 5G era? 23 2.1.11 Voice service continuity 59
1.1.4 Industry expectations for the 5G era 26 2.1.15 eSIM in the 5G era 62
1.4.4 5G Journey as a marathon 42 2.3.6 Lessons from 3G/4G: first mover advantage 78
1.4.5 Replacement of legacy networks 43 2.3.7 Lessons from 3G/4G: late mover risks 79
1.4.6 5G era revenues forecast 44 2.3.8 Lessons from 3G/4G: optimal rollout plan 80
2 Contents
THE 5G GUIDE
Contents 3
THE 5G GUIDE
Contents cont.
4 5G Cost Considerations 166 4.8 Network Ownership 205
4.8.1 Evolution of network ownership and
4.1 Cost Considerations 167 management 206
4.1.1 Cost considerations framework 168 4.8.2 Infrastructure sharing (incl. Towercos) 207
4.2 Network Capacity 169 4.8.3 Neutral Host: Single Wholesale
4.2.1 Network capacity drivers 170 Networks (SWF) 209
4.2.2 Spectral efficiency 171 4.8.4 Aerial networks (incl. LEO satellites) 209
4.2.3 Spectral capacity 171 4.8.5 Neutral Host: hotspots & 5G corridors 210
4.2.4 Spectral reuse: network densification 172 4.8.6 Private 5G networks 211
4.2.5 Transport (Backhaul/Fronthaul) 173 4.8.7 Wi-Fi: the road to Wi-Fi 6 212
4.3 Network Coverage 179 4.8.8 Bring-Your-Own-Small Cells (BYO-Small Cells) 212
4.3.1 5G spectrum coverage range 180 4.9 Network Equipment Sourcing 213
4.3.2 Network coverage: hotspots 181 4.9.1 Open Source for flexibility: a dose of realism 214
4.3.3 Network coverage: urban 181 4.9.2 New lock-in phenomenon 215
4.3.4 Network coverage: rural 183 4.9.3 Mobile operators as system integrators 215
4.3.5 Network coverage: transport Links 184 4.9.4 Proliferation of open source organisations 216
4.4 Network Flexibility 185 4.9.5 Engaging and leveraging open
4.4.1 Flexibility in 5G era networks 186 source organisations 217
4 Contents
THE 5G GUIDE
Contents 5
THE 5G GUIDE
List of Figures
Figure 1.1.1 The 5G era will begin fully from 2020 24
Figure 1.1.2 Mobile Industry goals for the 5G era 25
Figure 1.2.1 The 5G advantage and comparisons with 4G 29
Figure 1.2.3 4G and 5G are based on the same technology philosophy 30
Figure 1.2.4 5G will support low latency and high throughput services 31
Figure 1.2.5 5G is at the centre of the heterogeneous network of the future 32
Figure 1.2.6 5G and Intelligent Connectivity 33
Figure 1.2.7 5G will support existing and new products and markets 34
Figure 1.3.1 Contribution of 5G to the global economy (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 36
Figure 1.3.2 Key enablers of the digital economy in the 5G era (Source: BCG, GSMA) 37
Figure 1.4.1 The 3GPP roadmap for Release 15 and 16 39
Figure 1.4.2 Coverage and adoption for 5G (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 40
Figure 1.4.3 Adoption of 5G vs 4G (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 41
Figure 1.4.4 Reaching the 10% market share milestone – 3G, 4G and 5G 42
Figure 1.4.5 Market shares by 2025 – 2G, 3G, 4G and 5G (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 43
Figure 1.4.6 Mobile revenue forecast (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 44
Figure 1.5.1 Projected plans for 5G launches per country (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 46
Figure 1.5.2 Regional 5G adoptions by 2025, excluding IoT and FWA connections (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 47
Figure 2.1.1 5G NR Technology Roadmap 52
Figure 2.1.2 NSA configuration (option 3). NR connected to, and controlled by existing 4G core network 53
Figure 2.1.3 SA configuration (option 2). NR connects to the 5G core only.
The standalone 5G system interworks at core network level with legacy 4G system 53
Figure 2.1.4 Timeline of 5G Features 55
Figure 2.1.5 Total mobile backhaul by method (Source: ABI Research) 57
Figure 2.1.6 Evolution of IMS-based IP Communications Services 58
Figure 2.1.7 Interworking among radio accesses 59
Figure 2.1.8 Traditional SIM Cards vs. Remote SIM Provisioning of eSIM 62
Figure 2.1.9 Security controls outlined in 3GPP Release 15 65
Figure 2.2.1 Key policy considerations for the 5G era 67
Figure 2.2.2 Spectrum allocations in the 3.5GHz band 70
Figure 2.3.1 Mobile revenues and forecasts in $ billions for selected countries and regions (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 75
Figure 2.3.2 Average connections and mobile revenues for operators in China, EU and US (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 76
Figure 3.3.3 4G era market share evolution in the UK (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 78
Figure 2.3.4 Capex and cash flow evolution in the US (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 79
Figure 2.3.5 Capex and OFCF evolution in Canada (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 80
Figure 2.4.1 BEMECS Framework Indicators 84
Figure 3.1.1 The 5G Opportunity Framework 88
Figure 3.1.2 Economic contribution of 5G (Source: TMG, GSMA) 89
Figure 3.1.3 5G business potential per cluster (Source: Ericsson) 90
Figure 3.2.1 Three value capture opportunities for operators in the 5G era 92
6 List of Figures
THE 5G GUIDE
Figure 3.4.2 Insights from enterprises across eight key sectors (Source: GSMA) 101
Figure 3.4.3 1. Automotive and Mobility 101
Figure 3.4.4 2. Media and Content 102
Figure 3.4.5 3. Public / Smart City 103
Figure 3.4.6 4. Healthcare 104
Figure 3.4.7 5. Manufacturing 105
Figure 3.4.8 6. Energy & Utility 106
Figure 3.4.9 7. Software & Technology 107
Figure 3.4.10 Enterprise insights 108
Figure 3.5.1 Four ‘video’ traffic types for the 5G business case 114
Figure 3.5.2 Average data traffic per smartphone (Source: Ericsson) 115
Figure 3.5.3 Revenue/GB versus Cost/GB for mobile data (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 116
Figure 3.5.4 World Smartphone Average Selling Price (Source: Statista) 117
Figure 3.5.5 Mobile ARPU will stabilise in the 5G era (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 118
Figure 3.5.6 Demand variation for mobile network capacity – 24 hours (Source: Kings College London43) 119
Figure 3.5.7 Evolution of pricing for eMBB services 120
Figure 3.6.1 FWA product offerings for operators 122
Figure 3.6.2 FWA is a lower cost alternative than greenfield FTTx 123
Figure 3.6.3 FWA as an incentive to deepen fibre usage in 5G (Source: Solon Consulting) 124
Figure 3.6.4 Spectrum for new FWA entrants in Nigeria (2018) - nearly a quarter of assigned spectrum is held by
operators with a combined market share below 1% (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 126
Figure 3.6.5 FWA mass market opportunity for 160 countries (Source: GSMA) 127
Figure 3.7.1 Operator enterprise offerings in the 5G era 130
Figure 3.7.2 ARPU growth vs GDP/capita and iPhone ASP 2007 – 2017
(Source: Asymco, World Bank, GSMAi, GSMA analysis) 132
Figure 3.7.3 5G and the 4th Industrial Revolution 133
Figure 3.7.4 The operator revenue mix in the 5G era 134
Figure 3.8.1 Mobile IoT in the 5G future 136
Figure 3.8.2 Operator role in the IoT Value Chain 138
Figure 3.8.3 Operator role transformation 138
Figure 3.9.1 Designing networks to minimise downtime 140
Figure 3.10.1 Horizontal API as the vehicle for mass customisation in the 5G era 145
Figure 3.10.2 APIs – standardisation, platformisation, commercialisation 147
Figure 3.11.1 The Operator Cloud is a distributed edge/cloud infrastructure 149
Figure 3.11.2 MEC vs Cloud – a requirements perspective 150
Figure 3.11.3 Operator Cloud as, firstly, an infrastructure play
(Source: GSMA analysis, adapted from Deutsche Telekom) 153
List of Figures 7
THE 5G GUIDE
8 List of Figures
THE 5G GUIDE
Figure 5.2.1 Operator archetypes for the 5G business case model 225
Figure 5.2.2 Three 5G deployment scenarios 226
Figure 5.3.1 Summary of the Capex and Opex assumptions for the model 228
Figure 5.3.2 Summary of the cost of spectrum for 3.5GHz (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 229
Figure 5.3.3 Summary of the cost of spectrum for mmWave (Source: GSMA Intelligence) 230
Figure 5.5.1 Summary of outputs from the 5G business case model 235
Figure 5.5.2 Cost projections for operator archetypes in a developed market 236
Figure 5.5.3 Cost projections for operator archetypes in a developing market 237
Figure 5.5.4 Average revenue projections of operator archetypes in a developed market 238
Figure 5.5.5 Average revenue projections of operator archetypes in a developed market 239
Figure 5.5.6 Cost Intensity (indexed) projections of operator archetypes in a developed market 240
Figure 5.5.7 Cost Intensity (indexed) projections of operator archetypes in a developing market 241
Figure 5.5.8 Cost results for a major, integrated operator in a developed market 242
Figure 5.5.9 Cost intensity results for a major, integrated operator in a developed market 243
Figure 5.5.10 Revenue results for a major, integrated operator in a developed market 244
Figure 5.5.11 No of years of capex required for a major, integrated operator in a developed market 244
Figure 6.2.1 Towards a world of Intelligent Connectivity 251
Figure 6.3.1 Summary of GSMA Public Policy considerations relating to 5G 256
Figure 7.5.1 Example of three slices sharing common spectrum (taken from [7]) 274
Figure 7.5.2 Difficulty of addressing different vertical sectors and use cases within those sectors 276
Figure 7.5.3 Slice template to be used for setup of a slice and can be exchanged for negotiation between
two operators in establishment of a cross-operator slice 280
List of Tables
Table 1.1.1 Top 10 expectations for the 5G era 26
Table 1.2.1 IMT-2020 5G requirements (Source: ITU-R) 28
Table 3.7.1 Selected differentiated connectivity mechanisms (1974 – 2018) 131
Table 4.2.1 4G and 5G bandwidth and latency requirements (Source: Ericsson) 174
Table 4.2.2 Comparison of 5G mobile backhaul technology options (Source: ABI Research) 175
Table 5.4.1 Summary of the assumptions for the best-case incremental ARPU inputs for the model
(5 years post 5G launch) 232
Table 7.1.1 5G New Radio Spectrum Bands 259
Table 7.2.1 Technology Specifications for LTE-M and NB-IoT 260
Table 4.3.2 The BEMECS framework – the full details 262
List of Figures/Tables 9
THE 5G GUIDE
Glossary
AI Artificial Intelligence IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronics
API Application Programmable Interfaces Engineers
AR/VR Augumented Reality / Virtual Reality IETF Internet Engineering Task Force
Cloud RAN Cloud Radio Access Network LTE Long Term Evolution
CSFB Circuit Switched Fallback MENA Middle East and North Africa
10 Glossary
THE 5G GUIDE
Glossary 11
THE 5G GUIDE
Foreword
12 Foreword
THE 5G GUIDE
We would like to thank the GSMA board steering group, including Juan
Carlos Archila from América Móvil, Hatem Dowidar from Etisalat and
Serpil Timuray from Vodafone, for the helpful guidance, counsel and
support that they provided to the GSMA team in relation to the creation
of this guide.
Foreword 13
THE 5G GUIDE
Executive
Summary
The 5G era is upon us!
The mobile industry has begun the periodic journey to upgrade its infrastructure
and services to the next-generation of technologies. This is the story of 5G
– an inevitable, next generation technology upgrade that all operators will
eventually adopt. It is, thus, a question of ‘when’ rather than ‘if’ 5G will become
mainstream around the world.
14
14 Executive Summary
THE 5G GUIDE
5G is usually discussed from five perspectives: In addition, the guide includes insights from recent
• First, the technology-focused narrative seeks interviews with 25 operators, 8 leading telecoms
to showcase the superiority of 5G technology equipment vendors, 30 enterprise companies and a
compared to previous generations; consumer survey of 36,000 respondents in 34 markets.
It also integrates the insights from the GSMA global
• Second, the focus to pinpoint definitive, yet survey of 750 operator CEOs in Q4 2016 which led
somewhat elusive, new 5G use cases has almost to the development of the mobile industry’s 5G era
become a cause célèbre; vision in the 2017 report “The 5G era: age of boundless
• Third, the debate on spectrum availability, how it is connectivity and intelligent automation”.
allocated, to whom, and at what cost is particularly
topical in the run up to WRC-19; The 5G Guide is primarily for operators, especially
C-level executives in operators who will take the critical
• Fourth, there is the political nexus, with talk of ‘5G
‘when’ and ‘how’ decisions on 5G. It is designed to be
races’, and simmering debates over patents, security
used by operators regardless of where they are on
loopholes, trade wars, urban versus rural coverage
their 5G journey – whether they are planning to launch
dichotomy and the competitive advantage of
5G in 2019 or those who need to lay the foundation
nations;
to launch after 2025. In the guide, operators will also
• Fifth, there is the less headline-grabbing, yet find support for their discussions with policymakers,
practical task of upgrading the mobile infrastructure vendors, customers, industry analysts/consultants and
with the latest technology (i.e. 5G) based on a other stakeholders.
sustainable business case. This perspective is often
missing from the news and commentary about 5G. The core thrust of the 5G Guide is different to many
But it is the key driver for The 5G Guide – an in- other 5G reports. Instead of a technology-led narrative
depth reference resource to support operators as that focuses on the constituent 5G technological
they evaluate their plans and timings to sustainably features and how these may be implemented, the
evolve their business to 5G. GSMA has used a typical business-focused framework
to structure the guide. Hence the book focuses on
the timing (readiness) for 5G launch, how 5G will
The GSMA has developed The 5G Guide, the
create value for the benefit of all, and how to optimise
accompanying Business Case Considerations Model
deployment and operational costs.
and the Readiness Database for 160 countries, to
provide a summary of the economic case for 5G, and to
provide support to operators and the industry as they
decide how to deliver 5G sustainably.
Executive Summary 15
THE 5G GUIDE
There are six chapters (comprising of 41 sections) in the 5. Business Case Considerations Model: A
book, and each of these can be read as a standalone hypothetical model that explores the costs and
guide. Each of the sections also has a ‘Key Takeaways’ revenue potentials for 8 operator archetypes based
summary at the start. The details of the 6 chapters are on 3 deployment scenarios. The model suggests a
as follows: capacity-optimisation, evolutionary rollout plan as
1. Introducing the 5G era - five key questions: The the optimal option.
answers to the five questions provides a quick 6. Key Messages and Positions: As a member
roundup of the most important issues on 5G. organisation, the GSMA seeks to highlight the
2. 5G Readiness: As 5G is a question of ‘when’ key messages and positions for the industry.
and not ‘if’, this chapter provides clear guidance Operators can rely on this resource to develop and
on what factors influence readiness from a complement their own perspectives and positions
technological, policy and market perspective. The on 5G.
GSMA has developed the accompanying ‘BEMECS’
5G Readiness tool which provides 40 Readiness
indicators for 160 countries.
3. 5G Value Creation and Capture: This is the heart and
soul of the 5G Guide. It explores the different value
segments and opportunities in the 5G era (from the
evolutionary to the revolutionary), identifies the value
enablers, and highlights six potential business models
for operators in the 5G era.
4. 5G Cost Considerations: Explores how innovations
in 5G architecture, capability and ownership will
impact the operator business case. The impact of
some of these factors (e.g. network coverage) can
be clearly assessed. There also will be factors of less
clear impact in the 5G era – from the prospect of
private networks to AI-based automation that are
also assessed.
16 Executive Summary
THE 5G GUIDE
Executive Summary 17
THE 5G GUIDE
18
18 Imagine the future
THE 5G GUIDE
Final figures for 2029 show that GDP grew by 5% and Scientists at the National Laboratory
unemployment hit a 10-year low thanks to continued for Science Research have announced a
growth in industrial productivity. The economy is miniaturised computer for eye glasses that
benefiting from digitisation and automation across can interpret non-verbal facial communication
almost all sectors as businesses embrace new from humans. “This is a significant advance
technology to drive productivity growth. Economists that paves the way for super-intelligent eye
predict that the trend will continue as the full scale of glasses that bring powerful capabilities for
the 5G Internet of Things device explosion is only just users in their daily lives”, the lead researcher
beginning to become clear. said. The technology relies on advances in
machine learning, plus biological and quantum
Mobile World Times (01/03/2030) computing. As with other wearables, experts
expect the computers to be linked to users’
personal cloud storage via 5G networks,
enabling each user to capture, process, upload
and store their daily emotions. Human-to-
machine communication is already widely used
for ads that react to human emotions.
Mr G wakes up to natural light and the sound of a piano concert playing softly. His
automated home has raised his bedroom blinds early to let in the sun as recommended by
his doctor. His holographic display projects his calendar for the day on the wall next to his
breakfast table for him to see as he eats. It highlights important meetings and adds work
items for him to do on his commute. His avatar assistant follows him around as he gets
ready for work, telling him the latest news, traffic updates and warning him not to wear
that red tie because it wouldn’t be appropriate for his dinner date.
Before he leaves home, his Z-Phone syncs with the cloud to save a local copy of his current
working files. It does this over his combined Wi-Fi and 5G Small Cell home gateway. His
driverless car notes when he is about to finish his breakfast, and starts warming up in the
cold winter morning.
As the car drives off, his avatar provides companionship while he works on his latest
presentation. When he needs a new video file, his Z-tablet pulls the 2GB video via 5G in less
than 20 seconds and allows him to edit and embed it in his presentation on the fly. As he
drives through remote areas, the 5G core network integrates with a satellite backhauled 4G
cell to provide a heterogeneous, boundless connectivity experience. His avatar
recommends and books a training session at the gym near his office for before lunch.
His day in the office is normal. He is connected to the Bring-Your-Own 5G Small Cell in the
office which his Z-Phone prefers over the office Wi-Fi. The hot-desk space recognises him
and configures the seat and desk to his own personalised ergonomic settings. The coffee
maker ‘sees’ him as he comes over and says: “Hey, Mr G, same as usual?”. As he chats with
his colleague over coffee, he projects the presentation he is working on onto the table. His
avatar transforms the table into a touch screen.
As evening draws near, Mr G’s avatar orders flowers for his date, books the table and
checks with the avatar of his date that she would enjoy vegetarian cuisine. His connected
fridge had originally scheduled a delivery of groceries for 7pm in the evening, but his avatar
rescheduled it for 10pm once his date had confirmed – it will continue to monitor his
location and amend the delivery further if necessary. He has a wonderful evening, returns
home happy and wonders what life must have been before the 5G era!
His avatar ends the day by sending a message to his doctor detailing his medical signs,
showing her that he was very happy and positive today, and that his blood pressure was on
average down 5%. His avatar then sends a message to the government’s “Office for the
Promotion of National Happiness” telling them that Citizen G had a happiness index of
9.5 today.
1 Introducing the
5G Era
Chapter 1 of the 5G Guide addresses five key questions about the
introduction of 5G:
• How is 5G different?
• When is 5G coming?
• Where is 5G happening?
Readers will get an insight into the capabilities of 5G and why 5G will
fundamentally transform the role of mobile across industry and society.
22
22 Introducing the 5G Era
THE 5G GUIDE
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• 5G is the next generation mobile technology and will transform the role of mobile in society.
• The 5G era will commence in full from 2020, creating huge opportunities for consumers,
enterprises, operators, vendors and all stakeholders.
• To deliver on its promise, the mobile industry has five clear goals for the 5G era:
– Provide boundless connectivity for all
– Deliver sustainable network economics & innovation
– Transform the mobile broadband experience
– Drive growth in new use cases for massive and critical IoT
– Accelerate the digital transformation of industry verticals
• Based on the insights from a survey of 750 CEOs of mobile operators, the GSMA has distilled
the top ten industry expectations for the 5G era.
5G is more than just an evolutionary step to a new specifically for the way users want to live and will
generation of technology; it represents a fundamental provide a platform on which new digital services and
transformation of the role that mobile technology plays business models can thrive. It will enable machines
in society. As demand for continuous connectivity to communicate without human intervention in an
grows, 5G is an opportunity to create an agile, purpose- Internet of Things (IoT) capable of driving a near-
built network tailored to the different needs of citizens endless array of services. It will facilitate safer, more
and the economy. efficient and cost-effective transport networks. It will
offer improved access to medical treatment, reliably
Deploying 5G is an opportunity for operators to move connecting patients and doctors all over the globe.
beyond connectivity and collaborate across sectors
such as finance, transport, retail and health to deliver From low-power, sensor-driven smart parking to
new, rich services to consumers and businesses. It is holographic conference calls, 5G will enable richer,
an opportunity for industry, society and individuals to smarter and more convenient living and working. It
advance their digital ambitions, with 5G a catalyst for is a giant step forward in the global race to digitise
innovation. economies and societies.
Thanks to technology advances in many different fields, these successes by delivering a platform that enhances
5G networks will be at the centre of an ecosystem existing services, and enables new business models and
that pushes society’s continued digital transformation. use cases. The GSMA expects commercial 5G networks
The mobile industry has demonstrated its ability to to be widely deployed in the post-2020 period, the 5G
connect and transform society through its 2G, 3G and era, as outlined in Figure 1.1.1 below.
4G networks over the last 30 years. 5G will build on
FIGURE 1.1.1
TECHNOLOGY
4G takes
the lead
Following consultation with 750 operator CEOs in a Better Future”, the GSMA has identified five mobile
2016/171, and in line with the Mobile Industry’s Purpose industry goals for the 5G era:
to “Intelligently Connect Everyone and Everything to
FIGURE 1.1.2
BOUNDLESS
CONNECTIVITY FOR ALL
1.1.3.1 Provide boundless connectivity for all 1.1.3.4 Drive growth in new use cases for massive
5G networks will coexist with 4G networks and and critical IoT
alternative network technologies to deliver a boundless,
10-100X 5G era networks will support the massive rollout of
high-speed, reliable and secure broadband experience,DATA RATESintelligent IoT connections for a multitude of scenarios
and support a plethora of use cases for society.
PERCEPTION and provide an enhanced platform to support the
1 ms
OF 100% widespread adoption of critical communications
LATENCY
COVERAGE
1.1.3.2 Deliver sustainable network economics & services.
innovation
The mobile industry will strive to cost-effectively 1.1.3.5 Accelerate the digital transformation of
deliver better quality networks either independently 5G industry verticals
PERCEPTION 10-100X
or through sharing and partnerships. REQUIREMENTS
OF 99.999% 5G era networks The mobile industry will provide the networks and
CONNECTED
AVAILABILITY
will rely on a combination of established and innovative platforms to accelerate DEVICES the digitisation and automation
technologies, and use both licensed and unlicensed of industrial practices and processes (incl. supporting
spectrum, across different spectrum bands. the Industry 4.0 goals).
1,000X 10 YEAR
1.1.3.3 Transform the mobile broadbandMORE experience BATTERY FOR
5G networks will provide an enhanced broadband
CAPACITY SENSORS
90%
experience with speeds of up to 1 Gigabit per second REDUCTION IN
and latency of <4 milliseconds, and provide the ENERGY USE
platform for cloud and artificial intelligence (AI) -based
services.
1. “The 5G
VOICE era: Age of boundless connectivity and intelligent automation”, GSMA, February 2017
ORIENTED
1G 2G 3G
Introducing the 5G Era 25
2G
THE 5G GUIDE
The GSMA has been engaging with its members since These ten insights illustrate both the concerns that
2016 to help focus the wider debate on 5G and align its operators share in terms of putting in place the
members around a core set of expectations for the 5G foundations to support sustainable investment and
era. The expectations, outlined after the engagement innovation during the 5G era, and the potential
with operator CEOs, and other senior managers, in opportunity that 5G presents to the industry and
2016/17 is distilled into key insights for the 5G era as society. Together they form a holistic view of the key
shown in Table 1.1.1 factors that will shape the debate on 5G over the
coming years and beyond.
TABLE 1.1.1
Basics 5G will transform the mobile broadband experience in early deployments and drive new intelligent automation use
1
cases in later phases.
5G as a technology will evolve over time and leverage a variety of spectrum ranges, plus robust security, to support
2
new use cases.
Opportunity
3 Enterprise services and solutions will drive 5G’s incremental revenue potential.
4 5G will start as an urban-focused technology and integrate with 4G to provide boundless connectivity for all.
5 5G will deliver revenue growth to mobile operators, with at least a 2.5% CAGR in the early period of the 5G era.
Market Structure Competition and collaboration between operators and other ecosystem players to provide services will intensify in
6
the 5G era.
7 New models for infrastructure ownership, competition and partnerships will be required for the 5G era.
Sustainability
8 Regulation, licensing and spectrum policy will make or break the 5G opportunity.
9 The industry should strive to avoid spectrum and technology fragmentation for 5G.
10 Interoperable and interconnected IP communication services should be supported as default in the 5G era.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• As an evolutionary technology, 5G will do all the things that 4G can do; and it will do it even
better.
• But 4G is not going away just yet. It will coexist with 5G well into the 2030s and together
they will be the bedrock of next generation mobile networks.
• The definitive 5G design goals (IMT-2020) defines a set of specifications that will deliver new
capabilities and possibilities beyond what 4G can deliver.
• 5G’s superior throughput (speed), latency, device density, flexibility, heterogeneity and
energy efficiency will support a plethora of existing and new use cases.
• These new or improved capabilities will provide additional opportunities for operators to
develop new use cases for niche segments within industry verticals.
5G is a global and multi-stakeholder technology the IMT-2020 requirements in Table 1.2.1, proposed
development with a range of design goals. Diverse by the International Telecommunications Union
stakeholders within and across different countries Radiocommunications Sector (ITU-R), are the definitive
and regions have been working hard since 2012 to 5G design goals2.
define and shape what 5G should become. However,
TABLE 1.2.1
Requirement Value
Downlink: 20Gb/s
Peak
Uplink: 10Gb/s
Data rate
Downlink: 100Mb/s
User experience
Uplink: 50Mb/s
Downlink: 30 bit/s/Hz
Peak
Uplink: 15 bit/s/Hz
Downlink: 0.12~0.3 bit/s/Hz
Spectral efficiency 5th percentile user
Uplink: 0.045~0.21 bit/s/Hz
Downlink: 3.3~9 bit/s/Hz
Average
Uplink: 1.6~6.75 bit/s/Hz
Mobility 0km/hr~500km/hr
Bandwidth 100MHz
2. https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-R/study-groups/rsg5/rwp5d/imt-2020/Pages/default.aspx
A superior experience from 5G will not only enhance Figure 1.2.1 summarises the comparison of 5G with 4G.
the experience for existing users and use cases: it looks
set to unlock new,MASSIVE
currently
IOTunimaginable,
& CRITICAL possibilities. ENHANCED
COMMUNICATIONS BROADBAND
FIGURE 1.2.1
10-100X
DATA RATES
PERCEPTION
1 ms
OF 100%
LATENCY
COVERAGE
PERCEPTION 5G 10-100X
OF 99.999% REQUIREMENTS CONNECTED
AVAILABILITY DEVICES
1,000X 10 YEAR
MORE BATTERY FOR
CAPACITY SENSORS
90%
REDUCTION IN
ENERGY USE
VOICE ORIENTED
1G 2G 3G
2G
3G
DATA ORIENTED Introducing the 5G Era 29
4G 5G
THE 5G GUIDE
VERTICAL / INDUSTRIAL NETWORK ECONOMICS
TRANSFORMATION & INNOVATION
5G ERA
GOALS
While 5G offers superior performance over 4G, both Digital Subscriber Lines (DSL) and customer migration
will coexist comfortably into the 2030s as the bedrock to the superior FTTH system is a long term, multi-
of next generation mobile networks. There are three decade project. In many markets, 5G coverage will be
perspectives that help to underline this point. 10-100X less than complete for at least a decade until the late
DATA RATES2020s and users will continue to rely on the 4G network
Firstly, unlike voice-oriented 2G and 3G (which
PERCEPTION for 5G non-spots
1 ms
(see Section 1.4.5 for forecasts).
were primarily circuit-switched networksOF 100%
with LATENCY
COVERAGE
varying attempts to accommodate packet-switching Thirdly, given the absence of a philosophical
principles), 4G is a fully packet-switched network paradigm shift, it was always envisioned that 4G is a
optimised for data services. 5G builds on this packet- futuristic project; hence the acronym LTE (Long Term
switching capability as is shown in Figure
PERCEPTION 1.2.3. 5G Evolution), a registered
10-100X trademark of the European
Therefore, 4G and 5G networks can coexist for REQUIREMENTS
OF 99.999% a long Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI). As the
CONNECTED
AVAILABILITY DEVICES
while because the transition from 4G to 5G does not first fully packet-based mobile network technology, LTE
imply or require a paradigm shift in the philosophy of laid the foundation for future iterations of packet-based
the underlying technology. mobile networks.
1,000X 10 YEAR
Secondly, as the parallels with fibre rollout
MORE for fixed BATTERY FOR
CAPACITY
broadband show, Fibre-To-The-Home/Premises SENSORS
90%
(FTTH/P) coexists with variations of copper-based REDUCTION IN
ENERGY USE
FIGURE 1.2.3
VOICE ORIENTED
1G 2G 3G
2G
3G
DATA ORIENTED
4G 5G
5G will provide much higher data throughput, enabling examples of use cases that will benefit from 5G’s lower
a significantly better customer experience. Most of the latency capabilities, as outlined in Figure 1.2.4.
headlines, marketing pitches and even official targets,
will be based on the faster speeds delivered by 5G While the headline speed and latency will be
networks. regularly promoted, what will matter most for 5G era
services is the consistency in achieving the claimed
Faster speeds, however, are not the only determinant service performance. For example, suppose tactile
of overall customer experience3. In particular, the internet can work with 10ms latency, this can be
reduction in latency (delay) for data’s transit across achieved in modern 4G networks, however only on
the 5G networks and to end users will play a major role a few occasions and in ideal scenarios. In contrast,
in unlocking new use cases in the 5G era. The Tactile 5G networks should be able to meet the same
Internet and Immersive Communications services are performance levels most of the times.
FIGURE 1.2.4
Delay
– Augmented Tactile
Services
deliverable by 4G
1ms reality internet and evolved 4G
Autonomous driving
Virtual Services requiring
reality 5G capabilities
Person to person
10ms Disaster alert Real time
gaming Person to machine
Multi-person
video call Machine to machine
Automotive Bi-directional
100ms Device
ecall remote
remote First responder
controlling
controlling connectivity
Video streaming
Personal
assistants
Machine Robotics
learning
3. https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/148707/1/Stocker-Whalley.pdf
5G networks will utilise and integrate a mixture of (SDN); Network Function Virtualisation (NFV);
spectrum and access networks to meet customers’ and Cloud Radio Access Network (Cloud RAN). A
capacity and coverage needs. This possibility puts 5G flexible architecture makes it feasible to increase
at the centre of the heterogeneous network (HetNet) overall network capacity by adding small cells to
in a way that has not been feasible with previous complement macro networks. In addition, completing
generations.
1.16 the standardisation of APIs towards underlying
infrastructure will be key for automated connectivity to
1.14
This new role at the centre of the HetNet is because, hetnets. These are discussed in detail in Section 4.4 on
Mobile revenues (USD, trillions)
0.98
FIGURE 1.2.5
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
5G IS AT THE CENTRE OF THE HETEROGENEOUS NETWORK OF THE FUTURE
Aerial networks
5G Small
cell
Wi-Fi 5G + 4G
zone
Person to person
10ms Disaster alert Real time
gaming Person to machine
1.2.6 5G and Intelligent Connectivity Multi-person
video call Machine to machine
The combination of 5G, AI and IoT will usher in a new age of Intelligent Connectivity
Automotive Bi-directional
100ms Device
ecall remote
remote
5G is developing in parallel with rapid advancements
controlling in personalised
First responderexperiences, delivered on demand. It will
controlling connectivity
AI and IoT. The combination of flexible, high-speed 5G have a significant and positive impact on individuals,
networks with AI and IoT will underpin the new age of industries, society and the economy, transforming the
Video streaming
Intelligent Connectivity.4 way people live and work.
1000ms Wireless cloud
Personal cloud
FIGURE 1.2.6
Machine Robotics
learning
Speech, image
Gaming
ARTIFICIAL & video
recognition
INTELLIGENCE
+
5G
Virtual,
Surgery augmented reality,
& healthcare computer vision
4. https://www.gsma.com/IC/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/21494-MWC-Americas-report.pdf
FIGURE 1.2.7
5G WILL SUPPORT EXISTING AND NEW PRODUCTS AND MARKETS (NOT EXHAUSTIVE)
controls
telematics
5. https://www.gsma.com/futurenetworks/4g-evolution/gsma-unlocking-commercial-opportunities-4g-evolution-5g/
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• 5G matters because it is a necessary upgrade of the biggest consumer technology that is
used by over 5 billion users globally.
• The mobile industry contributes immensely to society. GSMA estimates that this was worth
$3.9 trillion to the global economy in 2018 alone.
• As the latest and most capable mobile network, 5G will underpin the growth of the digital
economy in many countries.
• In particular, 5G alone is forecast to create $2.2 trillion of economic value by 2034.
controls
With more than 5 billion unique mobile users at the telematics
enterprises, governments and society in general.
end of 2018, mobile has a greater reach than any other
technology, and is thus the most important consumer The importance of mobile, and its centrality to daily
Extended Opportunities Real-time
technology product today. In that sense, 5G is a life, will become even more profound in theuplink
video 5G era as
Immersive video
necessary upgrade to the mobile product, ensuring communications
more and more of society’s services are digitised and
that it continues to remain relevant to consumers, accessible via the mobile platform. Remote
Virtual
control
presence
FIGURE 1.3.1
$2.2 TRILLION
BY 2034
PUBLIC SERVICES
16%
PROFESSIONAL &
FINANCIAL SERVICES
28%
6. For more information, see the GSMA report ‘Study on Socio-Economic Benefits of 5G Services Provided in mmWave Bands’
It is universally accepted that a high-speed, reliable and As the latest and most capable mobile network, 5G
robust network infrastructure is a critical requirement will underpin the growth of the digital economy in
for the growth of the digital economy.7 From many countries. This explains a lot of the government-
shopping to entertainment, socialising to managing backed activities around the world that seek to
the household (and household finances) the digital influence or accelerate the pace of 5G deployment and
economy has fundamentally altered human behaviour. commercialisation.
Users have been, and remain, ever ready to embrace
and integrate new digital tools in their daily lives. Figure 1.3.2 identifies the key enablers of the digital
economy in the 5G era.
FIGURE 1.3.2
KEY ENABLERS OF THE DIGITAL ECONOMY IN THE 5G ERA (SOURCE: BCG, GSMA)
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2
Release 14 Freeze of
Non-standalone
Rel-15, St.1 (NSA) radio
Rel-15, St.2
Rel-15, St.3
Rel-15 ASN.1
RELEASE 15, 5G PHASE 1
Rel-16, St.1
Rel-16, St.2
Rel-16, St.3
Rel-16, ASN.1
RELEASE 16, 5G PHASE 2
5G Phase 1 5G Phase 2
7. https://www.gsma.com/publicpolicy/embracing-the-digital-revolution-policies-for-building-the-digital-economy
– New Radio access – Radio enhancements
– New core network (Service based – Service based Architecture
Architecture for CP) enhancements Introducing the 5G Era 37
– SA scenario 2, NSA scenario 3 – Trusted non-3GPP access
THE 5G GUIDE
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• The first 5G networks were rolled out in 2018, kicking off the 5G era globally.
• However, the standardisation roadmap from 3GPP sets the schedule on when different parts
of the technology will be ready for deployment.
• Thanks to earlier adoption in China, adoption of 5G will be faster than 4G. GSMA
Intelligence forecasts that there will be a total of 1.35 billion 5G connections by 2025.
• But the 5G journey is a marathon and not a sprint. It will take at least 7 years and 5 3GPP
releases to reach 10% of total global connections by 2024.
• As adoption grows, 5G revenues will grow, reaching $1.15 trillion by 2025.
The accelerated schedule agreed to by the 3rd build and design components that implement the 5G
Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) in 2017 allowed NR specifications, while awaiting final standardisation
many operators around the globe to bring forward across all NSA and SA models.
their 5G commercial launch plans. Non-standalone 5G
new radio (NSA 5G NR) specifications were officially The focus of future 5G specifications will be for other
approved in December 2017, while the standalone (SA) use cases including, for example, industrial IoT use
version was approved in June 2018, which represented cases such as robotics and telepresence systems. This
the full 3GPP Release 15. covers 3GPP Release 16 for ultra-reliable and low-
INFRASTRUCTURE DIGITAL SAFETY LOCALLY RELEVANT PEOPLE ABLE DIGITALISING
AND SECURITY CONTENTlatency
AND communications
TO COPE WITH (URLLC), withCOMPANIES
the goal that
The relatively rapid agreement of 5G specifications SERVICES
Reliable, fast this should beDIGITALISATION
completed by December 2019. Figure
and ubiquitous Trust into digital
has telecommunication
allowed hardware manufacturers, chip makers
systems, no data misuse
and 1.4.1 shows the
Broad choice of local
3GPP 5G roadmap forBroad
Broad digital literacy
and proactive
Release 15 and 16.
adoption of
other suppliers
networks to progress their tests further, andlanguage
to and locally digitalisation by local
Well-functioning cyber- relevant digital content Strong technical, inter- companies
Supporting physical security systems and services personal and higher-
infrastructure (energy, order cognitive skills Government and public
logistics, ...) support for company
digitalisation
FIGURE 1.4.1
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2
Release 14 Freeze of
Non-standalone
Rel-15, St.1 (NSA) radio
Rel-15, St.2
Rel-15, St.3
Rel-15 ASN.1
RELEASE 15, 5G PHASE 1
Rel-16, St.1
Rel-16, St.2
Rel-16, St.3
Rel-16, ASN.1
RELEASE 16, 5G PHASE 2
5G Phase 1 5G Phase 2
– New Radio access – Radio enhancements
– New core network (Service based – Service based Architecture
Architecture for CP) enhancements
– SA scenario 2, NSA scenario 3 – Trusted non-3GPP access
– Cloud native RAN – Better network slicing
– Scenarios 4 and 7 – Ultra Reliable Low Latency services
1,600 40%
1,400 35%
ography)
1,200 30%
Introducing the 5G Era 39
illions)
1,000 25%
Rel-14, St.3 Extensions
Release 14 Freeze of
Non-standalone
THE 5G GUIDE
Rel-15, St.1 (NSA) radio
Rel-15, St.2
Rel-15, St.3
Rel-15 ASN.1
RELEASE 15, 5G PHASE 1
1.4.2 5G connections forecast Rel-16, St.1
1,600 40%
1,400 35%
5G coverage (% of geography)
1,200 30%
5G adoption (in millions)
1,000 25%
800 20%
600 15%
400 10%
200 5%
- 0%
2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
GSMAi forecasts a faster rate of 5G adoption compared However, as coverage begins to reach the limits of
to 4G in the first five years post launch. This is primarily major urban areas, GSMAi forecasts a slight slowdown
due to China’s earlier launch and adoption of 5G in the rate of adoption compared to 4G, as shown in
compared to 4G. Also factors such as lower-cost years six and seven of Figure 1.4.3 below. This reflects
devices and a rise in non-smartphone connections will the challenges to 5G network densification needed for
boost growth. rural (assuming 5G is deployed on the high frequency
bands - 3.5GHz and mmWave).
FIGURE 1.4.3
30%
25%
Share of connections
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Years from launch
4G 5G
2G 53%
3G
29%
4G
Introducing the 5G Era
14%41
THE 5G GUIDE
Market commentary suggests that there is a race to In this context, announcements and plans within the
5G and announcements about being ‘first’ abound. industry need a level of realism and maturity to ensure
However, history suggests the 5G race will be a that in the race to be first to 5G, due consideration is
marathon, not a sprint. Figure 1.4.4 shows that 3G and given to the business case and the sustainability of 5G
4G both took a minimum of seven years and five 3GPP era systems.
releases to reach 10% global market share, and 5G will
only exceed the globally significant 10% mark by 2024.
FIGURE 1.4.4
8 YEARS
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
3GPP Release 99 4 5 6 7 8 9
LTE
Main development UMTS All-IPcore HSDPA HSUPA HSPA + LTE
Small Cell
7 YEARS
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
3GPP Release 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
LTE Mission
LTE LTE Carrier
Main development LTE CoMP Advanced Critical
Small Cell Advanced Aggregation
Pro Services
7 YEARS
2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026
3GPP Release 15
Main development 5G
era networks.
20% This is applicable to players in mature timeline when the commercial case allows.
4G markets that launch 5G in 2019, and also players
in markets
15%
where 2G/3G are the majority of their Technology neutrality has been used to enable operators
connections. to refarm their existing spectrum assignments for
use with newer technologies. Expectedly 2G and/
5G connections
10% will grow from the initial launches in or 3G networks will be the first to be replaced by 4G
early 2019 to reach around 15% of the global connection depending on the legacy network usage, and this has
base by5%
2025. However, this headline figure masks already happened in several markets. By 2025, GSMAi
significant variations at the country level: some of the forecasts that only 4% of connections will still be on 2G,
early adopters will see adoption rates close to 50% by with 3G also tending towards extinction. 4G networks
this date.
0% These higher levels of adoption (and implicitly will exist well into the 2030s before they will ultimately
higher levels of 5G0 coverage) will
1 give operators
2 in 3 be replaced.4 5 6 7
Years from launch
FIGURE 1.4.5 4G 5G
2G 53%
3G
29%
4G 14%
4%
5G
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
2G 3G 4G 5G
While mobile revenue growth has slowed over the their infancy and focused on trial deployments. In
past five years, GSMAi forecast continued single-digit developing countries, many operators are still investing
growth to 2025, at a global CAGR of 1.5%. Growth in increasing the coverage and capacity of existing 3G
will be sustained through connecting more unique and 4G networks.
subscribers as additional unconnected people adopt to
mobile services and populations grow. The level of 5G investment required will depend
on a number of factors, including the model (SA,
Furthermore, operators will actively pursue new NSA or phased approach) selected for 5G network
business models to improve data monetisation and deployments; the targeted network coverage; the range
seek to unlock the enterprise opportunity. There is a of spectrum bands in use; and the availability of fibre
potential upside to these forecasts if operators capture infrastructure and nationwide LTE networks.
more of the growth opportunities in areas such as
IoT and digital identity, which could increase annual The Cost Considerations chapter of this book goes into
revenue growth to 5% during the 5G era. more detail, exploring the different cost drivers that will
shape 5G rollout and analysing their potential known
A number of operators in the most developed markets and unknown impacts on operators.
are upgrading their 4G networks to faster speeds
and lower latencies, while 5G investments are still in
FIGURE 1.4.6
1.16
1.14
Mobile revenues (USD, trillions)
1.12
1.10
1.08
1.06
1.04
1.02
1.00
0.98
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Aerial networks
5G Small
cell
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• There is growing momentum around 5G, with over 120 operators globally undertaking 5G
trials, and over 70 announced plans for commercial launches.
• The US and South Korea kicked off the 5G era with 5G service launches in the fourth quarter
of 2018.
• By 2025, GSMA Intelligence forecasts that 5G will account for 50% of connections in the US
while China will have the highest absolute number of 5G connections (450m).
• The launch of commercial Mobile IoT (NB-IoT and LTE-M) networks has established the
foundation for 5G Massive IoT.
• Commercial licensed LPWA networks were available in 40 markets as of the end of November
2018.
There is growing momentum around 5G, with over 120 Meanwhile, launch of commercial Mobile IoT (NB-IoT
operators globally undertaking 5G trials, and over
US
70 and LTE-M)
JAPAN
networks hasEUROPE
established the foundation
CHINA
announced plans for commercial launches. Device and for Massive IoT. Commercial licensed LPWA networks
49%
network infrastructure vendors have also been active 49% 31% 25%
were available in 40 markets as of the end of November
in announcements to highlight their 5G readiness, 2018, and their global availability will increase further
supportingGlobal
operators in their trials and with the first 5G and be supported via global roaming agreements
14%
handsets already now slated for launch in 2019.
GSMAi forecasts significant regional variances in 5G as leaders in the 5G era. The GSMA provides deeper
adoption. This is driven primarily by the readiness coverage of 5G developments in the regional 5G
of local markets for 5G, as well as the desire of both reports and the Mobile Economy reports.
operators and governments in each region to be seen
FIGURE 1.5.2
REGIONAL 5G ADOPTIONS BY 2025, EXCLUDING IOT AND FWA CONNECTIONS (SOURCE: GSMA
INTELLIGENCE)
10% 7% 6% 3%
US mobile operators are targeting a phased approach 1.5.2.2 Japan: accelerating 5G deployment
to 5G network deployments, beginning with an Japan will closely follow the US on adoption, with
NSA architecture, where 4G and 5G radio access forecasts of around 49% of connections being 5G by
technologies will be used in tandem. The provision of 2025, for a total of 95 million connections. Operators in
enhanced mobile broadband to the consumer market the country have accelerated their deployment plans in
will be the core proposition in early 5G deployments in recent months, with indications of limited commercial
the US, with massive IoT and ultra-reliable, low-latency service in 2019 including a range of services during
communications gaining scale at a later stage. the Rugby World Cup running from September to
November. This would represent an acceleration of
5G-based fixed wireless, as well as 5G-based services previously communicated plans to showcase services
targeted at the enterprise sector, represent major during the summer Olympics of 2020.
opportunities for incremental operator revenue in
BY 2018 BY 2020 BY 2025
the US. 5G offers a potentially lower cost and faster
1.5.2.3 South Korea: aggressive and concerted China will be the largest projected market for 5G by
5G launch some distance, with 450 million connections by 2025.
South Korean operators (SK Telecom, Korea Telecom This will put it on a par with Europe in terms of 5G
and LG U+) launched the world’s first commercial penetration at just under 30% of the total connections,
5G services on smartphones in April 2019. They had and a little lower than the leading markets such as US,
earlier set a March 2019 date for commercial launch Korea and Japan. China sees 5G leadership as a key
but surprised many with the announcement that their element in the country’s ‘Made in China 2025’ roadmap,
5G services went live, although with limited coverage which envisages 5G as helping to play a transformative
and focused on enterprise solutions, in December role in China’s ambition to gain worldwide lead in a
2018. The accelerated deployment is a testament to range of new technologies such as industrial IoT, cloud
Korea’s reaction to the intensifying global race to usher computing and AI. Chinese operators already account
in the 5G era and its push for global leadership. In for two thirds of the overall IoT connections and also
September 2017, SK Telecom showcased 360 degree lead the adoption of low power wide area NB-IoT
video over pre-commercial 5G network in Seoul near technologies that will become the base of Massive
Myoung-Dong, one of the densest urban areas in Korea. IoT. As a result, there is potential upside to existing
Likewise, KT offered a glimpse of 5G at the 2018 Winter forecasts if Chinese operators accelerate deployment
Olympics in Pyeongchang, when it provided immersive plans beyond the main urban areas.
services and 360-degree video over a pre-commercial
5G network. Chinese operators look set to adopt the SA deployment
route for 5G networks from the beginning. This is in
The 5G services launched in December 2018 are contrast to other regions of the world where most
available only in the form of mobile routers providing operators have indicated a preference for a NSA
connectivity, while operators plan to make nationwide deployment. Standalone offers larger-scale economies
coverage and services available to the consumer and high performance as well as less complexity from
market as handsets become available in 2019. For legacy LTE integration, but it is more expensive in the
example, auto-parts manufacturer Myunghwa Industry early commercial stage.
is now able to remotely perform real-time quality
control analytics on its production line, by connecting 1.5.2.5 Europe: efforts to accelerate 5G
super-high-resolution cameras to cloud-based AI over Europe is keen to play a leading role in 5G, having
5G connectivity. trailed other developed regions in 4G adoption.
Reflecting these ambitions, the European Commission
1.5.2.4 China: will be the largest 5G market launched the 5G for Europe Action Plan in 2016
China will play a key role in driving global 5G adoption and established the 5G Infrastructure Public Private
rates, given the size of its market and the impressive Partnership (5G PPP) in conjunction with the region’s
rate at which it adopted 4G. All three Chinese operators wider ICT industry. National level initiatives are also
have commercial launches planned by the end of 2020. underway supported by operators and governments.
Initial 5G launch plans will focus on a limited footprint
of dense urban centres to test network efficacy and 5G coverage will reach three-quarters of the population
consumer take-up levels before commitments are in Europe by 2025. By this date there will be 203
made to roll out into suburban and rural areas. In million 5G connections, accounting for 29% of total
aggregate, China’s pre-commercial and commercial connections. From a regional perspective, Europe will
launch footprints will be among the largest in the world account for the third largest share of 5G connections by
in terms of coverage and number of base stations. 2025, behind Asia Pacific and North America.
1.5.2.6 Middle East: host to some of the earliest 1.5.2.7 India: getting ready for 5G while
5G rollouts deepening 4G
Middle East is a diverse region in terms of mobile The Indian market is currently seeing a rapid migration
market maturity, mobile internet adoption and 5G to 4G, with over half the connection base set to be
timelines. The major operators in the oil-exporting running over 4G networks by 2020 and operators
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states are looking investing heavily in LTE networks. Whilst India is
to be global leaders in 5G deployments and are unlikely to be a first mover in terms of 5G launches,
rapidly moving from trials to early commercialisation. there is growing discussion amongst operators and
Launch of 5G mobile services in the GCC region will other industry stakeholders around the potential
begin in 2019, when the first 5G smartphones will benefits of 5G. The government has created a high
be commercially available. Further ahead, 15 MENA level forum that has made recommendation around
countries have announced plans to launch 5G mobile spectrum, as well as other initiatives to support
services by 2025, which together account for more 5G including the development of India-specific 5G
than half of the markets in the region. For example, applications. Spectrum auctions are currently planned
UAE successfully trialled FWA in 2018 and is ready for for the second half of 2019 that would potentially
5G mobile commercial launch as soon as 5G devices are cover a number of bands relevant to 5G, including the
available. 700MHz, 3.5GHz, 24GHz and 28GHz.
Enhanced mobile broadband will be the key use case Initial commercial 5G launches are currently expected
in early 5G deployments in the MENA region, while by 2020, in line with the government’s own targets.
applications and services for enterprises are tested. Bharti Airtel has suggested that initial use cases could
The opportunity for MENA operators to enhance include FWA, whilst Reliance Jio has suggested an
the consumer experience through 5G networks, and early launch of 5G with a focus on enhanced mobile
hence drive incremental revenue, rests on linking broadband. Both operators and regulators are focused
5G commercial propositions to developments in on the need to increase fibre deployments across the
applications and content for immersive reality, country to provide backhaul and enhanced backbone
eSports and enhanced in-venue digital entertainment connectivity for future 5G deployments.
(stadia, music venues). Some Middle East operators
are already showcasing potential applications of
immersive reality.
2 5G Readiness and
Enabling Conditions
Chapter 2 focuses on the enabling conditions for 5G rollouts and provides
guidance to operators on the key considerations ahead of 5G deployments.
While these vary across markets, there are common prerequisites, enabling
conditions and initial considerations. The Chapter is structured around three
key readiness questions: technology readiness; policy readiness; and market/
operator readiness, which in combination are the critical pillars that underpin
the overall viability of the 5G business case.
50
50 5G Readiness & Enabling Conditions
THE 5G GUIDE
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Technology readiness is the most pivotal factor for 5G. 3GPP delivered the first phase of 5G
standards in June 2018; commercial handsets will follow from April 2019.
• There are two 5G deployment models that have been standardised to meet initial market
requirements: Non-Standalone Access (NSA) and Standalone Access (SA).
• 5G NSA will be available for deployment from 2019, with full standalone 5G ready from 2020.
• NSA and SA 5G deployments are optimised for different needs:
– NSA configuration is suitable for providing more broadband capacity since 5G NR can
act as a supplementary capacity overlay to the 4G network.
– SA configuration allows operators to fully exploit the features of NR as well as the
capabilities of the new core network architecture.
• Based on the time lag between standardisation and device availability, NSA equipment was
ready from late 2018 and SA equipment will be ready from 2020.
• The different spectrum bands to be used for 5G create interesting perspectives:
– 5G deployment at 3.5GHz can reuse the existing infrastructure for 4G at 1800MHz
– mmWave frequencies can support high bandwidth services. However, due to cost, they
will initially be restricted to localised and specialised deployments.
• Given its high capacity, 5G sites will need fibre or high capacity microwave backhaul
• 5G will inherit services from 4G. For communication, the industry is working to support IMS-
based services from Day 1. For IoT, NB-IoT and LTE-M are already part of 5G.
• Identity and access management (incl. e-SIM) are key requirements for 5G success, especially
given the significantly more complex devices and services 5G landscape.
• 5G is an opportunity for the mobile industry to enhance network and service security levels to
better address the threat landscape resulting from the move to all-IP.
The Technology Readiness for 5G is predicated on its As Figure 2.1.1 highlights, the 3GPP releases kick-
standardisation process led by the 3GPP, the body start the roadmap for commercialisation of chipsets,
that designs the technical specifications of the radio equipment and devices. Commercial volumes
access network and core network. 3GPP released a typically lag standardisation by 12-18 months, whilst
subset of the specifications sufficient to deploy the NR development, testing, trials and pre-commercial
access network in NSA mode in December 2017, before activities take place.
completing the first phase of the 5G specifications with
Release 15 in June 2018. Low power wide area IoT technologies are part of the
5G Roadmap, as NB-IoT and LTE-M already meet 5G
5G phase 2 (Release 16) is set to be completed requirements.
by December 2019. Release 16 will enhance the
capabilities of the NR and introduce additional features
such as enhancements to ultra-reliable low-latency
communications for industrial IoT; integrated access
and wireless backhaul; and more sophisticated network
slicing.
FIGURE 2.1.1
5G NR TECHNOLOGY ROADMAP
5G Core 5G Core
NR gNodeB
(based on Rel-15) (based on Rel-16)
LTE enhancements
EQUIPMENT
5G5GCore5G Core
Core 5G5GCore5G Core
Core
FIGURE 2.1.2 NR NR gNodeB
NRgNodeB
gNodeB FIGURE 2.1.3
(based
(based (based
on on
onRel-15)
Rel-15)Rel-15) (based
(basedon
(based on Rel-16)
onRel-16)
Rel-16)
EPC EPC
EPC EPC EPC
EPC 5GC 5GC
5GC
NR NR
NR LTE LTE
LTE LTE LTE
LTE NR NR
NR
User
PlanePlane
UserPlane
User Control
Control
Control PlanePlane
Plane
20182018
2018 20192019
2019 2020
2020
2020 2021
2021
2021 2022
2022
2022
Enhanced
Enhanced
Enhanced dual dual connectivity
dualconnectivity
connectivity Positioning
Positioning
Positioning 5G evolution
5G5Gevolution
evolution
Cloud-native
Cloud-native
Cloud-native RAN RAN
RAN Unmanned
Unmanned
Unmanned aerial systems
aerialsystems
aerial systems
RADIORADIO
RADIO LAYER
LAYER
LAYER
FEATURES
FEATURES
FEATURES Downlink/Uplink
Downlink/Uplink
Downlink/Uplink
split split
split
UltraLow
Ultra Ultra
Low Low latency,
latency,
latency,
Ultra Ultra reliable
Ultrareliable
reliable services
services
services
eMBB eMBB
eMBB Network
Network
Network SlicingSlicing
Slicing
Enhanced
Enhanced
Enhanced Network
Network
Network SlicingSlicing
Slicing
SERVICE
SERVICE LAYER
LAYER MEC MEC
MEC
SERVICE LAYER CellularCellular
Cellular IoT enhancements
IoTenhancements
IoT enhancements
FEATURES
FEATURES
FEATURES
5G
5G5Gvoice
voice voice continuity
service
service service continuity
continuity TrustedTrusted
Trusted non-3GPP
non-3GPP
non-3GPP accessaccess
access
2.1.3 SA vs NSA 5G
Non-standalone and Standalone 5G deployments are optimised for different needs
The NSA configuration is most suitable for providing (multiple logical networks on a single physical network),
enhanced mobile broadband services since NR can act as a as well as ultra-reliable and low-latency transmission.
capacity overlay to the 4G network, supplementing existing This set of features makes an SA deployment more
network investments. Where an operator aims to focus on suitable to address the enterprise market.
eMBB alone (at least initially), then NSA is suitable.
A full 5G system deployment, comprising the new radio
The 4G Radio and access networks will need upgrades access technology and new core network architecture,
to support 5G NSA. These will include software; new will require new investment cases and market readiness
hardware to support new 5G frequency bands and to is critical to these decisions.
aggregate the processing capacity in baseband that
5G needs; and antenna systems for MIMO. NSA devices It should be observed that while NSA 5G was originally
only need to support the new radio access technology: intended as an intermediate step for operators ahead
the control protocols are the same as those used by of the full rollout of Standalone 5G, market realities will
LTE devices. ultimately shape if, and when, the migration to SA 5G
happens. Both NSA and SA deployments are likely to
SA 5G configuration allows operators to fully exploit the coexist over the long term and some kind of upgrading
features of NR as well as the capabilities of the new core would be required for a full-fledged 5G (SA) network
network architecture. This will include network slicing (software versions, configuration, transport…).
Timely availability of network equipment is essential, The release of the Snapdragon X50 5G modem8 by
not only for testing but also to plan the integration with Qualcomm and of the Balong 5G019 by Huawei led
existing sites. With the technical specifications for NSA to the expectation that 5G-ready smartphones, from
NR completed in December 2017, many vendors have several vendors, may become commercially available
already started testing standards-compliant equipment. as early as 201910. Customer Premises Equipment (CPE)
Interoperability testing between major vendors has also for Fixed Wireless Access became available by the end
started. of 2018.
SA requires operators to deploy a completely new core commercial deployments after 2020. All operators
network that was only defined in the first 5G standards should pay attention to device compatibility with NSA
finalised in June 2018. Given a typical lag of 18 months and SA architectures, as some chipsets will not be dual
from standard completion to commercial introduction mode NSA and SA compatible.
of a new technology, 5G Core will likely be used in
8. http://www.trustedreviews.com/news/qualcomm-unveils-snapdragon-x50-world-first-5g-modem-2935894
9. https://www.totaltele.com/499418/MWC-2018-Huawei-launches-worlds-first-commercialised-5G-chip-set
10. https://www.digit.in/mobile-phones/5g-phones-heres-a-list-of-all-5g-ready-smartphones-expected-to-launch-in-2019-44894.html
5G technical
CHIPSETS features will spur new services Intel (Rel-15)
FIGURE 2.1.4
User Plane Control Plane
TIMELINE OF 5G FEATURES
EQUIPMENT
Operators will need to densify their networks for 5G, this limitation two strategies have been proposed:
especially by deploying many more small cells to boost utilise lower band spectrum for the uplink, such as the
capacity. However, the scale of the densification may 1800MHz spectrum (downlink/uplink decoupling); or
not be as big as it has been occasionally suggested. aggregate carriers at 3.5GHz with carriers at lower
By utilising advanced antenna techniques such as frequencies.
massive MIMO and beamforming, simulations (e.g. by
Qualcomm11) have shown the feasibility of matching It should be noted that the limited availability of
the downlink coverage provided by LTE 1800MHz with spectrum in lower bands would result in a limitation
5G radio base stations operating at 3.5GHz: this implies of the uplink throughput. Therefore, although the
a potential for the same cell grid to be reused for the strategies discussed in this section address the
initial rollout, albeit with challenges on managing the potential coverage impairment resulting from reusing
power output for urban massive MIMO deployments the LTE grid for NR, it is unlikely to address the capacity
as well as the feasibility of installing complex antenna demand of symmetric or uplink skewed services (such
systems required for MIMO in micro base stations. as many wideband IoT services).
The large amount of spectrum available in the However, the deployment of a large-scale millimetre
millimetre wave range combined with the opportunity wave network is not without challenges. As the size
for creating extremely dense networks will enable of a millimetre wave cell, depending on propagation
operators to launch ultra-high throughput services characteristics, is expected to be in order of 200metres
such as 8K video or high definition AR. Commercial to 1000metres outdoors and few tens of metres
applications of 5G in millimetre wave spectrum will indoors, the cost to achieve nationwide coverage will be
initially appear in the form of fixed wireless access for prohibitively expensive. Accordingly, use of millimetre
both consumers and enterprises. The use of millimetre wave technologies will initially be restricted to localised
wave technologies for self-backhauling of cell sites is and specialised deployments. Operators may also want
being studied by the 3GPP as a candidate feature of to consider models of infrastructure sharing including
Release 16. with each other, through public-private partnerships
and neutral hosting for millimetre wave deployments.
10. https://www.qualcomm.com/news/releases/2018/02/25/qualcomm-network-simulation-shows-significant-5g-user-experience-gains
5G sites will rely on a combination of fibre and Existing microwave links will likely need to be upgraded
microwave backhaul solutions. This mix of backhaul in order to provide the up to 10Gbps throughput that
options will persist deep into the 5G era: by 2025, 5G will require because currently, a typical microwave
the proportion of base stations connected via fibre link can carry 1Gbps. This type of upgrade is possible by
backhaul will grow from 30% in 2017 to just over 40%.12 adopting new technical solutions that operate in the E
band and that can achieve speeds of up to 10Gbps. NTT
Fibre is the ideal option for 5G, as capacity demands has also demonstrated a 100Gbps link using Orbital
are significantly higher compared to current typical Angular Momentum.13
microwave installations. A site hosting a 5G radio
base station operating on 100MHz of spectrum using Readers should also be mindful of the fact that network
beamforming and MIMO is expected to require up to deployment does not only take into account the peak
10Gbps (depending on site size and access spectrum) traffic, but also average traffic rate within a certain
for backhauling. For comparison, LTE backhaul demand percentile to meet economic feasibility.
is in the region of 1Gbps to 2 Gbps per site. In addition,
latency and availability need to be also considered in Ericsson Microwave Outlook 201714 forecasts that for some
backhaul technology selection and design processes. operators in Western Europe, backhaul for 80% of 5G sites
will be provided by microwave links with the remaining
20% of the sites connected by fibre.
FIGURE 2.1.5
90%
Total Cell-site Backhaul Usage
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
WW 2017 WW 2025
CS Voice
Enriched
VoLTE Communications
12. https://www.gsma.com/spectrum/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Mobile-backhaul-options.pdf
13. https://www.thestar.com.my/tech/tech-news/2018/05/23/record-breaking-100gbps-wireless-transmission-is-a-world-first/
VoNR
ViLTE
14. https://www.ericsson.com/assets/local/microwave-outlook/documents/ericsson-microwave-outlook-report-2017.pdfd
VoLTE/ViLTE
RCS
5G Readiness & Enabling Conditions 57
RCS
SMS
THE 5G GUIDE
The ‘regulated’ nature of voice services in most markets rationalising their legacy 2G/3G networks; and provide
means that operators would be expected to support enhanced communications functionality for users. As
voice services in the 5G era. For example, operators IP communications services are set to replace their
may be mandated, as part of the licence condition,
100% legacy counterparts (e.g. RCS will replace SMS) in the
to provide
90% voice services, especially emergency voice 5G era, operators should begin to leverage their 4G
services, to their subscribers at substantial coverage. investments to provide full IP communications services.
Total Cell-site Backhaul Usage
80%
IMS-based communications services are the future of
70% communications and VoNR (IMS voice service
operator Profiling of VoNR based on 3GPP specifications is
over 5G
60%New Radio) will become the standard operator ongoing in GSMA Networks Group and operators are
voice 50%
service for the 5G era (as shown in Figure 2.1.6). encouraged to contribute in order to provide clarity to
device manufacturers and infrastructure vendors as to
40%
The GSMA recommends that VoNR is planned to be what the minimum set of functionality to be supported
30% as soon as possible to avoid a repeat of the
deployed are. Strict adherence to the profile will accelerate the
challenges
20% with the retrospective introduction of VoLTE introduction of the service, and unlock economies of
on 4G 10%
networks; provide guidance to operators on scale and interoperability around the globe.
0%
WW 2017 WW 2025
CS Voice
Enriched
VoLTE Communications
VoNR
ViLTE
VoLTE/ViLTE
RCS
RCS
SMS
VoWiFi VoWiFi
MMS
WebRTC WebRTC
Cell Broadcast & Public Warning System (PWS) Services run on IMS
CS CS
No
CSFB CSFB
70%
THE 5G GUIDE
60%
50%
40%
30%
2.1.11
20%Voice service continuity
10%
Operators need to take special consideration in adopting IP Communications for 5G
0%
WW 2017 WW 2025
5G coverage will likely be limited initially, so operators Figure 2.1.7 illustrates the various voice continuity
should have mechanisms inFiber
Copper
place to secure the
Microwave:
scenarios.
Microwave: Satellite Sub-6GHz
Sub-6GHz
continuity of communication services when the device41GHz~100GHz
7GHz~40GHz Unlicensed Licensed
roams across different access technologies. Unlike 4G, The recommendation is, therefore, to deploy
there will be no provision in the standards to force the nationwide IMS-based IP communications services
device to select a legacy circuit switched (CS) network as soon as possible. This would eliminate the need
(2G or2G3G) to make or receive
3G a call in the
4G case where for4G
having to resort
Evolution 5G to SRVCC or CSFB and enhance
Non-3GPP Access
voice service over IMS is not supported (CS Fallback). the user experience by providing consistent HD voice
CS Voice quality within the network. If the operator does not
When the operator supports voice over IMS (that is have VoLTE,
Enriched deploying nationwide VoLTE would be
VoLTE and VoNR) voice continuity can be attained
VoLTE theCommunications
first step to achieving future-proof voice service
when the device moves between these two radio continuity in the 5G era. Furthermore, operators
VoNR
access technologies by means of regularViLTE handover. The should take into consideration that interconnection
capability of transferring a voice callRCS
to a legacy CS access and roaming of IMS networks will allow higher
VoLTE/ViLTE
(Single Radio Voice Call Continuity – SRVCC) that was quality services to be provided to its subscribers with
RCS
standardised for 4G, is currently
SMS not specified in the first expanded user base that enjoys the quality service.
release of the 3GPP specifications for 5G (Release 15). It Operators are therefore recommended toVoWiFi
VoWiFi interconnect
is a Study Item for Release 16 and will be standardized by
MMS and adopt roaming of IMS networks to leverage full
WebRTC WebRTC
earliest in 2021. network effect of global communications service.
Cell Broadcast & Public Warning System (PWS) Services run on IMS
FIGURE 2.1.7
CS CS
No
CSFB CSFB
PS PS
Handover Handover
NR LTE NR LTE
3GPP has indicated that both NB-IoT and LTE-M will 3GPP Release 13 provided the initial set of capabilities
be proposed to ITU-R as meeting the 5G Massive IoT for both LTE-M and NB-IoT. Both technologies have
requirements for IMT-2020. The results from initial been designed to be power efficient and to achieve
studies are available in the Evaluation of LTE-M towards better coverage and penetration. In addition, each
5G IoT requirements16; 3GPP Tdoc R1-180252917; and technology offers a variety of capabilities that allow
3GPP Tdoc R1-180179618, and a number of other studies mobile operators to address a wider range of IoT
are currently being conducted as part of the 3GPP use cases. Please refer to Appendix 7.2 for further
assessment of the IMT-2020 requirements. descriptions of the NB-IoT and LTE-M requirements.
15. https://www.gsma.com/iot/mobile-iot-5g-future/
16. “Evaluation of LTE-M towards 5G IoT requirements”, Sierra Wireless, Ericsson, Altair, Sony, Virtuosys, AT&T, Verizon, Orange, Nokia, China Unicom, NTT DOCOMO, KDDI, KPN, KT,
Sequans, SK Telecom, SingTel, Softbank, Sprint, Telenor
https://www.sierrawireless.com/-/media/iot/pdf/LTE-M_White_Paper_171114B
17. “IMT-2020 self-evaluation: mMTC connection density for LTE-MTC and NB-IoT”, Ericsson http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/TSG_RAN/WG1_RL1/TSGR1_92/Docs/R1-1802529.zip
18. “Consideration on self-evaluation of IMT-2020 for mMTC connection density”, Huawei, HiSilicon http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/TSG_RAN/WG1_RL1/TSGR1_92/Docs/R1-1801796.zip
19. “Interim conclusions for IoT in REL-16”, 3GPP http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/tsg_ran/TSG_RAN/TSGR_79/Docs/RP-180581.zip
The 5G era will experience a number of challenges 5G will herald a move from legacy subscriber-centric
around identifying users, devices and the various services, where operators have focused on providing
associations formed between the two. For example, a voice and data services to the subscriber, towards the
device may need to be associated with a manufacturer need to support personalised user-centric services
(for lifetime maintenance), an owner (who may be where the focus shifts to the user. In this model, users
paying for the core 5G services consumed by the will take their services with them, regardless of the
device) and a user (who consumes third-party services subscription and the access network used.
via the device).
For this, operators can step-up as trusted Identity
These challenges already exist to some extent Providers and, in doing so, will be able to better
in previous generation systems and were solved understand and serve their customers, while also
in a proprietary manner by third-party service unlocking new revenue opportunities by offering such
providers, resulting in closed environments and capabilities to third parties delivering services over 5G
a lack of interoperability. A standard identity and networks. For example, operators could play a key role
access management framework (and management in enabling a “car as a service” solution by providing the
of privileges) will therefore become increasingly capability to identify and authenticate users to the car
important in order to simplify interworking between sharing service provider.
different solutions.
In recent years, developments in embedded SIM available to consumers and enterprises, requiring
(eSIM) technologies that permit remote management smaller form factors and remote provisioning. Secure,
of the SIM on mobile devices have matured to the scalable and minimal friction processes that enable
point that major manufacturers have started to deploy operators to securely authenticate devices on 5G
eSIM technology on an increasing range of connected networks will become increasingly important.
devices, including smartwatches and smartphones.
Achieving these secure, scalable and minimal friction
The traditional removable SIM card will continue to eSIM processes is likely to see further evolution
be the most used form factor in the early 5G era for in the way eSIMs are manufactured. One possible
mass-market devices such as smartphones. However, evolution is an emphasis on enabling manufacturers to
eSIM does provide benefits that may be very valuable incorporate eSIM capability in their devices that bring
for OEMs for 5G devices, two significant benefits with them pre-certified compliance to personalisation
being a 98% reduction in space over the removable and certification schemes. Such techniques are being
SIM (allowing more room for batteries and modems in developed by manufacturers supporting so-called
5G devices) and the ability to provision devices post- integrated or ‘system-on-chip’ eSIM solutions and can
sale to the consumer allowing much more freedom in enable manufacturers to support eSIM without actually
device distribution models. This will lead to an increase having the skills and capabilities in their own companies
in eSIM deployment as OEMs launch new devices with to manage eSIM production and personalisation and at
eSIM capability and operators increasingly support reduced overall cost to the mobile industry. Ultimately,
eSIM functionality (currently 100 operators worldwide this would see eSIM as an enabler to connecting many
support eSIM). Furthermore, the diversity of IoT more devices and device types to many different types
applications for which 5G will be used will undoubtedly of networks, potentially to even non-cellular networks.
further increase the range of connected devices
FIGURE 2.1.8
The red dot represents the The profile, once The eSIM can store
data stored on the SIM, downloaded, is securely several profiles
called a ‘Profile’ stored on an eSIM, which is
Device soldered into the device Device
62 SUBSCRIBER
5G Readiness &PROTECTION
Enabling Conditions RADIO PROTECTION CORE PROTECTION
• Subscriber Permanent Identifier (SUPI); a • Encryption keys are used to demonstrate • The home network carries out the original
THE 5G GUIDE
With the introduction of NFV, telecommunication (whether it’s VoLTE, 4G Enhanced Packet Core [EPC]
networks are preparing to undergo the same or enterprise services like Software Defined-Wide
transformation that took place in the Information Area Network [SD-WAN]) come with their own set
Technology sector (IT) from where the virtualisation of infrastructure requirements and custom design
software paradigm originates. Network Virtualisation parameters. This results in the creation of various
promises an acceleration in time-to-market for existing vendor/function based silos which are incompatible
and new services, as well as more flexible networks that with each other and have different operating models,
can scale and evolve as needed. Many of the solutions and crucially drives up cost beyond what is anticipated.
for virtualisation are devised in groups adopting Open
Source, thus operators will work in the future with new This topic is covered in more detail in Section 4.4:
suppliers and a new layer of configurability. Network Flexibility and in Section 4.9: Network
Equipment Sourcing
While the goal is to be able to use common hardware
and standardised platforms to run Virtual Network
Functions (VNFs), the reality is that virtualised services
The cloud native design of the 5G core and adoption 5G operators will, therefore, need to forge new
of a service-based architecture has the potential for business relationships with these new partners and
disrupting the equipment vendor landscape, with possibly adapt to a business model that could be very
suppliers that are currently associated with the IT different from that of traditional vendors. This will be of
sector being in a position to provide their products particular relevance when working with vendors who
to telecommunication companies. In the 4G era, sell products based on open source.
operators already started to introduce virtualised
network elements and functions (e.g. virtual IMS) and System integrators are also likely to play a much bigger
horizontal IT/technology vendors specialised in cloud, role as the decomposition of the network will result in
virtualisation, SDN and so on are starting to make a multitude of suppliers of components that need to
inroads in mobile operator networks. work harmoniously.
5G allows operators to leverage the latest technologies Traditional security operations will struggle to contend
and as such benefit from a more secure network. This with the volumes of data a 5G network will produce;
is due to the fact that 5G has been designed with it is not envisaged that collecting all network and user
security at each level of the network. It offers the data will be effective or even feasible. Threat modelling
mobile industry an unprecedented opportunity to uplift of the 5G services offered by an operator should be
network and service security levels. part of the service design phase and the purpose of this
process is to identify key threats the service is likely to
5G services scale up and offer flexibility to the operator, be impacted by.
with this comes the additional opportunity to remove
costly unilateral security controls. 5G security controls Operators should leverage technologies such as
should be appropriate to the specific service needs. For Machine Learning (ML) and Deep Learning (DL) to
example, a content delivery service may not warrant automate the identification of the threats within the
the same security investment as an autonomous data, given the rapid increase in data volumes (see
vehicle. This flexibility allows the operator to invest in Section 4.7: Network Automation, for more details).
the most appropriate security controls for the service. If processed in near real time, potentially at the edge,
this automated detection could be paired with real
2.1.18.1 5G era threat landscape time blocking capabilities to mitigate the effects of an
Introducing a new technology to any network alters the attack. 5G’s Network Data Analytics Function (NDAF)
threat landscape. Vulnerabilities and threats against could support real-time threat detection.
technology are likely to be unknown at the time of
launch. New threats will be developed as attackers 2.1.18.3 3GPP security standards
are provided live service environment to develop their 5G standards enable security. SA3, the security
techniques. subgroup of 3GPP, has outlined a standard security
architecture in Release 15. This architecture introduces
5G is the first generation that recognises this threat controls to prevent several known threats, including
and has security at its foundation. The threat landscape numerous fraud types. The standards outline the use
will diversify due to the unprecedented combination of more industry defined and supported, IP-based
of new technology and differing service models being protocols. Enabling the move away from historical
introduced. For example, new players to the market insecure protocols, such as SS7, is the right strategic
may not have the same maturity to personal data evolution for operators.
management as an operator, therefore increasing the
chances of poor security practices impacting the end to The correct implementation of these standards
end service. should fulfil an operator’s security requirements when
deploying 5G. Failure to deploy standard architectural
2.1.18.2 Operational security in the 5G era controls may result in a less secure network and
5G has designed in new authentication capabilities, necessitate additional security requirements being
enhanced subscriber identity protection and additional added post launch. Experience has shown this costs
security mechanisms. Preventative controls are outlined operators more in the long term, in capex and impact
within the standards but applications to protect and on service.
monitor the ecosystem as a whole will need to be
implemented. The ability to identify and respond to
these threats will require data analysis.
The red dot represents the The profile, once The eSIM can store
data stored on the SIM, downloaded, is securely several profiles
FIGURE called
2.1.9a ‘Profile’ stored on an eSIM, which is
Device soldered into the device Device
• Subscriber Permanent Identifier (SUPI); a • Encryption keys are used to demonstrate • The home network carries out the original
unique identifier for the subscriber the integrity of signalling data authentication based on the home profile
• Dual authentication and key agreement • Authentication when moving from 3GPP (home control)
(AKA) network to non 3GPP network • Encryption keys will be based on IP
• Anchor key is used to identify and • Security Anchor Function (SEAF) allows network protocols and IPSec
authenticate UE. This key is used to create re-authentication of the UE when it • Security Edge Protection Proxy (SEPP)
a secured access throughout the 5G moves between different access or protects the home network edge
infrastructure. serving networks • 5G separates control and data plane
• X509 certificates and PKI are used to traffic
protect various non UE devices
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• An enabling policy environment is a prerequisite for 5G success. Accordingly, policymakers
need to foster a pro-investment and pro-innovation environment for the mobile ecosystem.
• To accelerate 5G into commercial use, policymakers should focus on network deployment,
network flexibility, spectrum access and regulatory costs, including reducing sector specific
taxes on customers and operators.
• Specifically, regulators need to promote streamlined network deployment regulations to
address the emerging challenges of network densification.
• Likewise, regulators should promote flexibility to support emerging 5G services (e.g.
through a pragmatic interpretation of the Open Internet principle) and modernising
regulatory frameworks.
• Sufficient, affordable, exclusively licensed, contiguous spectrum should be made available
in harmonised 5G bands. Set-asides in these bands jeopardize the success of public 5G
services and could waste spectrum.
• Spectrum policy measures should be adopted which support long-term 5G investment.
These should include long-term technology neutral licences, clear renewal processes, a
spectrum roadmap and due care taken to avoid artificially inflated spectrum prices.
FIGURE 2.2.1
25. https://www.gsma.com/publicpolicy/handbook
Operators are still rolling out 4G infrastructure in Policymakers are urged to:
most markets, with 5G as the evolutionary step with
• Simplify planning procedures and regulations for
newer equipment added to earlier-generation sites.
site acquisition, colocation and upgrades of base
Operators will rely, in some geographical areas, on
stations;
the deployment of small cells, including more densely
distributed antennas and the provision of backhaul, to • Provide operators access and right-of-ways to
connect a far greater number of mobile base stations. public/government facilities for antenna siting on
As a frame of reference, in a hypothetical scenario reasonable terms and conditions;
where 5G small cells are installed on all street lamp • Establish uniform electromagnetic field (EMF) rules
posts, the GSMA calculates that London in the UK could that are no more restrictive than internationally
see up to 500,000 small cells installed across the city. agreed levels.
The densification of networks to cope with urban • Encourage and incentivize fibre investments, and
capacity demands requires significant new investments enact appropriate policies to ease and expedite
in additional sites and supporting infrastructure, fibre rollouts.
potentially four- to six-times higher than for 4G based • Strive to ensure that the deployment regulations at
on some market estimates. Furthermore, complex the local level are aligned with the national digital
planning procedures involving multiple layers of ambitions and market realities. This includes setting
approval in some countries create additional burden, reasonable fees and other conditions for network
significantly delaying 5G deployment. Policymakers deployment at local level.
must strive to ensure that the deployment regulations
at the local level are aligned with the national • Offer a reasonable expectation of approval for
digital ambitions and market realities. For example, voluntary network sharing deals while avoiding
governments should adopt a national code for mandated sharing agreements that may amount to
new mobile sites and modification of existing sites, an access obligation.
implemented by local authorities (e.g. FCC orders).
To realise the full economic potential of 5G, regulators fully utilising capabilities such as network slicing to
should protect operators’ flexibility to meet the offer tailored services to vertical sectors (e.g. urgent
connectivity requirements of emerging services made software updates for driverless cars vs. streaming a cat
possible with 5G. With 5G operators can use network video on a smartphone).
virtualisation techniques to dynamically configure
network resources to deliver bespoke, managed Regulators should interpret the open internet principle
connectivity services. Network slicing is a core in a manner that encourages flexible and efficient
capability that enables operators to create such service networks instead of taking an overly-restrictive view
offerings and it is also critical to support public-safety of the logical architecture of the network. Where rules
services as they migrate to 5G infrastructure. on open internet conduct are in place, services other
than mass-market consumer internet access services
While the GSMA and its members are committed to should remain outside of those rules. Additionally,
the open internet principle and advocate for technical regulators should review old-fashioned regimes and
and commercial flexibility, some operators have raised update regulatory frameworks to adapt them to the
concerns that potential regulation related to the open new industry reality.
internet and net neutrality could prevent them from
FIGURE 2.2.2
300 280
250
200 200 200 200
200
150
150 125 130
100 93
100
67 70
50 50 50 50
50 31 38
0
Latvia Australia United Czech Italy Spain United Arab Korea Ireland Finland
2018 2018 Kingdom Republic 2018 2018 Emirates South 2018 2018
2018 2018 2018 2018
Note: the UK amounts exclude the 40 MHz already owned by Three UK through a prior company acquisition.
$ 350
$ 300
21. The second digital dividend is the 700 MHz band in Europe, the Middle East and Africa and the 600 MHz band in the Americas and Asia-Pacific
22. ‘European Commission stakes out 700 MHz band for 5G’ – Telecom TV (2016)
$ 250
23. Leading towards Next Generation “5G” Mobile Services’ – FCC (2015)
24. The proposed range is based on typical availability of 400MHz spectrum in the 3.5 GHz range, divided by, generally, 4 operators per country.
25. As at 1 January 2019
$ 200
Spectrum prices are increasing with final prices paid 7. Spectrum caps and set-asides distort the level
rising 3.5 fold in the 4G era (i.e. 2008-2016) with playing field, may jeopardise the success of
some outliers 700% above the global average. While commercial 5G services and can be costly for the
high spectrum prices occur in all types of market, it is entire ecosystem27.
notable that prices are three times higher in developing 8. Spectrum pricing decisions should be made by an
countries compared with developed countries once independent regulator in consultation with industry
GDP is accounted for. High spectrum prices have been
linked to more expensive, slower mobile broadband
services with worse coverage and so present a 2.2.4.5 Spectrum Fragmentation Risk
profound threat to the success of 5G. They are also Support for ‘private’ 5G should not jeopardise spectrum
linked to irrecoverable losses in consumer welfare availability for ‘public’ 5G
worth billions of dollars worldwide that comfortably Regulators must be careful not to undermine the
outweigh additional treasury revenues from the higher availability of sufficient spectrum for ‘public’ 5G
prices. networks, in seeking to support vertical players who
may want to deploy their own ‘private’ 5G networks. In
The causes of very high prices are typically policy particular, as 5G should optimally be deployed in 80MHz
decisions that appear to prioritise maximising short to 100MHz blocks in the 3.5GHz range, many markets will
term state revenues over long-term socio-economic not have enough spectrum if governments fragment the
benefits of mobile services. The GSMA recommends available spectrum to allocate for private 5G networks.
the following best practice for ensuring policy decisions
do not artificially inflate spectrum prices and thus For example, some regulators are keen to encourage
jeopardise the success of 5G: private 5G networks by setting aside spectrum for
verticals or through spectrum sharing mechanisms. Both
1. Avoid limiting the supply of 5G spectrum, publish approaches risk limiting the spectrum that is available
long-term spectrum award plans and hold open for public 5G services which will result in slower services,
consultations. 5G requires significant amounts of reduced capacity and risks driving up spectrum prices
spectrum so artificial limitations on the amount through artificial scarcity.
offered or inappropriate lot sizes risk inflating prices.
More widely, set-asides for verticals can lead to
2. Set modest reserve prices and annual fees, and rely inefficient spectrum usage of priority 5G bands.
on the market to determine spectrum prices. Verticals are unlikely to use the spectrum very widely
3. Avoid creating unnecessary risks in the auction across countries, so national set-asides are likely to
design that put the success of operators’ 5G go unused in many areas. Instead, mobile operators
services in jeopardy forcing them to overbid. can provide customised 5G services for verticals who
can then benefit from network slicing, small cells,
4. Consult with industry on licence terms and
wider geographical coverage, as well as the larger and
conditions and take them into account when setting
more diverse spectrum assets, as well as deployment
prices.
experience, at mobile operators’ disposal.
26. https://www.gsma.com/spectrum/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/spec_best_practice_ENG.pdf
27. https://www.gsma.com/spectrum/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/The-Cost-of-Spectrum-Auction-Distortions.-GSMA-Coleago-report.-Nov14.pdf
Voluntary spectrum sharing approaches are preferable All mobile licences should be technology neutral –
to set asides as they can be used to support all potential without additional cost – so operators can speed up
5G users, including verticals. For example, MNOs can be wide area 5G rollouts using existing infrastructure while
permitted to lease their spectrum assets so that verticals also improving spectrum efficiency. A 5G spectrum
can build their own private 5G networks. This approach roadmap should be published outlining exactly what
also overcomes the issue of synchronising public 5G bands will be made available and in what timeframes so
networks with private 5G networks in adjacent bands operators can plan their investment strategy and value
which may limit which 5G use cases can be supported. spectrum effectively.
2.2.4.6: National spectrum planning All 5G spectrum plans should be subject to consultation
Put in place spectrum policy measures to support with 5G stakeholders to ensure spectrum awards and
long-term 5G network investment and address national licensing approaches consider national technical and
operators’ requirements commercial deployment plans. For example, decisions
around licence area sizes (e.g. national versus localised)
It is vital that spectrum is made available in a way and coexistence measures including rules surrounding
that encourages operators to invest heavily in mobile network synchronisation will have a major bearing on
networks and supports quality of service. This will network investment, deployment plans and the viability
require a significant amount of long-term exclusively of various 5G use cases.
licensed spectrum (e.g. over twenty years) with a
predictable renewal process that is planned years (e.g.
over five years) in advance of expiry.
Operators are in the difficult position of committing mobile operators can reliably access to maximize the
significant new investments for the rollout of 5G without full potential of 5G services in terms of very-high
any real certainty of how, or when, a return can be throughputs, low latency (etc). Spectrum sharing
expected. Governments, in support of their own digital frameworks support multiple users in a given band
policy goals, should therefore take meaningful action and enterprises in some vertical sectors are calling
to ease the cost burden faced by the mobile industry to on regulators to ensure they can access 5G spectrum
deliver 5G services. without relying on mobile operators. Some regulators,
most notably the FCC in the 3.5GHz band, are looking
In addition to reasonable spectrum costs, further steps to create shared spectrum bands. These approaches
should be taken in many areas, such as reducing or could limit the amount of spectrum available to mobile
eliminating mobile-sector taxes on both operators and operators for high-quality 5G services.
customers; easing tax on energy for 5G; and lowering
administrative and siting fees. Policymakers are also To deliver affordable, widespread and high-quality
encouraged to allow voluntary spectrum pooling mobile broadband services, mobile operators require
between operators to help drive faster services and affordable and predictable access to sufficient radio
maximise spectrum efficiency. spectrum. High spectrum prices have been linked
to more expensive, lower-quality mobile broadband
Spectrum sharing (with entities other than mobile services and may limit 5G roll-out an take-up. Spectrum
network operators) is gaining traction in some countries. auctions should allow the market to determine spectrum
This may have an impact on the amount of spectrum prices. Governments should prioritise rapid, high-quality
5G service rollouts over revenue maximisation when
awarding 5G spectrum.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Market readiness, starting with 4G maturity, is crucial to determine the timing of 5G launch.
This varies by market and will make or mark the success of 5G in each market.
• The 5G competitive landscape will remain fierce. Policymakers must continue to ensure a level
playing field among competitors that supports the industry’s ability to invest.
• Markets with greater scale can better influence the global trajectory of 5G development, and
are also able to achieve low unit costs of network rollout and economies of scale.
• The availability and capability of 5G phones from 2019 will be a pivotal moment that will
drive customer adoption of 5G.
• An interesting lesson from the launch of 4G is that being the first-to-launch does not
guarantee sustainable competitive advantage.
• Another lesson from 4G is that when an operator delays launching for too long (>12 months
after its rivals), it faces a decline in revenues as competitors gain market share.
• Given revenue uncertainty, many operators will maintain their CAPEX envelopes and focus on
a demand driven approach that addresses hotspots in urban areas with a clear capacity need
or to support enterprise customers’ requirements.
• Operators should have a clear roadmap to shut down 2G/3G networks to limit network
operations complexity and support spectrum refarming.
• The idea of leapfrogging to 5G from 2G/3G and without deploying 4G, is tantalising. But it
will be very difficult due to technical, commercial and regulatory challenges.
• With a major shift in architecture away from traditional models and competencies, operators
need collaboration and new skills to unlock 5G era opportunities.
Assuming that the technology for 5G is ready and the • What is the right operational model for the 5G era?
market is ready, operators will need to evaluate what
• What new opportunities does 5G create?
they need to get right on their 5G journey. Some of the
key questions to consider: • When would customers need 5G capabilities?
• How mature is my 4G customer base and what will • Does a market have pro-investment and innovation
they be prepared to pay for 5G? policy and regulatory framework?
• What is the state of my current network coverage • Are operators financially healthy to support 5G
and capacity? investments?
• Do I have the right skills and expertise, and if not, Some of these questions are explored further in this
what new partner relationships are required? section.
5G is a question of ‘when’ and not ‘if’ for most markets Customers’ ability and willingness to pay a premium
and operators. The decision on when to launch 5G will for 5G services will be an important consideration in
be based on triggers that are localised for each market, most markets. Any operator expectation on charging
given the different stages of 5G readiness across a premium for eMBB will need to be tested, given
markets. that over the last ten years, customers have used ever
growing amounts of data over faster connections,
For example, a looming capacity crunch for mobile while ARPU has stagnated and even declined in many
broadband or an identified enterprise need in a market developed markets.
are credible triggers for 5G launch. Ericsson28 reports
that average smartphone data usage by 2023 will range
from 7GB/month in in Sub-Saharan Africa to 48GB/
month in North America.
28. https://www.ericsson.com/en/mobility-report/reports/june-2018
The competitive environment going into the 5G era A supportive policy framework and a level playing
remains challenging in many markets around the world. field between competitors is vital in enabling a
This is unlikely to abate anytime soon and intense intra- market environment that supports the ability of the
operator competition will remain a big market force industry to invest in 5G. When these conditions are
for the foreseeable future. Many operators are also less ideal, or supportive, industry financial health may
increasingly competing with non-operator companies, be negatively impacted. For example, a comparison
for example in TV and content services where operators 390
of selected countries and regions outlined in Figure
400
have made acquisitions (e.g. AT&T’s acquisition of Time 2.3.1 below suggests Europe was the350only region in the
350
Warner) as well as IoT, where some operators aim world where revenues during the 4G era fell. This may
to
300expand beyond connectivity and provide vertical undermine the capacity of 280the operators in the region
solutions.
250
to pursue an aggressive 5G rollout strategy.
200 200 200 200
200
Competition has been instrumental in driving costs
150
down,
150 developing innovative
125 products and services, 130
and expanding coverage globally. Operators will 100 93
100
continue50to50play their part in ensuring that the 67 70
38 50 mobile 50
50 31 of value
industry remains a source creation and growth
driver
0 for the global economy.
Latvia Australia United Czech Italy Spain United Arab Korea Ireland Finland
2018 2018 Kingdom Republic 2018 2018 Emirates South 2018 2018
FIGURE 2.3.1
2018 2018 2018 2018
$ 350
$ 300
$ 250
$ 200
$ 150
$ 100
$ 50
$0
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
577
Telecoms is a capital intensive industry and having revenues. With sufficient scale, operators in China and
$ 350
sufficient scale can provide huge benefits for all the US have considerable financial muscle to support
stakeholders in a market. Markets with sufficient 5G deployment and a large base of customers to drive
$ 300
scale can better influence the global trajectory of 5G down the cost per connection for 5G.
development and are also able to achieve low unit costs
of network rollout (i.e. economies of scale). These will
$ 250 To mitigate this, operators in individual markets that
create significant incentives for early 5G rollout. are subscale can consolidate, collaborate or align their
5G strategies to achieve better economies of scale.
$ 200
Figure 2.3.2 illustrates the lack of scale for operators This can be in-country (e.g. through network sharing
in the EU. Each of the market-leading operators in or consolidation) or across borders (e.g. harmonising
$ 150
China and the US (accounting for more than 95% of the use of spectrum and timing of auctions). This is
all connections) has an average of at least 100 million a task for all stakeholders in the market, including
connections and generates an average of $58 billion in
$ 100 policymakers and operators. The announcement
annual revenues. of the Nordics 5G corridor is an example of a
$ 50 collaboration that facilitates technology and spectrum
In contrast, leading operators in the EU have an harmonisation, and improves the incentives for network
average of 11 million connections and $2 billion annual launch29.
$0
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
FIGURE 2.3.2
Europe China Japan South Korea United States
AVERAGE CONNECTIONS AND MOBILE REVENUES FOR OPERATORSofIN CHINA,
America
EU AND US (FY 2017) (SOURCE: GSMA INTELLIGENCE)
577
105
58 58
11 2
China US EU China US EU
Average connections, millions Average mobile revenues, USD billions
29. https://www.government.se/press-releases/2018/05/new-nordic-cooperation-on-5g/
While early 5G devices will be mostly customer introduced in 2019, will be more than $750 and that only
premises equipment (CPE) for Fixed Wireless Access 9% of Chinese customers buy phones with wholesale
(FWA) or wireless routers, the availability of 5G phones prices of over $50030. The implication is that high device
from 2019 will be a pivotal moment that will drive prices could threaten the economies of scale from China
customer adoption of 5G. that ought to accelerate global 5G rollout.
The smartphone market has matured, leading to a In addition, battery capacity, performance and
lengthening of the smartphone replacement cycle. In safety for early 5G handsets will be a key success
this reality, connection speed alone is unlikely to be a factor. Adoption will be seriously impacted if early
sufficient driver for mass-market upgrade to 5G devices 5G handsets cannot last 24 hours on one charge, or
as users will wait to see if the new or improved features if customers need to switch off 5G in order to make
warrant replacement of the smartphones every 12 to 18 the battery last longer. Concerns about safety of 5G
months. The device ecosystem, including 5G devices, handsets will also be notable, whether as a result of
is hoping for an ‘iPhone moment’, similar to the new battery safety, fire hazard or avoiding electromagnetic
customer experience created by the iPhone in 2007. radiation. In September 2017, the GSMA produced
the paper “5G, the Internet of Things (IoT) and
There are also disincentives that could deter customers. Wearable Devices - What do the new uses of wireless
Affordability is a major concern, given early indications technologies mean for radio frequency exposure?” to
that the wholesale cost of 5G handsets, when they are provide more clarity on EMF concerns in the 5G era.
30. https://news.strategyanalytics.com/press-release/devices/strategy-analytics-5g-hype-cycle-about-run-hard-truth-subsidies-needed
GSMAi analysis of operator KPIs during 3G and 4G upsides. First, operators that launch first in a market
deployment periods suggests that being first to launch often do so on a limited scale (e.g. in selected key
a new cellular technology in a market does not always cities) with the intention to be the first for marketing/
result in an increase in financial performance. In terms PR reasons. Second, in most cases the gap between
of ARPU, revenue or market share of connections, no the first mover’s and competitors’ launches was
correlation was observed either that proves a clear less than a year, therefore not enough to bring a
benefit of launching first. For example, EE launched 4G sustainable competitive advantage. Third the first
in the UK in Q4 2012, ten months ahead of other UK mover spends time and money debugging the system
operators, yet its market share continued to decline for others. Fourth, the first mover pays a premium for
(see Figure 2.3.3 below). infrastructure and devices.
There are at least four likely explanations as to why Long-term market share trends are rather dependent on
being the first mover did not bring any significant other factors such as competitors’ strategy or tariff plans.
FIGURE 2.3.3
40%
35%
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
Q4 2011 Q4 2012 Q4 2013 Q4 2014
30% 30%
25% 25%
20% 20%
15% 15%
10% 10%
5% 5%
0% 0%
-5% -5%
-10% -10%
78 5G2010 2011& Enabling
Readiness 2012 Conditions
2013 2014 2015 2016 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
40% THE 5G GUIDE
35%
30%
25%
2.3.7
20%
Lessons from 3G/4G: late mover risks
15%
Late
10%
movers risk capex spikes to catch up with early adopters
While
5% being the first to launch a new generation rivals, the obvious impact is that the operator faces a
technology
0% does not necessarily bring sustained decline in revenue as competitors gain market share
competitiveQ4advantage,
2011 being late to the market
Q4 2012 can with a superior Q4offer.
2013 Moreover, the operator is
Q4often
2014
have serious implications for an operator. When an forced to catch up with an aggressive technology
operator delays launching a new technology
EE (BT) for too
O2 (Telefonica) rollout to regain competitiveness.
Vodafone Figure 2.3.4 illustrates
3 (CK Hutchison)
long (for example, by more than 12 months) after its how this dynamic played out in the US for 4G roll out.
FIGURE 2.3.4
30% 30%
25% 25%
20% 20%
15% 15%
10% 10%
5% 5%
0% 0%
-5% -5%
-10% -10%
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
35% 35%
30% 30%
25% 25%
20% 20%
15% 15%
10% 10%
5% 5%
0% 0%
1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5
Years after 4G launch Years after 4G launch
Bell Rogers
15%
THE 5G GUIDE
10%
5%
0%
Q4 2011 Q4 2012 Q4 2013 Q4 2014
The lesson from 3G/4G network rollouts is that a CAPEX dynamics over time are closely linked to
progressive and steady rollout plan, launching
4G era Capex/revenue (US) around revenue, and revenue
4G eragrowth for leading
OFCF/revenue (US)operators has
the
35%
same time as rivals, is optimal. Operators which been
35%
stagnating in recent years.
adopt this approach may, in the short term, experience
a30%
slight increase in capex and a slight decrease in 30%
Looking at the 5G monetisation potential during
operational
25% free cash flow (OFCF). This may happen the25%
next five years, many operators feel that a clear
in a competitive context that necessitates higher revenue increase based on the currently-known 5G
20% 20%
investment levels to meet market-wide network use cases remains to be proven. Therefore, many
coverage.
15% In the long run, capex levels will fall to pre- operators
15% will maintain the CAPEX envelope, which
launch
10% levels as investment is focused on continued means
10% that 5G rollout will most likely be gradual (at the
densification, maintenance and upgrading of the pace of the regular equipment upgrade/replacement
5% 5%
network. The examples of Bell Canada and Rogers in cycle), starting in 2018 and lasting seven to ten years.
Canada
0% in Figure 2.3.6 (below), illustrate the point. Early
0% deployment will be very much need/demand
driven, addressing hotspots in urban areas with a clear
-5% -5%
Much as the lessons from 3G/4G rollouts are useful, capacity need or to support enterprise customers’
-10%CAPEX constraints that operators are facing today
the -10%
needs.
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
will be the important consideration in 5G deployment.
Verizon AT&T Sprint
(2010 launch) (2011 launch) (2012 launch)
FIGURE 2.3.5
35% 35%
30% 30%
25% 25%
20% 20%
15% 15%
10% 10%
5% 5%
0% 0%
1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5
Years after 4G launch Years after 4G launch
Bell Rogers
The prospect of running a combined 2G/3G/4G plus implied bonus when spectrum can be refarmed for
5G network will pose an operational challenge to 5G rollout – although there are sometimes regulatory
operators in many markets. The initial headache with barriers to this happening.
5G will come from the complexity of managing legacy
networks, the need for integrating legacy networks A key requirement before rationalising 2G/3G
with the new 5G network, and the resources and networks is adopt All-IP communications services
expertise required to address these challenges. to replace circuit-switched communications. In
addition, interconnection and roaming of these All-IP
In the early 5G era, some operators may be able to communications services is essential because having
count on multi-mode common platforms that are able inbound roamers and international communications
to manage all access types (2G, 3G and 4G) plus 5G traffic using CS services forces the operator to retain CS
scenarios (NSA + SA) from a core perspective. infrastructure.
However, operators need to develop a clear roadmap The GSMA has developed the Network Economics
for shutting down legacy 2G and/or 3G networks Model and worked with the industry to detail several
before commencing mass market 5G rollout, if they case studies that illustrate how operators have
haven’t done it yet. Such a roadmap could have an executed a 2G or 3G network shutdown or ease down31.
2.3.10 Leapfrogging to 5G
Leapfrogging to 5G from 2G/3G, without deploying 4G, is possible but challenging
The prospect of leapfrogging 4G will be difficult for deployment of 5G, and with no fallback and no
most operators because of technical, commercial and inbound roaming. It also raises the danger that some
regulatory challenges. investments (e.g. spectrum), made in anticipation of
4G rollout, could become ‘stranded assets’. Given the
A 4G network is a requirement for operators planning momentum towards a 4G-to-5G migration, devices
to launch NSA 5G. While a leapfrog from 3G to SA 5G and equipment for 3G-to-5G migration will struggle for
is technically feasible, there are many complications. economies of scale, potentially making them costlier.
These include the challenges of managing voice
handover; managing spectrum harmonisation; Voice is a regulated service that operators will be
maintaining device interoperability; and the need to expected to support for the foreseeable future. In
wait for the later maturity of SA 5G. It also means markets where lots of voice traffic is still on 2G, over
carrying over the complexities of the Circuit Switched devices on 2G mode, it will be difficult to skip 4G and
3G network into the 5G era, and the risk of undermining migrate to 5G without failing to fulfil the regulatory
the simplicity inherent in migrating to 5G’s service- obligations on voice. Unless an operator wants to
based architecture (SBA). continue supporting 2G or 3G into the future, there is
a need to firstly migrate voice traffic and usage to 4G
Commercially, a leapfrog to 5G from 2G/3G will likely (i.e. VoLTE), monetise any 4G spectrum and then plan a
require a costly outlay on a greenfield, nationwide migration path to 5G.
31. https://infocentre2.gsma.com/gp/pr/FNW/NE/Pages/Default.aspx
5G era opportunities will require new domain expertise However, as Sections 3.4 and 3.7 show, operators
including data science, analytics, machine learning can make a difference with 5G and addressing the
etc., and an architectural rethink of how a network is enterprise opportunity will also influence how and
deployed and run, including new approaches such as where 5G networks will be built. Unlike 2G/3G/4G,
virtualisation. Operators will either have to develop where operators built networks and waited for
these competencies in-house, or they will need to customers to come onboard for connectivity solutions,
source them externally, establish partnerships, or 5G networks may have to be built to address specific
bring in new talent in order to address these new enterprise needs in specific locations.
opportunities.
This will necessitate close collaboration between
Some of the new skills will be required to address the operators and enterprises to understand the best
enterprise opportunity in particular. 5G offers huge ways of deploying the network. Some operators have
opportunities for operators in the enterprise segment, already begun engaging with enterprises and this will
but they must address the big challenge of building increasingly become a necessity for most operators.
the C-level relationships to connect and understand
the actual needs of enterprises, and build the solution- For more details on operator relationships with
ing capabilities to address those needs. For instance, enterprises, please go to Section 3.4: What do
in most enterprise use cases, operators will be enterprises want, and Section 3.7: Enterprise
competing with system integrators and other service opportunity.
providers (e.g. platform providers) on how best to serve
enterprise needs. Often, these rivals will have deep
understanding, borne out of existing relationships with
enterprises.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• The BEMECS (for Basic, Economic, Market, Enterprise, Consumer, Spectrum indicators)
framework is an evaluation tool for 5G market readiness.
• There are 40 indicators in the BEMECS tool which can be used to appraise the 5G market
readiness for 160+ countries.
• The BEMECS tool uses a traffic light system (red, amber, green) to evaluate market readiness
for 40 indicators.
Expectations across society on what 5G will deliver and The BEMECS framework aims to encompass the
how revolutionary it can be, are very high. However, different perspectives from which 5G readiness can
the readiness of each market for 5G is a multi-factorial be analysed. For example, it covers indicators that
reality and different markets are at different stages of are endogenous to the mobile telecoms industry (e.g.
maturity and readiness. 4G and Smartphone penetration), which derive from
the in situ competition in the industry. It also covers
The GSMA has developed the Basic, Economic, Market, exogenous indicators (e.g. GDP/capita, literacy rates),
Enterprise, Consumer, Spectrum indicators (BEMECS) which act as external variables that will ultimately
framework to provide an evaluation tool for the 5G shape 5G readiness. Likewise, BEMECS covers demand-
market readiness of different countries. The BEMECS side indicators (e.g. ‘Household computer penetration’
framework tool covers more than 160 countries and uses and ‘Ratio of ARPU and GDP/Capita’) and supply-side
a traffic light system (Green, Amber, Red) to analyse the indicators (e.g. number of operators in a market and
40 indicators included, as summarised in Figure 2.4.1 and FTTx penetration).
explained in full in Table 7.3.1.
FIGURE 2.4.1
AffoGDP rdability:
Region GDP (real) Total Subscribers IoT Penetration <1GHz availability
ARPU/per capita
Average Download Speed Registered Websites per Affordability: Device
GSMA Region GDP Growth Rate (Real) 1-6GHz availability
(Mbit/s) 1000 people ASP/GDP per capita
GDP Growth Rate Published Apps per 1000
Population Number of Operators Literacy Rates >6GHz availability
(Constant) people
Population with Tertiary Mobile Social Media
Population Density GDP Growth Rate (PPP) 4G Penetration
Education Accounts
Mobile Connections Personal Computer
Urbanisation GDP (real) Per Capita Ease of Doing Business
Penetration Penetration
Published Apps in National
Smartphone Penetration FWA Opportunity
Language
Unique Subscribers
E-Government Availability
Penetration
Fixed Broadband
Penetration
FTTx Penetration
Internet Backbone
Penetration
Mobile Revenue
Growth/GDP Growth
Electricity Availability
3 5G Value Creation
and Capture
Chapter 3 looks at the promise and opportunity of 5G, examining what
customers and enterprises are anticipating from the technology and how it will
deliver a variety of new revenue streams.
Readers will get an insight into some of the new opportunities unlocked by 5G,
along with an understanding of the key enablers of 5G value creation.
86
86 5G Value Creation and Capture
THE 5G GUIDE
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• The 5G opportunity is clear. It will support a wider set of use cases, with varying requirements
in terms of speed, latency, number of connections and mobility.
• The potential economic contribution of 5G to society is clear. A TMG/GSMA study estimates it
at $2.2 trillion contribution to global GDP and $588 billion in worldwide tax revenue by 2034.
• Operators have a clear opportunity to benefit from 5G and the 5G use cases will enable a
broader set of monetisation opportunities for operators and the wider ecosystem.
• Given the aspiration to support enterprises using 5G, operators’ share of the 5G value will
depend on their ability to support the digital transformation of other industries.
5G is inevitable
GSMA Region and with
GDP Growth Rate the
(Real) right conditions, it will flourish and create opportunities
Average Download Speed Registered Websites per Affordability: Device
1-6GHz availability
(Mbit/s) 1000 people ASP/GDP per capita
across society GDP Growth Rate Published Apps per 1000
Population Number of Operators Literacy Rates >6GHz availability
(Constant) people
5GPopulation
is inevitable.
Density
For users, operators, vendors
GDP Growth Rate (PPP)
and
4G Penetration
5G opportunities
Population with Tertiary range
Mobilefrom the known knowns of
Social Media
Education Accounts
policymakers, 5G is the next step in the industry’s enhanced mobile broadband (eMBB) and fixed wireless
Mobile Connections Personal Computer
steady progress towards
Urbanisation providing
GDP (real) Per Capita a better mobile
Penetration access (FWA)
Ease of Doing Businessto known unknown opportunities (e.g.
Penetration
experience. In that sense, 5G is a matter of when and in IoT)Apps
Published in inmany
Nationaldifferent enterprise markets. Given the
Smartphone Penetration FWA Opportunity
how, and not if, it will happen. course of technological development, 5G is also set to
Language
Unique Subscribers underpinAvailability
E-Government revolutionary market opportunities, such as
Penetration
From an operator’s perspective, 5G promises to those based on artificial intelligence and cloud-based
Fixed Broadband
structurally reduce the cost of operating future
Penetration services.
networks, while providing new functionalities and
Average ARPU (2017-2018)
unlocking a new wave of innovative services. 5G Figure 3.1.1 introduces the 5G opportunity framework,
will support a wider set of use cases, withFTTx
varying
Penetration highlighting the evolutionary, transformational and
requirements in terms of speed, latency, number of revolutionary opportunities for the 5G era.
ARPU Growth (2018-2023)
connections and mobility. These use cases will enable a
broader set of monetisation opportunitiesInternet Backbone
Penetration
Mobile Revenue
Growth/GDP Growth
3 4
CONSUMER MOBILE
2 5
BROADBAND
(eMBB) UNKNOWN FUTURE
DEVELOPMENTS
1 ENTERPRISE SOLUTIONS
6
CONSUMER FIXED
WIRELESS BROADBAND
(FWA) 10+ 7
9 8
5G VALUE ENABLERS
5G will generate massive value for the global economy. trillion in global GDP and $588 billion in worldwide tax
This is underpinned by earlier studies (e.g. by World revenue cumulatively over the period from 2020 to
Bank32) that show strong relationships between 2034, as outlined in Figure 3.1.2, below. Millimetre Wave
broadband availability and economic growth. The 5G use cases will make up an increasing proportion of
GSMA’s Mobile Economy report also shows strong GDP the overall 5G contribution to global GDP, achieving
contribution by the activities of the mobile telecoms around 25% of the cumulative total by 2034, which
industry. amounts to $565 billion in GDP and $152 billion in tax
revenue.
The December 2018 GSMA/TMG study33 estimates that
5G will provide important economic benefits of $2.2
FIGURE 3.1.2
$152bn
$565bn
Total 5G tax
revenue:
$588bn
$2.2tr
2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034
Other
Real-time automation
77 101
Augmented reality
24
Autonomous robotics
35
Other
Real-time automation
77 101
Augmented reality
24
Autonomous robotics
35
73
57 Monitoring and tracking
Connected vehicle
34. https://www.ericsson.com/assets/local/networks/documents/report-bnew-17001714.pdf
35. https://www-file.huawei.com/-/media/CORPORATE/PDF/mbb/5g-unlocks-a-world-of-opportunities-v5.pdf?la=en
36. https://www.ericsson.com/en/networks/trending/insights-and-reports/5g-challenges-the-guide-to-capturing-5g-iot-business-potential?aliId=1206580
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• There are three opportunities for operators to create and capture value in the 5G era.
• First, 5G will enhance the core business of communications and data services. It will boost its
capabilities, and make it more efficient and profitable.
• Second, 5G will deliver new 5G use cases, which operators can either monetise directly, use to
enrich the core offering or can be spun off.
• Third, operators can capture value by investing in ecosystem innovations or partnerships that
can help to ‘pull through’ 5G adoption or that can benefit from a more connected society.
Operators have three sets of recognisable opportunities The third set of opportunities lie in ecosystem
to capture value in the 5G era, as outlined in Figure 3.2.1. innovations or partnerships that can help to ‘pull
The first is in enhancing the traditional core business of through’ 5G adoption or that can benefit from a more
communications and data services to consumers and connected society. Pull-through innovations (e.g. AR/
enterprises. Operators are already experts in this area, VR entertainment) encourage customers to upgrade
and will evolve their current commercial models into to 5G and their growth invariably leads to faster, and
the 5G era. more profitable, 5G adoption. Innovations that grow as
mobile connectivity improves (e.g. music streaming)
The second set of opportunities for operators is in new are also good candidates for capturing value in
5G use cases. The industry has focused a lot of effort the 5G era. While several operators already make
on activities, pilots, and test beds to conceptualise, such investments, the key is to explicitly link these
develop and commercialise new 5G use cases. Many ecosystem investments and partnerships as part of the
of these are aimed at industry verticals, in keeping value capture opportunities in the 5G era.
with the expectation that 5G will transform industrial
verticals. Some new use cases will have synergies that
enrich the core business (e.g. Cloud AR/VR) while some
will be independent from the core business and could
be spun off to flourish as independent businesses (e.g.
drone delivery).
FIGURE 3.2.1
54%
41%
5G has the potential to both bring growth in new segments. This will require commercialising 5G
business areas and improve profitability in operators’ capabilities such as low latency and security, and
core business. Figure 3.2.2 provides an illustration of monetising them, potentially through APIs or a
these two options. platform model. Based on the technological, market
and operator 5G readiness, this high growth scenario is
Using 5G to improve profitability of lower-growth less likely to happen in the first years of 5G deployment.
business segments is primarily about making the
core business of connectivity more efficient with Operators pursuing the higher growth model need to
better utilisation of the network. This is the minimum act now to prepare the market; understand the needs
A B C
expectation for any operator seeking to launch 5G. of the ecosystem; test and evaluate new use cases; and
CORE
strike partnership deals.
NEW USE ECOSYSTEM
Operators seeking a higher-growth
BUSINESS 5G strategy will CASES
Enrich the core Spin-off to flourish INNOVATIONS
need(VOICE, MESSAGING,
to devise a robust roadmap that is based on (CONSUMER & (START-UPS,
DATA) ENTERPRISES) PARTNERS)
offering differentiated services to different market
Operators can fund Option C with profits from Option A
FIGURE 3.2.2
While there is less of the euphoria to find a 5G ‘killer whether consumers or enterprises, are buying the
25%
app’ as was for 3G, there are still high expectations that core product of22%
23% connectivity from operators. However,
24%
operators will identify new use cases in the 5G era to 20%
operators can offer new 5G services to increase the
drive revenue growth. In practice, any new use case can bundle price, incentivise upgrades, reward loyalty,
be used in three ways by operators. minimise churn or even expand their offering.
Most operators already work closely with start-ups to Collaboration can take different forms and models,
find and fund promising innovations. Overall, operator based on the depth of collaboration and the financial
corporate venture capital (CVC) is on the rise in the commitment required from the operator. These include
wider TMT sector, demonstrated by an increasing in-house tech hubs, start-up investments (through
number of deals and associated funding over the last CVC, direct equity investments and joint ventures)
few years. GSMA analysis37 of many operators’ CVC and commercial agreements including OTT reselling
shows they invest in start-ups that support extension partnerships.
of core assets or a move into new business lines
altogether, e.g. media, content and fintech (see Figure While these CVC activities will continue and grow in
3.2.3). Operator CVC activity is also on the rise in the 5G era, there is an opportunity to reimagine some
developing markets, where many local start-ups face of the investments as an extension of the 5G value
scarce funding options and struggle to reach scale. capture mechanism. These are investments (e.g. AR/
VR solutions) that, while not directly linked to the core
operator business, help to create demand for 5G. Value
capture from these investments will not come from
the usual direct channels. Rather they will help to drive
adoption of 5G, providing an indirect route to creating
and unlocking value in the 5G era.
FIGURE 3.2.3
Payments
Networking &
Connectivity
Music Education & Training
Facilities
Monitoring & Security Over the past three years operator CVC funds
Health & Wellness have invested in a huge range of sectors and
Marketplace
sub-sectors, demonstrating the wide breadth of
Location Based & Infrastructure
operator innovation interests
Navigation & Hosting
Only selected sectors shown in this chart
37. https://www.gsma.com/mobileeconomy/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/The-Mobile-Economy-2018.pdf
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Consumers will remain the biggest beneficiaries of 5G and their views and expectations is a
good barometer of how 5G will develop.
• Insights from a GSMA Intelligence’s survey of 36,000 consumers in December 2018 suggests
the following key consumer expectations:
– Faster speed is the top consumer expectation
– Consumers expect wide 5G coverage
– Expectations vary on whether 5G will bring innovative new services. Overall, 25% of
respondents expect it but this rises to nearly 50% in Korea.
– Some customers flagged lower service costs as an expectation for 5G, potentially
capping the opportunity for revenue growth.
• Given consumer apathy (particularly in Europe and Japan), operators need to do a better job
of focussing the 5G message to drive demand.
GSMA Intelligence’s December 2018 consumer survey, Importantly, the survey reveals significant variations
which covered 34 markets and 36,000 respondents, between countries, highlighting the success of early
included a sub-set of respondents in developed 5G marketing efforts for some, and the need for others
markets and what they expect 5G networks to deliver. to refocus the 5G narrative to be clearer on its early
applications and benefits.
The top-level results will not surprise: consumers
expect faster networks and better network coverage.
Digging a little deeper reveals some of the 5G
challenges operators face in terms of customer
awareness,
A operator relevancy, and strategic focus. B C
5G adoption.
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE DIFFERENTIATION
It’s only natural that early marketing efforts will focus
• Better network efficiency for low cost/GB • Productise 5G capabilities for monetisation
on it as• one ofdata
Stimulate the
usagekey differentiators
& drive network utilisation against LTE. The (e.g. Network Slices)
margin of expectation of faster speed versus other • Mass customisation & industrialised partnership model for
market segments
FIGURE 3.3.1
54%
41%
Improved mobile Improved mobile Innovative new Improved fixed Lower service XConnectivity for Don't know
data speed service coverage services home broadband costs previously unconnected
devices (wearables,
appliances,vehicles, etc.)
Q: As you may or may not be aware, new 5G networks will be introduced over the next year, promising to deliver advanced capabilities over
today’s 4G networks. From what you know of 5G, which, if any, of the following would you expect 5G networks to deliver?
69% 20% 3% 6% 3%
N= 15,000
Enterprises (e.g.respondents
B2B, B2B2C)in 16 countries. Respondents could select multiple answers, chart shows % of respondents. Survey fieldwork was
completed in 2018
23% 31% 34% 9% 3%
Consumers (e.g. B2C)
96 5G Value Creation and Capture
17% 17% 40% 17% 9%
THE 5G GUIDE
3.3.2.2 Consumers expect improved 5G coverage 3.3.2.5 Customers expect lower service costs in the
Improved coverage was the second most frequent 5G era
consumer 5G expectation, but also had the highest While 5G will deliver lower cost per bit, the capital
variation across countries (17% in Japan versus 50% in cost of deployment to achieve this is significant
the US, for example). 5G coverage expectations may and operators should make appropriate plans given
end up being the trickiest for operators to fulfil given consumer propensity to spend more on 5G, coupled
the different propagation properties of spectrum bands with the cost-orientated, pro-competitive regulatory
identified for 5G use and likely early rollout strategies, climate leading into the 5G era.
which will focus NSA deployments within urban areas
using existing tower infrastructure. That a sizeable proportion of respondents in some
European markets flagged lower service costs as an
The 600 MHz and 700 MHz bands can be used to expectation for 5G is worrying (e.g. 32% in Spain and
extend 5G services widely, including in rural areas. 28% in Germany, versus only 16% in the US and 14%
However, the limited amount of spectrum available in South Korea) and symptomatic of the regulatory
means the fastest 5G services will not be possible in approach to date. Japan was the outlier in terms of
those bands alone. non-European markets with similar expectations
(33% of respondents), in fact it was their primary
3.3.2.3 Consumers are unaware of new 5G use cases expectation, however this may well lessen later this
Only 25% of respondents in the survey expect 5G to year following NTT DOCOMO’s announcement in
bring innovative new services. This is despite 5G’s October 2018 that it plans to cut mobile charges by
enhanced technological capabilities relative to LTE between 20% and 40%38.
and the focus of its development (showcased in the
media and in early trials) on the new services that it 3.3.2.6 Korean consumers’ expectations stand out
will enable, such as autonomous cars and augmented South Korean expectations of 5G stand head and
reality. shoulders above most other markets. While consistent
on expectations of faster speeds and improved
As smartphone innovation plateaued some time ago, coverage, Korean consumers also demonstrated the
this may reflect operators beginning to drop off the highest expectations that 5G would deliver innovative
innovation radar in consumers’ eyes: their expectations new services (45%) and connectivity for previously
around 5G suggest a decoupling of the link between unconnected devices like wearables, appliances, and
service innovation and new network technologies. devices (38%).
3.3.2.4 5G messaging needs to be clearer This reflects the drive with which Korean operators
Almost a quarter of respondents expect 5G to drive and regulators have approached 5G: from the first live
improvements to fixed home broadband (even in trials at the Korean Winter Olympics, to agreements
markets where no 5G fixed-wireless network plans have to launch simultaneously to avoid excessive marketing
been announced). An additional quarter did not know costs and to share deployment costs, it has been
what it would deliver. A broad section of consumers are a focussed and pragmatic approach that has fed
still unaware of what 5G will offer, pointing to a lack of consumer expectations.
clear and focussed messages from the mobile industry.
The fact that 5G has so many potential applications
does not help: if the industry is unable to put forward
a clearer proposition to consumers then it further
relegates operators to just providing more and faster
pipes.
38. https://www.mobileworldlive.com/asia/asia-news/docomo-to-cut-back-on-smartphone-bundling-by-april/
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• While consumers will be the biggest beneficiaries of 5G, the enterprise segment offers the
biggest incremental opportunity for operators in the 5G era.
• In a Q4 2016 survey of operator CEOs, nearly 70% of respondents indicated that they view
the enterprise segment as the most important 5G era opportunity for the industry.
• In Q4 2018, the GSMA conducted a series of interviews with enterprises to understand the
technical and business requirements of enterprises in the 5G era.
• Key takeaways were as follows:
– Enterprises to use massive IoT and 5G to expand their role in the value chain.
– Private 5G network deployments by enterprises using unlicensed spectrum and, where
available, their own spectrum, will accelerate due to the perceived benefits of improved
security, reliability and strategic control
– Enterprises see 5G as ‘good to have’, but not yet a ‘must have’
– 5G capabilities are seen of interest, but business models are unclear
– Enterprises are focused on business outcomes, and flagged the historic challenges of
working with operators
– SMEs were more willing to allow operators to take a role beyond connectivity.
• There are five key lessons for operators from the enterprise interviews:
– Operators need to focus on providing horizontal enablers to create common capabilities
that can be offered across multiple industrial use cases
– As SMEs are more willing to consume operator plug-and-play services, operators should
create a catalogue of services that SMEs can choose from
– There is an industry need to better articulate the 5G capabilities and value proposition to
enterprise customers (incl. FWA, network slicing, MEC and IoT)
– Operators must address the risk of marginalisation in IoT; operators want to move up the
value chain but enterprises see them as connectivity providers
– Enterprises are increasing the number of partners in the digital ecosystem; Operators
should seek to grow their relevance to avoid being disintermediated.
3.4.1 5G
54% enterprise opportunity
With the growing maturity of the consumer mobile 750 operator CEOs in fourth quarter 2016, nearly 70%
25%
segment, the enterprise market has an elevated of respondents22%
23% indicated that they view the enterprise
24%
importance in the 5G era. Two GSMA surveys underline 20%
segment as the most important opportunity for the
the importance of the enterprise segment to future mobile industry in the 5G era (see Figure 3.4.1).
operator opportunities. In the GSMA global survey of
Improved mobile Improved mobile Innovative new Improved fixed Lower service XConnectivity for Don't know
data
FIGURE 3.4.1 speed service coverage services home broadband costs previously unconnected
devices (wearables,
appliances,vehicles, etc.)
WHERE WILL NEW OPERATOR REVENUES IN 5G COME FROM?
(SOURCE: CEO 5G SURVEY; GSMA; FEBRUARY 201739)
69% 20% 3% 6% 3%
Enterprises (e.g. B2B, B2B2C)
The GSMA 5G engagement study with operators of respondents expect to generate more than 15% of
in April 2018 indicated that the industry has an revenues from enterprises five years post 5G launch).
aspirational target to generate 40% of revenues from 5G will bring new capabilities and the flexibility to serve
enterprises five years post 5G launch (NB: over 85% the specific needs of different enterprise customers.
The GSMA conducted 30 interviews with enterprise select number of operators, to fully understand the
companies across different regions and verticals technical and business requirements of enterprises in
between October and December 2018, as well as a the 5G era and beyond.
39. https://www.gsmaintelligence.com/research/?file=0efdd9e7b6eb1c4ad9aa5d4c0c971e62&download
FIGURE 3.4.2
1. 2. 3. 4.
AUTOMOTIVE / MEDIA & PUBLIC / HEALTHCARE
1.
MOBILITY 2.
CONTENT 3. CITY
SMART 4.
AUTOMOTIVE / MEDIA & PUBLIC / HEALTHCARE
MOBILITY CONTENT SMART CITY
5. 6. 7. 8.
MANUFACTURING ENERGY & SOFTWARE & MOBILE
5. 6.
UTILITIES 7.
TECH 8.
OPERATORS
MANUFACTURING ENERGY & SOFTWARE & MOBILE
UTILITIES TECH OPERATORS
FIGURE 3.4.3
•KEY REQUIREMENTS
Network NEEDED
slices will require FROM
clear SLAs MNOS
– for the road managers, they could choose to look for alternative networks
MOBILE •• Closer relationship between telcos
Network slices will require clear SLAsand car
– for themanufacturers will
road managers, be could
they required
choose to look for alternative networks
OPERATORS
MOBILE • Closer relationship between telcos and car manufacturers will be required
OPERATORS NEW BIZ MODELS ENABLED / FUTURE POTENTIAL ROLE
FIGURE 3.4.4
• Transmitting high volume, high definition videos / drones for transmission in real time for disaster
ENTERPRISE response requires high bandwidth and low latency
• VR for live-broadcasting and interactive experiences – using the smart phones to share videos in real
time with the community opens up immersive experiences
• Enhancing commerce for retailers – using VR to enhance the customer experience for shopping /
car-parking / getting into their offices etc
• Cloud gaming – requires low latency and high bandwidth of 5G. The role of edge computing key to be
able to process large volumes of data – this means the VR/AR headset itself does not have to be as high
quality
• 5G can be a lower cost alternative to satellite
• 5G for content production (transporting cables for filming can be cumbersome and expensive – wireless
equipment is of interest to media companies)
• Advertising opportunities for the media / content provider (e.g. immersive retail)
• Most likely be a revenue share model with the multiple parties involved for new services
• Players in media & content are more willing to experiment around use cases for 5G
MOBILE • Live content requires low latency, high bandwidth and more reliability
OPERATORS
• Media and content players need operators to collaborate better and agree on common APIs for developer
communities
• When working with smaller ecosystem players, these companies value the reach and marketing spend
that can be accessed through partnerships with mobile operators
• Most likely be a revenue share model with the multiple parties involved for new services
• Certain operators will have ambitions to take a more proactive role higher in the media value chain e.g.
proprietary platforms
• Cloud computing is key to handle the large volumes of video traffic – this could provide an opportunity
for operators to operate cloud / CDN for media players
FIGURE 3.4.5
• Connected vehicles for police – link with traffic lights for example
ENTERPRISE • Mass digitisation of certain public services – e.g. police officers with smartphones and enable them to
send high quality video and voice
• Smart city management
• Network slicing – provide higher security and reliability for mission critical services
• Public sector – less about new business models as such more about cost efficiencies, security and
reliability
• Enterprise either have private network or would consider getting private network but very expensive
• Operators have the potential to re-sell services provided to the public sector to other enterprise
segments e.g. prioritisation services at premium to enterprises
FIGURE 3.4.6
4. HEALTHCARE
• Training junior doctors for surgery using AR/VR – this requires low latency, high bandwidth
ENTERPRISE • Wires in surgery rooms could be replaced with wireless equipment but requires low latency and security
• Remote diagnostics is currently in use but could be enhanced greatly by 5G for real time diagnostics and
high definition video
• Robotics is another use case – surgery is still nascent but for pharmaceutical dispense or support
diagnostics could help save costs (low latency, eMBB)
• Not 5G specific but AI and running data analytics across medical records such as CT scans can help with
prioritisation
• Less about new biz models – more about cost optimisation and offering a best experience for patients
and also for the physicians
• 5G has to offer the same latency as wired networks - no interruption and no error in connectivity as
MOBILE safety is the most paramount importance
OPERATORS • Lower price of cellular connectivity for diagnostic devices and as high performance as fibre
• Operators could provide cloud storage / data centres and outsource it to other parties who are not large
enough to have their own – operators are looking into diversifying revenue in healthcare
• Smart governments are looking for innovation partners and PPP models for healthcare use cases
FIGURE 3.4.7
5. MANUFACTURING
• Wirelessly connecting a large number of devices in a secure and economic fashion (cables very
ENTERPRISE expensive)
• Enabling virtual control of machines with low latency provided through 5G – lead to cost optimisation as
less CPUs needed on one floor
• Telemetry / exchanging information between large number of interconnected devices in real time –
cloud computing can enable this as well as eMBB and mMTC to transmit the information in real time in
high resolution
• Network slices can be reserved for specific functions and allow for lower cost infrastructure
• Providing service capabilities to customers based on data analytics coming through connected devices
(e.g. predictive maintenance) even offering cloud computing
• Innovation of products based on networked equipment and machines
• Minimum requirement for 5G is to deliver similar latency to fixed network for mission critical applications
MOBILE • Backward compatibility with past generation devices
OPERATORS
• Communicate clearly that NB-IoT and LTE-M will be supported by 5G and provide clear deployment and
technology support timeframes
• Cybersecurity could be a potential area where MNOs could play a role as it is a big concern when it comes
to data analytics from mass number of sensors
• Potential for operators to leverage global reach and help provide “Out of the box connectivity”
• Potential for operators to become data platform providers but will be limited to certain markets (e.g.
data storage, analytics etc)
FIGURE 3.4.8
• Edge computing will be required when enterprises want to scale the number of devices and require
ENTERPRISE platforms and analytics which can deal with that amount of data in real time
• 5G could provide a substitute for the last mile
• Microrobotics – perform inspection of sensors and share information real-time to prevent malfunctions
(mMTC, low latency) and save costs
• Management of complex virtual plants of the future
• Cybersecurity is a both threat and opportunity – large volumes of information flowing through devices
and cloud – open to collaboration with other stakeholders
• Already running or / looking to run private network for more control and reliability
• Communicate transparently how long certain technologies will be supported on the field
MOBILE • Backward compatibility with past generation devices
OPERATORS
• SLAs could help boost adoption of 5G
• Managing cybersecurity becoming important with the volumes of data - “veracity of data coming from
wireless technologies”
• Difficult to see that 5G can compete with fibre for latency and therefore deployment may be difficult for
mission critical missions
• Would like to understand from operators value proposition of network slicing and MEC
FIGURE 3.4.9
• Next generation work sites will be enabled by 5G – not just the communication but networked work sites
ENTERPRISE and equipment
• Network slices and personalised networks will provide different industries more flexibility but require
SLAs and security
• Low latency will allow an real-time interpretation of actions that were not possible before which will
open up a suite of new services and seamless experiences
• Edge computing and 5G bring robotics in reality
• Potential for someone to play a role in aggregation of offerings or hosting platforms as the ecosystem
becomes more complex – software providers see themselves as playing this role
• AI and the cloud would become a big opportunity in the 5G era for software providers
• Big enterprises want to deploy private networks
• Collaboration with the rest of the ecosystem – especially in use cases such as smart homes / cities where
MOBILE there a wide rate of players
OPERATORS • Robotics require high bandwidth connectivity, security and SLAs
• MNOs should focus more on an end-end service delivery which is not well practiced currently
• Industry need for policies around 5G access network sharing
• MNOs may need to look at new biz models – not charging by data used but other metrics e.g. CPUs /
number of clicks / per session
• Close collaboration with tech players who offer services dependent on cellular connectivity could boost
revenue – especially with co-development of certain services
FIGURE 3.4.10
ENTERPRISE INSIGHTS
40
108 5G Value Creation and Capture
THE 5G GUIDE
3.4.3.3 5G seen as ‘good to have’, not yet a ‘must The key technological needs from enterprises
have’ focuses on latency (similar to fibre for mission critical
Enterprises are aware of the attributes of 5G and applications), reliability of service and security
expect it to provide higher reliability and security (particularly with the volumes of data coming from the
at a lower cost. Enterprises are mostly aware of the mass of devices connected). Backward compatibility
attributes 5G offers such as high bandwidth and low with past generation devices was one of the most
latency which they expect to provide an enhanced frequently mentioned requirements from operators,
experience and lower cost of existing services. even going as far as operators potentially taking a
larger role in auditing the certification of IoT devices.
Several enterprises are exploring use cases for network Several enterprises raised the question of costs related
slicing and edge computing. Enterprises indicated to 5G, particularly in public and health sectors and
that network slicing could be used to provide more where cost optimisation was a greater priority than
flexible networks, increased reliability and can allow for revenue generation.
infrastructure simplification when slices are reserved
for specific functions. For edge computing, enterprises 3.4.3.4 5G capabilities of interest, business models
anticipate the ability to process larger volumes of data unclear
faster, which can lead to innovation of both devices and A number of new use cases enabled by 5G mentioned
services. in the interviews focus on the media industry. The
low latency and high bandwidth offered by 5G will
These findings are supported by the results of the improve the nascent VR/AR/XR experience for end
2018 GSMA Intelligence IoT Enterprise Survey, which users, proliferate usage and open up new revenue
measures IoT adoption by enterprises across 14 opportunities (e.g. immersive reality platforms). The
countries and eight verticals. When asked which 5G role of edge computing and the ability to process larger
capabilities would make it compelling to deploy 5G for volumes of data faster is valuable across the media
future IoT deployments, 74% of enterprises stated that value chain, from broadcasting (real time broadcasting
higher data transfer speeds would make 5G compelling; of content) all the way to hardware innovation, as AR/
49% cited network slicing, 41% edge computing; and VR headsets do not have to be as high-quality when
31% low-latency services. It is interesting to note that content can be processed at the edge.
there is little variance in the responses from enterprises
across different verticals. Media players expressed the most willingness to
engage operators, especially on discussions on revenue
5G was highlighted as a potential alternative network sharing for new service opportunities in the future,
technology for more expensive modes of connectivity and were least concerned about cannibalisation
such as fibre and satellites in rural areas. In an industrial of players’ traditional business. Media players, as
setting, wirelessly connecting a mass number of technical innovators, are open to collaboration and
devices in a secure and economic way was seen to be experimentation with operators.
a key advantage, however it was noted that in fact for
most use cases existing technologies for IoT networks, Media players saw the value of operators not only
4G and fibre were seen as good enough. There were providing eMBB and uRLLC, but also the VR/AR/
some question marks by enterprises whether 5G could XR platforms, and the cloud compute/storage and
ever compete with, or replace fibre. analytics required. Although business models were
not clearly articulated, players in the media space are
exploring potential revenue share models based on new
services or advertising models with mobile operators.
3.4.3.5 Enterprises are focused on business 3.4.3.6 SMEs require more end-to-end services
outcomes support
The most urgent enterprise requirements are business Across all verticals, SMEs were much more willing to
oriented, such as providing clear SLAs and lowering allow operators to take a role beyond connectivity than
the cost of cellular connectivity. Clear communication the larger enterprises. Already, there are several cases
around how long technologies would be supported where operators provide/are looking to provide various
in the field (e.g. legacy technologies such as 2G), platforms, cloud services and analytics for smaller
the value and definition of network slicing (business enterprises.
benefits rather than technical definitions) and edge
computing were also highlighted across various In APAC, operators are even taking a large role in
verticals. marketing and business development by supporting
national and international expansion for smaller partner
The challenges of working with operators was also companies. Several enterprises also commented on
highlighted by enterprises (e.g. speed of deployment, their willingness to have operators provide connectivity
complexity of organisations and openness to bundled with their services and expressed an interest in
collaboration with the ecosystem). Mobile operators collaboration around cybersecurity.
need
WHATtoENTERPRISES
focus on end-to-end
HAVE TOLD US…service delivery and
horizontal enablers such as APIs, analytics platforms
1 canEnterprises
that to use massive
be built across IoT while
verticals to expand role ininvalue
bearing mind chain
the specific functionalities and services for specific
2 Private network deployments by enterprises will accelerate
verticals.
4
3.4.4
5G capabilities of interest, business models unclear
Lessons for operators
5 Enterprises
There
are focused on business outcomes
are five key lessons for operators from the enterprise interviews
6 SMEs require more end-end support
FIGURE 3.4.11
2 Premium / exclusive Video Content Few opportunities & for mostly ‘cash rich’ operators
4 Video Enablers / API (e.g. Cloud AR/VR) Identify & standardise common video APIs
3.4.4.1 Develop horizontal enablers for 5G 3.4.4.3 Articulate a clear 5G value proposition
5G opportunities exist across different industries, There is an industry need to better articulate the
but building vertical-specific competencies requires 5G capabilities and value proposition to enterprise
substantial investment in acquiring expertise, customers (including FWA, network slicing, edge
relationships and assets. Operators need to focus computing and IoT technologies). The perceived lack
on providing horizontal enablers to create common of clarity on technology migration (timelines but also
capabilities and services which can be offered across how legacy technology works with new technology)
multiple industrial use cases. This could allow operators delays enterprise investment in devices and potential
to offer and sufficiently scale services beyond take-up of service. Enterprises typically lean towards
connectivity and generate a positive business base. implementation of technology that is available
currently, that will be supported in the future or is more
3.4.4.2 Target SMEs for end-to-end solutions economical (e.g. enterprises preferring LoRa over NB-
The SME segment emerges as an area where there is IoT).
demand for operators to play an end-to-end role in 5G.
Non-network assets such as marketing and business The lack of clarity leads to differences in opinions
development are just as valuable to these players as is on the potential for a particular technology: for
connectivity, which can unlock new interesting business example, operators are very positive about the
models for operators. As SMEs are more willing to potential opportunity of FWA for enterprises in
consume operator managed services, generating a the 5G era whereas verticals showed relatively low
catalogue of services that businesses can choose from levels of awareness on the benefits. It should also be
could be a potential opportunity for operators. emphasised that there was a high level of confusion
from enterprises regarding NB-IoT and LTE-M: the
As one example, SMEs are a prime target for network- mobile industry needs to clearly communicate that NB-
as-a-service capabilities. 5G and network slicing will IoT and LTE-M will be supported by 5G.
allow operators the capability to offer SMEs hyper-
targeted network-as-a-service, allowing them to The 5G era also presents an opportunity for operators
consume network slices with differentiated QoS, to innovate on business models. Several operators
latency and throughput according to use case and in APAC and in the Middle-East have embraced
customer. Although targeting the SME segment government-led digitisation initiatives to engage both
alone may not generate a positive business case for public and private sector enterprises in discussions
5G due to the complexities of SME needs and size to explore new business models for the 5G era.
of opportunity, it could be a chance for operators to Innovation of business models could include ways
experiment with new use cases and business models, of how to monetise connectivity in different ways
which could be replicated further as can be seen by (e.g. automotive industry looking for one-stop
several innovative operators in APAC. regional roaming services, charging data by CPU/
number of clicks etc.), monetising non-traditional
services (e.g. outsourcing cloud and data centres,
cybersecurity, platforms) and effectively monetising
specific enterprise needs (e.g. using 5G as a back-up
solution for enterprises that have a critical reliance
on connectivity, in the same way that 4G is offered to
enterprises by operators today).
3.4.4.4 Address IoT disintermediation risks Several operators and vendors are already adopting a
Operators must address the risk of marginalisation in graded approach to test the viability of slicing by rolling
the massive IoT opportunity. Many operators recognise out private LTE networks and/ or campus networks.
that expanding their role within the value chain is A number of demos at MWC 2019 showcased the
imperative to generate a positive business case for 5G usability of such networks in practice – a welcome
and are looking to play a role in data processing, cloud advance from previous discussions at the conceptual
operations, data storage, analytics services and other level. Notably Deutsche Telekom and Osram launched
digital services. Enterprises, however, very much see Campus Network, based on a ‘dual slice’ that combines
the role of the operator restricted to providing faster, a public and a private LTE network on a common
more reliable and secure connectivity in the future platform to enable a smart factory use case and
and creating the standards for technology rather than Telefonica highlighted its LTE-Enterprise (LTE-E)
working on integration and service design. solution which has been developed for industrial
environments in partnership with Ericsson, ASTI and
Operators are not only at risk of missing out on Geprom.
opportunities further up the IoT value chain: there is a
threat of connectivity disintermediation, particularly 3.4.4.5 Focus on retaining and growing relevance
from utility/manufacturing enterprises and the public with enterprises
sector which have deployed proprietary networks to Digitisation and increasing complexity of the ecosystem
have more control over their networks and isolation. will only increase the need for operators to understand
With fully virtualised networks in the future, the large and meet the needs of enterprises. There is a risk
cloud players become increasingly strong competitors that operators may be facing disintermediation from
to mobile operators in providing connectivity. Amazon’s managing the direct relationship with enterprises as
announcement of a partnership to deliver a cloud- other technology players see this as a potential role
based private LTE network solution based on CBRS is a they could play in the 5G era.
perfect example of this trend.
Technology providers position themselves as better
Other enterprises interviewed have revealed that they able than operators to manage the complexities and
are exploring options for private networks, however, relationships with enterprises. They believe that AI,
this could potentially be an opportunity for mobile cloud and big data are large opportunities to grow
operators. For example, operators could consider revenue and as ecosystems become increasingly
managing private networks on behalf of these types complex, they believe they could also play the
of players. By opening up network capabilities via APIs aggregator role to minimise the difficulties in working
and leveraging network slicing, this would provide with mobile operators. This trend mirrors that of the
enterprises the control they are looking for while approach aggregators have taken in working with
avoiding the cost of investment and risks of operations operators in digital services (payments, identity and
without having to build up in-house know-how in messaging) and looks to be replicated in the enterprise
network deployment and management. space.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Enhanced mobile broadband (eMBB) is the default, and earliest, 5G use case. This includes
mobile data, video and IP communications services (i.e. VoLTE, RCS).
• 5G will provide the capacity for at least 100GB per month per customer to cope with growing
video traffic.
• Low latencies approaching 1 millisecond will support new use cases in gaming, critical
communications, remote control of devices and industrial automation.
• Monetising extra network capabilities will help to stabilise 5G era ARPU.
• Additional capacity from 5G will encourage bigger/unlimited bundles, and may trigger a shift
to a different pricing paradigm e.g. speed-based tiering.
In the 5G era, many operators will be aggressively Figure 3.5.1 outlines four types of video products that
targeting the lucrative vertical market - including using operators should evaluate for 5G.
customised technologies like NB-IoT etc. However, • Internet Video: while operators are unlikely to
for most operators the early use case for 5G will be charge customers more for internet video, the
to provide mobile broadband services directly to lesson from 4G is that while customers will not pay
customers. This will be primarily through enhanced for internet video directly, they will pay more for a
mobile broadband (eMBB) and, in some cases, fixed 5G that offers superior experience for video.
wireless access (FWA). The prospect for eMBB is
evolutionary to theHAVE
current business of operators • Premium video: operators, where viable, can
WHAT ENTERPRISES TOLD US…
and will progressively improve the mobile internet offer premium/exclusive video content to paying
experience of thetomore than 5IoT
billion mobile customers. This is a lucrative opportunity. Ampere
1 Enterprises use massive to expand rolephones
in value chain
users in the world. analysis forecasts that OTT video revenues
(including pay-TV, subscription video, video-on-
2 Private network deployments by enterprises will accelerate demand) will generate revenue of $46 billion in 2019
3.5.1.1 Data
eMBB compared to cinema box office revenues of $40
3 is5Gtheseendeasfacto
‘goodproductisation
to have’, not yet aof‘must
mobile
have’data and
billion.
is used for accessing apps; email; viewing web pages;
watching videos; updating
4 5G capabilities software;
of interest, businessand anyunclear
models internet- • Video Communications: thanks to OTT services such
based activity on a mobile device. 5G, as has been the as WhatsApp and WeChat, video calling is no longer
case
5 forEnterprises
previousare generations of mobile
focused on business technology,
outcomes a novelty. However, carrier-grade ViLTE remains an
will deliver faster downlink/uplink speeds and lower interesting proposition for the 5G era and should be
6
latency. This
SMEs will
requirein turn
more enable
end-end improved
support experiences actively considered.
and a wider range of use cases.
• Video enablers/APIs: Operators should consider
developing video enablers/APIs to promote
3.5.1.2 Video
development of inter-operator video services. This is
Video is saturatingKey 4Gfindings
networks and 5G will bring Potential Opportunity and / or Risk Key risk
the major driving force for the GSMA’s 5G Cloud XR
much better performance for video services. In the 3G
Forum40.
era, the predominant way of consuming video was via
downloads. Thanks to the boom in streaming services, Broadcast / Multicast technologies and approaches
4G networks support a lot of streaming (e.g. Netflix). can also be used for efficient content distribution of
Early projections with AR/VR, 4k/8k video and 360 video and other high capacity content (incl. software
degreeDEVELOP
videos suggest that TARGET5G videoSME content will beARTICULATEupdates). ADDRESS IOT FOCUS ON
HORIZONTAL
immersive, consuming an FOR even5G END-END
higher proportion ofAtheCLEAR 5G DISINTERMEDIATION RETAINING AND
ENABLERS FOR 5G SOLUTIONS VALUE PROPOSITION RISKS GROWING
overall data traffic. RELEVANCE WITH
ENTERPRISES
FIGURE 3.5.1
2 Premium / exclusive Video Content Few opportunities & for mostly ‘cash rich’ operators
4 Video Enablers / API (e.g. Cloud AR/VR) Identify & standardise common video APIs
50
40. https://www.gsma.com/newsroom/press-release/gsma-launches-new-industry-wide-initiative-to-support-development-of-operator-edge-cloud-ar-vr/ 48 GB
B/month)
40
30
28 GB
20 19 GB
16 GB
12 GB
10 10 GB
7 GB
0
2017 2023
3.5.2.2 Lower cost/bit the underlying assumptions that define the operator
Cost versus revenue per GB trends will further drive the business model.
market to unlimited data bundles in 5G
5G will continue the trend in mobile data pricing Given the increased efficiency and capacity in 5G,
that was seen in the 4G era where bigger network higher-priced unlimited data bundles can help to
capacities, and the convergence of the revenue/GB increase profitability for the industry. However,
and cost/GB curves (see Figure 3.5.3), have led to depending on market conditions, it could also lead to
the re-emergence of unlimited data bundles. This is a deflationary pricing and its concomitant implications.
major change in the business model of operators and
FIGURE 3.5.3
80
60
40
20
0
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
$ 14.00
3.5.2.3 Low latency profound impact on service development. For example,
5G’s$ low
13.00latency will support new use cases 4G’s low latency and bigger capacity has accelerated
A design goal for 5G is to support low latencies of the development of services that rely on real-time
up to$ 12.00
1 millisecond. Potential use cases in gaming, feedback and notification (e.g. online gaming).
Current ARPU
critical communications, remote control of devices and
Global ARPU, USD
$ 11.00
industrial automation have been suggested. However, If this trend is replicated in the 5G era, new, currently
there are question marks whether these services
$ 10.00 unknown services could emerge, especially focusing
will need low latency of 1 millisecond and if such low on factory automation, robotics and haptic/tactile
latency
$ 9.00can be found everywhere. For example, some interactions. Ultra-reliable low latency communication
of the big content providers insist that they only design and time-sensitive networking, enabled via a
their$services
8.00
to work within the current capabilities of combination of 5G and wireless edge, will be required
the widely-provided
$ 7.00
network. for time-critical Industrial IoT manufacturing processes.
Such processes include closed-loop robotic control,
While the scepticism is understandable, the lesson
$ 6.00 machine-human interactions, automated guided
of 4G shows2010 2011 2012
that generally 2013
lower 2014 can
latencies 2015
have2016 2017 2018 as well
vehicles, 2019 as2020
AR and2021
VR. 2022 2023 2024 2025
MOBILE BROADBAND
THE 5G GUIDE
Illustrative only
12 noon
FIGURE 3.5.4 Time of day 12 noon
336.8 348.6
332.5
305.8 291.1
276.2
Average selling price in US$
261.3
245.1
229.4 214.7
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Iceland
100
41. https://www.gsma.com/mobilefordevelopment/programme/digital-identity/access-mobile-services-proof-identity-global-policy-trends-dependencies-risks/?utm_
Norway
Ireland
Monaco
Belgium Finland Austria Slovakia Kuwait demand
5G Value Creation80and Capture
France Malta
Hong Kong
Japan
Europe
Israel
Slovenia Latvia
Croata Poland 117
Spain Czech Republic Lebanon Russia Kazakhstan
Korea, South Maldives
Portugal Hungary Romania Trinidad and Tobago
Malaysia
Greece Cyprus
Barbados
Lithuania Bahamas
Moldova
TFYR Macedonia
Saudi Arabia Palestne 70
THE 5G GUIDE
$ 13.00
$ 12.00
Current ARPU
Global ARPU, USD
$ 11.00
$ 10.00
$ 9.00
$ 8.00
$ 7.00
$ 6.00
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
MOBILE BROADBAND
?
Metered Unlimited Speed
Rebalance Rebalance
42. https://www.telecomasia.net/content/telcos-lose-386b-ott-voip-ovum
3.5.3.2 Capacity glut and big bundles But this additional capacity has consequences. As
Capacity glut in the 5G era may encourage big Figure 3.5.6 shows, the continuous addition of extra
deflationary data bundles capacity to provide for the ‘unmet demand’ increases
Operators face a constant, unending competitive the ‘average supply’ of network capacity above what
pressure to add more capacity to their networks. is needed to cover for ‘average demand’. The resultant
This is driven by the need to accommodate growing ‘excess capacity’ has become a key battleground, as
data usage on smartphones, and the need to serve operators try to monetise this capacity with bigger, and
additional devices. But the biggest driver is to provide increasingly unlimited, data bundles.
enough peak capacity to cover spikes in data usage.
Operators in every market are competing to assure This trend is already in full swing in many developed
customers that their mobile data connections will markets for 4G services and would carry on into the 5G
perform well during peak hours, such as at a bus/train era. In some places, it has provided an upsell opportunity,
station during rush hour or at a stadium during a sports but concerns remain that the quest to monetise excess
game. capacity is stoking deflationary pricing.
FIGURE 3.5.6
DEMAND VARIATION FOR MOBILE NETWORK CAPACITY – 24 HOURS (SOURCE: KINGS COLLEGE LONDON43)
Unmet
demand
Average supply
Network Capacity Usage
Excess
capacity
Average demand
Illustrative only
336.8 348.6
332.5
305.8 291.1
276.2
Average selling price in US$
261.3
245.1
229.4 214.7
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Iceland
100
Norway
Ireland
Monaco
Belgium Finland Austria Slovakia Kuwait demand
France Malta
Hong Kong
Japan
Europe
Israel
Croata Poland 80
119
Slovenia Latvia
Korea, South Spain Czech Republic
Hungary
Lebanon Russia
Romania
Kazakhstan
Trinidad and Tobago
5G Value Creation and Capture
Maldives
Portugal
Malaysia
Greece Cyprus
Barbados
Lithuania
Uruguay
Bahamas
Moldova
TFYR Macedonia
Saudi Arabia Palestne 70
Belarus Serbia CIS
Argentna Ukraine
Italy Americas Armenia
20
THE 5G GUIDE
0
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
$ 11.00
has happened for many fixed broadband customers to rebalance to quality-based pricing for HD Voice and
in developed markets. Internet Service Providers have VoLTE (see Figure 3.5.7). Technical challenges and the
$ 10.00
shifted from data usage based pricing to speed tiers ability to put together a compelling value proposition
pricing as a differentiating factor between basic and
$ 9.00 are often obstacles. For example, a survey of a
premium services to users. representative sample of 978 households in the US in
$ 8.00 2016 suggests that households’ do not value speeds of
over 100Mbps highly44.
$ 7.00
$ 6.00
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
FIGURE 3.5.7
MOBILE BROADBAND
?
Metered Unlimited Speed
Rebalance Rebalance
44. https://prodnet.www.neca.org/publicationsdocs/wwpdf/91917tpi.pdf
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Fixed Wireless Access (FWA) is a by-product of excess eMBB capacity and enables operators
to address new & existing broadband opportunities.
• There are four clear FWA use cases: broadband for the unconnected; broadband to compete
with fixed alternatives; backup broadband and base station backhaul.
• FWA is important for other strategic reasons too: additional incentive to deepen fibre
capillarity, to boost product portfolio for mobile-only operators; or to avoid new FWA
entrants distorting the market.
• The GSMA has mapped FWA opportunities for 160 countries: Blue Ocean markets, Red Ocean
markets and Desert markets.
• While the FWA opportunity varies considerably across geographies, there are always
potential “oases” of opportunities.
Fixed Wireless Access (FWA), a wireless link that regions, or to provide a competitively-priced alternative
provides connectivity to objects that are stationary or to fixed broadband. This opportunity exists, but is by
nomadic, will receive a boost thanks to improved 5G no means universally addressable by operators in all
capabilities. FWA is not a new product idea, but 5G markets. As such, 5G FWA needs to be viewed as an
FWA is positioned as superior to previous attempts to opportunity that is highly dependent on local realities,
deploy FWA-like services using proprietary wireless such as the 2018 launches in the US.
technologies (e.g. LMDS, iBurst), alternative cellular
technologies (e.g. WiMAX) and default cellular There are four primary FWA products that operators
technologies (e.g. 3G, 4G). can offer globally, as shown in Figure 3.6.1. Also, as the
FWA opportunity is not universal, this section frames
Many operators expect to deploy 5G FWA early in the the discussion based on the different market scenarios
5G era to provide for broadband in rural/sub-urban in terms of attractiveness for FWA.
FIGURE 3.6.1
1
Roof-mounted or semi fixed
equipment in residential
premises
5G Base Station
or Small Cell
2
Roof-mounted or semi fixed
equipment in business
premises
Core
FWA Links FWA Links
Network
/ Internet
3
4 Fibre Links FWA units as
FWA solutions as backhaul for backup connectivity
Small Cells for enterprise
FWA
FTTx
Fibre may terminate in the middle
HOME CABINET depending on the type of FTTx CENTRAL OFFICE
1
Roof-mounted or semi fixed
3.6.1.1 Broadband for the unconnected For many fixed/mobile operators with aequipment
commitment
in residential
premises
Operators can address stationary broadband demands to provide high-speed broadband services to rural and
5G Base Station
including premises that were ornot connected
Small Cell previously suburban premises, FWA offers a competitive cost
or are connected with only legacy copper/DSL economics compared to greenfield FTTx deployments, 2
broadband, time-limited (e.g. seasonal) broadband especially in developing regions whereRoof-mounted
low fibreor semi fixed
equipment in business
demands and IoT demands.
Core This is the strongest penetration and costly civil works for fibre densification
premises
FWA Links FWA Links
opportunity for 5G FWA.
Network favours wireless connectivity. Huawei estimates the
/ Internet
capex per subscriber range at between $5003and
For mobile-only
4 operators, FWA is an
Fibreopportunity
Links to $1000 for FTTx versus $100to $400 for FWA FWA 45 . This
units as is
backup connectivity
enter into new broadband markets, gaining access to
FWA solutions as backhaul for based on calculations for 4G FWA and 5Gformay work
enterprise
Small Cells
new value pools. out to be even cheaper.
FIGURE 3.6.2
FWA
FTTx
Fibre may terminate in the middle
HOME CABINET depending on the type of FTTx CENTRAL OFFICE
3.6.1.2 Broadband competition turn out to be the most profitable FWA product for
The idea of 5G FWA competing with fixed broadband operators. The rationale is straightforward. Market or
is a polarising proposition. The attraction is that 5G NR regulatory forces are pushing businesses to ensure that
4G AND PREVIOUS 5G
provides an experience that enables operators to offer there is very little downtime in their operations. Faced
Macro cells
a high-performing, competitive broadband service for with the costly option Small cells a leased line into their
of running
customers. premises, a 5G FWA option will prove much more cost
effective. Already some operators have begun offering
The clear opportunities are to address customers still such services in the market using 4G FWA (e.g. BT
reliant on legacy copper/DSL broadband products, Assure in the UK).
and scenarios where the cost of newly deploying FTTx
is prohibitively high. However, the idea that already- 3.6.1.4 Base station backhaul
installed FTTx can be replaced with FWA is largely The option of using 5G FWA as a backhaul for 5G base
unproven. Unless the FWA service is priced to woo stations is still under development, but could well prove
Light Pole Street furniture Light Pole
customers, there is little evidence from anywhere that to be an important use (e.g.case for FWA. Using Integrated
bus stop)
FWA offers a superior customer proposition – based on
Radius: 500 – 4,000+m
Access Backhaul (IAB), an advanced beamforming
Radius: 200 – 1,000m
speed/performance - to FTTx. technique that concentrates radio waves in a specified
Mix of fibre and legacy backhaul Rich fibre backhaul
direction for long-distance transmission, operators can
Cell site TCO (%) Cell site TCO (%)
3.6.1.3 Backup broadband use FWA to provide backhaul for 5G macro and small
Fibre Fibre
As businesses increase their dependence on the cells. NTT DOCOMO and Huawei demonstrated IAB in
internet, their
10–30% of total cost need for a reliable backup will grow. This early 2018
60–80% 46
and 3GPP is considering Integrated Access
of total cost
is a currently underestimated opportunity and may Backhaul (IAB) as a possible 5G NR standard.
45. https://www-file.huawei.com/-/media/corporate/pdf/news/4g-wireless-broadband-industry-white-paper.pdf?la=en&source=corp_comm
46. https://www.nttdocomo.co.jp/english/info/media_center/pr/2018/0522_00.html
5G Base Station
or Small Cell
2
3.6.2 FWA drivers Roof-mounted or semi fixed
equipment in business
premises
Core
FWA Links FWA Links
3.6.2.1 Monetising excess Network network capacity study, based on the US market, suggests that fibre
/ Internet
Excess network capacity is the biggest enabler for FWA could make up between 60-80% of total cost 3of a
FWA is an4opportunity for operatorsFibre to monetise
Links their 5G mmWave base station compared to 10-30% FWA unitsforas a
excess network
FWA solutions as backhaulcapacity
for by creating new product typical 4G macro cell (see Figure 3.6.3). backup connectivity
for enterprise
Small Cells
lines. These include broadband products for the
unconnected, for competing with fixed broadband Accordingly, the opportunity to productise and market
propositions, and for backup, in both developed and FWA will act as a driver for fibre investments. This
developing markets. In a study of European operators, can be as part of a fibre + FWA hybrid bundle. FWA
Rewheel argues that the excess capacity on mobile can provide an additional revenue stream for base
networks will push operators to go after fixed-to- stations that are already connected by fibre. And for
mobile broadband substitution47. This is already base stations that are still connected by microwave, the
happening in markets such as Finland and Austria. prospect of FWA will provide the incentive to switch
from microwave to fibre backhaul.
3.6.2.2 ‘Pull through’ driver for fibre
FWA
FWA provides an additional incentive to deepen fibre
capillarity in the 5G era
The cost of deploying additional fibre infrastructure
to support 5G rollouts is a concern for operators in
some markets, especially if the deployment is for
small cells on mmWave spectrum. A Solon Consulting FTTx
Fibre may terminate in the middle
HOME CABINET depending on the type of FTTx CENTRAL OFFICE
FIGURE 3.6.3
4G AND PREVIOUS 5G
Macro cells Small cells
Fibre Fibre
47. http://research.rewheel.fi/downloads/Capacity_utilization_fixed_mobile_broadband_substitution_potential_2017_PUBLIC.pdf
3.6.2.3 ‘Strategic competition’ with fixed broadband 3.6.2.4 Competing with new FWA entrants
Cost and strategic leverage will inform many FWA Operators should take the lead to chart the roadmap
launches for FWA hotspots
There is an ongoing industry debate on the merits of Past experience suggests that operators may not be
using FWA to compete with existing fixed broadband alone in the race to win valuable 5G spectrum for FWA.
propositions. This will likely play out in at least two A number of new entrants have competed for, and
ways. won, spectrum for 3G and 4G FWA services in the past.
For example, UK Broadband won around 120MHz of
First, in a greenfield context, rolling out FWA is 3.5GHz spectrum in the 2013 UK 4G auctions, while new
significantly cheaper than FTTx. The per subscriber entrants, such as Smile, Surfline and Afrimax, have been
capex estimates are $500-$1000 for FTTx versus $100- assigned significant amounts of sub-1GHz spectrum in
$400 for FWA, so it is attractive to opt for 5G FWA if markets across Africa, sometimes ahead of established
it can provide a customer experience that is close to service providers.
FTTx. Operators who are driven by this cost analysis will
justify FWA based on its lower total cost of ownership. Most of the new entrants have struggled to scale up:
those in developed regions have been constrained by
Second, operators with small or no fixed broadband well entrenched fixed broadband infrastructure and
market share could use FWA to boost their product weak performance of 3G and 4G FWA, while a lack of
portfolio and strengthen their competitive position. resources and capability for large scale deployment is
This may be more so in markets where fixed-mostly the primary limitation for those in developing regions.
companies (e.g. cable companies) are seeking to enter Nonetheless, their activities impact operators’ ability
the mobile market in the 5G era. For this, the strategic to deploy 4G networks cost-effectively and, in many
benefits of launching FWA may not be immediately cases across Africa, distort value in the 4G market with
evident and may be indirect. deflationary pricing.
FIGURE 3.6.4
60
20
30 20
30 20 20
10
20 30 30 30
10
30
20 20 20 20
10 10 10
MTN Glo Airtel 9mobile ntel Bitflux Intercellular Smile
3.6.2.5 Affordability of FWA devices products based on 3GPP specifications have been
DIFFERENTIATED CONNECTIVITY MANAGED SOLUTIONS
Adoption of 3GPP’s 5G specifications for FWA
(incl. Network Slicing and QoS Differentiation) enables developed by a robust ecosystem
(incl. managed consisting of
services)
production of FWA devices to scale numerous vendors. 3GPP specifications also are peer-
The success of mobile communications, especially GSM reviewed by number of experts, ensuring that mistakes
(Global System for Mobile communications), stems and errors are minimized. This means that the operator
BASIC CONNECTIVITY BEYOND CONNECTIVITY
from the fact that it is globally interoperable
(incl. Faux Consumers and basic IoT)
and enjoys will not only benefit from the potential cost reduction,
(incl. software and security)
global economies of scale. Unlike other technologies, but also have numerous alternatives in procuring its
GSM enabled devices and network equipment to be CPEs. Operators will then be in a position to adopt
manufactured at global scale, reducing the cost Extending
of into non-core products
more competitive pricing for end users.
adoption for both operators and subscribers.
Device rental models can also be beneficial for both
This also applies for FWA using 5G. If FWA customer customers and operators. For example, FWA customers
premises equipment (CPEs) is based on 3GPP’s 5G can benefit if the CPE is rented as it would be easier for
specification, the operators will be able to enjoy global operators to upgrade the CPE while potential upsell of
economies of scale in production of CPEs. Furthermore, services can also be possible with the upgrade.
1.6
1.4 3.6%
CAGR (2007–2017)
1.2
1.0%
1.0 CAGR (2007–2017)
0.8
-6.0%
0.6 CAGR (2007–2017)
0.4
0.2
0.0
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Average demand
3.6.3 FWA economics: opportunity mapping
GSMA mapping of ‘oasis’ of FWA opportunities and limitations
Illustrative only
There are several metrics that can be used to map the For (1), the proportion of households with a computer
relative
12 noonmass market FWA opportunity in different Time of day
is a good indicator of an appetite for home broadband.
12 noon
countries. On the supply side, home density vs. Customers who can neither afford computers nor
population density provides a comparison on how decide against having a computer are unlikely to be
costly it can be to provide mass market FWA coverage. willing FWA customers. For (2), in households with
Spectrum choice 348.6
(mmWave vs. 3.5GHz) determines computers, the level of fixed broadband penetration
336.8 332.5
the size of the cells for FWA coverage and the
305.8 resultant in each country will show the level of pent-up,
291.1
276.2
Average selling price in US$
FIGURE 3.6.5
Norway Iceland
50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0
Fixed Broadband Penetration
The GSMA has used the ITU’s data for 2017 to develop this analysis to cover 160 countries. Readers are invited to use more current data for
their respective markets for more accurate predictions
3.6.3.1 Mostly ‘Blue Ocean’ markets makes FWA pricing uncompetitive or the existing fixed
Operators should explore playing in these markets broadband providers will fight to defend their market
Blue Ocean markets present a sizeable, and relatively share. However, FWA, as a backup broadband for
uncontested, mass market opportunity for home enterprises could provide attractive.
broadband (i.e. analogous to a peaceful-looking blue
ocean). These are markets with at least 40% household Examples of Red Ocean FWA markets are in most
computer penetration but less than 20% fixed developed markets in Europe, North America and North
broadband penetration. East Asia.
These markets are attractive for 5G FWA because 3.6.3.3 Mostly ‘Desert’ markets
affordability and usability for residential customers is Operators should seek out and play in ‘oasis’
high. Likewise, the enterprise opportunities for FWA, opportunities in these markets
especially for SMEs, will broadly mirror the consumer Desert markets offer only a small, mass market FWA
market opportunity. opportunity because of low affordability and usability
(i.e. analogous to a dry, barren desert with isolated
Good examples are found in Middle East countries such ‘oases’ of greenery). These are markets with household
as Saudi Arabia (69% household computer penetration; computer penetration of less than 40% and less than
11% fixed broadband penetration) and Kuwait (84% 20% fixed broadband penetration. Customers in these
household computer penetration; 3% fixed broadband markets will likely stick to using their smartphones for
penetration). internet access, and as a hotspot for computer internet
access.
3.6.3.2 Mostly ‘Red Ocean’ markets
Operators should only play in these markets for However, there will be selected residential and
broader strategic reasons enterprise opportunities, especially in affluent
Red Ocean markets present a fiercely competitive neighbourhoods and business districts which can prove
opportunity for home broadband (i.e. analogous to a particularly lucrative. Operators in these markets should
bloody, shark-infested ocean). These are markets with focus on making a compelling FWA proposition to
household computer penetration of over 40% and over customers in these locations early, else these customers
20% fixed broadband penetration. will seek alternative broadband solutions for their
needs.
Although these markets are sizeable to be addressed
by FWA, they are highly competitive because either Examples of Desert FWA markets are in many
the fixed broadband ARPU is already at a price that developing markets in Africa and South East Asia.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• 5G will bring new capabilities and the flexibility to serve the specific needs of different
enterprise customers. This could be worth $400 billion per annum to operators by 2025.
• There are broadly four enterprise offerings by operators: basic connectivity; differentiated
connectivity; beyond connectivity and managed solutions.
• Operators should seek ways to capture incremental value from commoditised basic
connectivity; hence the need for differentiated connectivity (e.g. network slicing).
• Operators can sell more third-party products as part of beyond connectivity; they can also
work as co-innovators with their customers to build customer-relevant solutions.
• 5G will be a key enabler of the 4th Industrial Revolution, as technology is seamlessly
embedded within society and especially in commercial and industrial processes.
20
5G will bring new capabilities and the flexibility To fully capture this opportunity, operators will need
to better serve the specific
20 needs of different to tailor their value propositions to large organisations
30
enterprise customers. Operators can leverage these (including municipalities and government agencies) as
new capabilities to unlock 20 revenue20
30 a sizeable new well as small and medium enterprises (SMEs). While
10
opportunity 20 that GSMA estimates could be worth up operators are primarily purveyors of connectivity
10 30 30 30
to $400 billion per annum by 2025 (including the IoT products, they can 30
offer enterprises four different
segment). 20 20 10 10 offerings
10 positioned around the 20 core connectivity
20
MTN Glo Airtel 9mobile
offering
ntel
as shown in
Bitflux
Figure 3.7.1.
Intercellular Smile
FIGURE 3.7.1
700 800 900 1800 2100 2300 2600
3.7.1.3 Beyond Connectivity Secondly, they will deepen their role as resellers of
Operators will develop new solutions, sell more non-operator products and services (e.g. insurance,
third-party products/services/solutions and develop fraud detection, business productivity software [e.g.
platforms for APIs Office 360, Salesforce]). Importantly too, and as was
Operators already offer several non-connectivity evident in the enterprise engagement, the SME market
products and services to enterprises and these will welcome operators providing end-to-end services.
will grow in the 5G era. Many of these propositions These businesses have limited budgets and will opt
are complementary to connectivity (e.g. devices, for plug-and-play products from operators that can
cloud/backup storage, security) while some are simplify their tasks.
supplementary to connectivity (e.g. IT support,
business apps, web hosting). Thirdly, in a push to expand their role in the value chain,
operators will develop platforms/market exchanges
In the 5G era operators will extend their beyond to commercialise network APIs and platform enablers.
connectivity propositions in three additional ways. This is one of the main lessons from the enterprise
Firstly, they will leverage their deep knowledge engagement, highlighting the need for operators to
about the needs and behavior of the customer, plus develop horizontal enablers that can be used to serve
management of the network infrastructure to develop customers in different industry verticals.
new products and services.
TABLE 3.7.1
3.7.2.1 The declining ARPU trap By contrast, over the same period global GDP/capita
Operators need the enterprise market to stabilise grew by 1% annually, and the average selling price
declining consumer ARPU of the iPhone grew by 3.6% annually. This means
Extending the core product
The mobile industry has faced a declining ARPU for a consumers were getting richer and were willing to pay
DIFFERENTIATED CONNECTIVITY MANAGED SOLUTIONS
long time. This is(incl.
now an established
Network long-term trend,
Slicing and QoS Differentiation) more for other products and services
(incl. managed services) in the telecoms
highlighting how challenging it has been for operators ecosystem, but were paying less for mobile services.
to increase their share of the consumer wallet. Using
2007 as a base, in the ten years to 2017 unique Stabilising, and then reversing this persistently
BASIC CONNECTIVITY BEYOND CONNECTIVITY
subscriber ARPU declined by an average
(incl. Faux Consumers of 6% per
and basic IoT) declining ARPU trend(incl. would besecurity)
software and a major success for the
year, as shown in Figure 3.7.2 5G era, and the enterprise opportunity may be key to
achieving this.
Extending into non-core products
FIGURE 3.7.2
1.6
1.4 3.6%
CAGR (2007–2017)
1.2
1.0%
1.0 CAGR (2007–2017)
0.8
-6.0%
0.6 CAGR (2007–2017)
0.4
0.2
0.0
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
3.7.2.2 5G and the Fourth Industrial Revolution in robotics, AI, quantum computing, IoT, 3D printing,
The biggest geopolitical driver for 5G is as an enabler autonomous navigation etc. as the emerging
for the Fourth Industrial Revolution technological forces that will power Industry 4.0.
Some operators face an immediate and direct demand
from geopolitical forces to deploy 5G to support the As Figure 3.7.3 shows, operator products and services
transformation of society and vertical industries. were integral to the Third Industrial Revolution from the
1980s as technology evolved from analogue electronic
This aspiration is captioned as the Fourth Industrial and mechanical solutions to the digital versions that
Revolution or Industry 4.0, a time when technology is are prevalent today. This was the era of the Personal
seamlessly embedded within society and especially Computer (PC), internet, smartphones and Machine-to-
in commercial and industrial processes. Political Machine devices.
commentary often puts 5G together with advances
FIGURE 3.7.3
ENTERPRISE MARKET
Always-on data
2000s Industrialised
PREPAID MARKET Smartphones
partnership model
App stores
Swappable
POST PAID MARKET 1990s SIM cards
Open market
devices
Interoperability
1980s
Interconnection
Roaming
Proof-of-Concept
for cellular
X enterprise opportunities
3.7.2.3 Private 5G networks: the market opportunity environment. One estimate is that $5 billion will be
Operators need to be ready to support private 5G 40% on private mobile networks per year by the end
spent
cellular networks of 202149.
5G will be the first mobile technology generation to
be designed from20% the outset to operate in unlicensed, This is an opportunity for operators to deploy private
33%
shared48 and traditional licensed spectrum. This means networks for key enterprise customers, or to sublet
that not owning licensed spectrum will not be the licensed spectrum to them. However, enterprises may also
barrier80%to mobile network operation that it once was. choose to roll out their own 5G networks, either directly
REVENUE GROWTH
or through partners50. These enterprises
FOR A include private
HYPOTHETICAL
As a result, the introduction of 5G will create venues, municipalities, utility OPERATOR
companies, port authorities
60%
opportunities for new players to enter the market and manufacturers who want to deploy cellular-based IoT
to provide private cellular services in a localised solutions and other broadband communications.
Faced with a maturing consumer market, the enterprise target of 40% of the total. A hypothetical operator
segment offers an opportunity for operators to going from 80/20 to a 60/40 revenue split, could see
continue growing revenues in the 5G era, which can revenues in the 5G era grow by 33%.
3rd INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
lead to a changing mix of revenues. 4th INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Unlike the consumer market where operators rely on a
ENTERPRISE MARKET
An industry rule of thumb suggests that operators single proposition based on mostly basic connectivity
currently seek to generate 80% of revenues from products (voice, messaging and data), there is unlikely
INTERNET MARKET 2020s
consumers and 20% from enterprises. To make to be a single enterprise opportunity that will deliver
progress in the 5G era, operators will need to aim to 40% of revenues.
EMERGING MARKET
Instead, operators
2010s will rely on serving
Horizontal enablers
grow their absolute revenues by maintaining their multiple enterprise opportunities using
(AI, IoT, a common
APIs, Network Slices) set
X enterprise opportunities
40%
20%
80%
33%
REVENUE GROWTH
FOR A HYPOTHETICAL
OPERATOR
60%
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Many IoT applications are well supported on the existing 4G networks, and NB-IoT and LTE-M
are already part of the 5G family.
• 5G will enhance the IoT opportunity by providing more capacity for scale, for critical IoT, and
by supporting enhanced quality of service and lower latency.
• To compete effectively in IoT, operators should plan to provide IoT connectivity solutions
enhanced with additional capabilities, such as MEC, AI and security.
THE 5G GUIDE
ENTERPRISE MARKET
A boost of capacity supported by 5G will be particularly Public and private businesses will use input from secure
important, as the 20%large-scale IoT deployments will drive IoT connectivity overlaid with artificial intelligence,
a massive growth of IoT connections. Two thirds of the cloud computing and advanced analytics to monitor
3.6 billion IoT connections in 2025 (up from 1.1 billion
at the end
80% of 2018 as per GSMA Intelligence forecasts)
will be used by smart industry and automotive verticals:
33%
and interpret data from diverse assets, production lines
and complex machinery in real-time to anticipate faults,
manage infrastructure and mitigateREVENUE
risks. GROWTH
FOR A HYPOTHETICAL
5G is already incorporated into the roadmaps for OPERATOR
60%
connected vehicles, transport, manufacturing and
robotics.
CRITICAL ENHANCED
COMMUNICATIONS MOBILE BROADBAND
Autonomous vehicles Immersive video conferencing
Smart grid Augmented reality
Factory automation 3D video
3.8.2.1 NB-IoT and LTE-M as futureproof IoT is expected to be backward compatible, with software
Investment into NB-IoT and LTE-M today is already an upgrades that would support transition to massive IoT
investment into 5G massive IoT without disrupting the IoT business case.
Massive IoT connectivity based on low power wide
area (LPWA) networks will become a less expensive, 3.8.2.2 IoT ‘long tail’ as a driving force
less complex and an energy-efficient foundation for “IoT out of the box” will drive the long tail of industrial
building future intelligent 5G managed services. and consumer applications
The early adoption of IoT has been driven by large
One of the most important enterprise considerations enterprises, but the large-scale deployment will
for any technology investment is its durability and the accelerate when IoT becomes ingrained in the long tail
openness of its ecosystem. The majority of IoT business of industrial and consumer applications and services,
cases require a long-term deployment of connected many of which are developed by small- and medium-
sensors and devices that can be managed remotely and size enterprises. Adoption of cellular IoT solutions in
can last for many years without replacement. With the this segment will be driven by the mobile industry’s
first 5G networks now being planned, some potential ability to support open innovation, and open source
customers for NB-IoT and LTE-M have been hesitant prototyping and development.
to deploy the technology, believing 5G could make it
obsolete. The foundation for diverse IoT applications is laid on
the existing 4G networks, where LPWA NB-IoT and
In reality, the opposite is true: 3GPP has agreed that LTE-M technologies already support the functionality
the LPWA use cases will continue to be addressed of massive IoT and private LTE networks are used by
by incorporating LTE-M and NB-IoT as part of the 5G enterprise customers. The launch of SA 5G networks
specifications, so confirming the long term status of will enhance the LTE functionality and give extra boost
both LTE-M and NB-IoT as 5G standards. Massive IoT to the growth of IoT applications.
3.8.3.1 Competition in the IoT ecosystem as-a-service that can cater to both the short-range
Operators will differentiate with a secure, neutral and long-range Industrial IoT network requirements.
service IoT proposition Operators’ unique proposition is in secure management
Operators will not be alone in competing for the of diverse 5G connectivity options, combined with
industrial IoT market. Firstly, mobile IoT will coexist a variety of services such as cellular grade security
and compete with other access technologies such and analytics, moving from providing data services to
as Wi-Fi, LPWA networks and satellite. Secondly, control services.
the management of private 5G networks is equally
attractive to systems integrators, enterprise-focussed Importantly, operators do not need to wait until 2020.
vendors, and enterprise customers themselves. Their portfolios of managed enterprise IoT services can
be built using 4G IoT, and later enhanced and expanded
To compete effectively, operators should plan to with 5G building on the established enterprise
provide IoT connectivity solutions enhanced with relationships and opening new value-added revenue
additional capabilities, such as MEC, AI and security- opportunities.
3.8.3.2 IoT value chain forecasts the share of connectivity revenue in the
Operators will increase their role in the IoT value chain total IoT revenue will decline to 17%, while Service
in the 5G era Enablement, including Applications and Platforms, is
New network capabilities will create more IoT forecast to generate 57% of the total, and Professional
opportunities for operators, in addition to the many Services and Business Solutions 26%.
IoT use cases that can and are being addressed using
today’s existing technologies. A typical example of the This “Forward Integration” opportunity should see
value chain for an IoT service is illustrated in Figure operators take on more roles in enabling IoT services,
3.8.2 and where feasible, offering IoT business solutions.
Among these are analytics/Big Data, real time control/
For operators, the IoT opportunity is about adding telematics, and autonomous driving capabilities. The
many more connections, as well as capturing value new roles are outlined in Figure 3.8.3, and analysed in
from parts of the IoT value chain beyond connectivity. detail in the GSMA report titled “Opportunities in the
Connectivity revenues represent the main opportunity IoT: Evolving roles for mobile operators.”
for operators in IoT today and this opportunity will
continue to grow as billions of additional connections Likewise, operators could backward integrate and take
are brought on stream. By 2025, however, GSMAi advantage of opportunities in new areas.
FIGURE 3.8.2
FIGURE 3.8.3
Transformation
OPERATOR
TRANSFORM ROLE TRANSFORMATION
on Transformation
TRANSFORM Visi
of Portfolio
on
Visi
EMPOWER
Operator
of Portfolio
Operator
IoTData,
Big Prime Contrator
Analytics & AI Roles
Ecosystem Orchestration
CONNECT
IoT Infrastructure Big Data,Specialisation
Vertical Analytics & AI
Ecosystem Orchestration
CONNECT IoT Connectivity
IoT Service Management IoTIoT Security
Infrastructure Vertical Specialisation
IoT Connectivity
IoT Foundation IoT Service Enablement
IoT Security IoT Solutions
IoT Service Management
>$400bn
TARGETABLE REVENUE OPPORTUNITY BY 2025
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Resilience will be a major strategic and business enabler in the 5G era and will play out in
different ways for different services.
• Operators will need to create value propositions to customers based on clear understanding
of service availability and reliability.
• 5G networks should recognise that different use cases may require different service levels,
especially during atypical operating scenarios.
• Operators need tools and processes to reassure customers that 5G will deliver on its value
proposition and SLA.
• Operators need a secure way to authorise devices and to block devices en masse.
Studies show that the cost, to society, of poor internet Six Sigma to improve their service delivery and business
connection can be high and many 5G era use cases processes ). While much of the focus on resilience has
could fail to materialise if operators cannot assure been at the service level, the 5G era will need a similar
network and service resilience. A 2015 UK study by push at the network level to fully enable value creation
Daisy Group suggests that the cost to the economy and capture for operators.
can be as high as £11billion, equating to about 31% of
the total annual revenues of the UK’s fixed and mobile Resilience will be a major strategic and business enabler
operators. This is the context to the importance of in the 5G era and operators will need to create value
resilience to creating and capturing value in the 5G era. propositions for customers based on clear understanding
of service availability and reliability. For example, Table
A resilient system provides and maintains an adequate 3.9.1 illustrates the different levels of network availability
level of service in normal and abnormal operating and the type of use cases that can be supported.
scenarios, including in the event of a fault. In this
context, resilience is an all-encompassing concept and It is important to stress that operator-run 5G networks
covers other attributes such as reliability; availability; using licensed spectrum will already be more resilient
survivability; consistency; quality management; Six than alternative networks run on unlicensed spectrum
Sigma, etc. It also covers the traditional approaches or managed by organisations without the scale or
from systems, safety and reliability engineering. competence to run critical infrastructure.
Many operators have already embraced the Total Quality This section groups the considerations for network and
Management (TQM) methodologies that came from the service resilience into predictive resilience, preventive
manufacturing industries (e.g. operators now routinely use resilience and corrective resilience.
FIGURE 3.9.1
Downtime
Per Year 3.65 days 8.77 hours 52.60 minutes 5.26 minutes
Per Month 7.31 hours 43.83 minutes 4.38 minutes 26.30 seconds
Per Week 1.68 hours 10.08 minutes 1.01 minutes 6.05 seconds
Voice, autonomous
Use cases (Ideal for…) Email, Web browsing IoT Pay TV
navigation
3.9.1.1 Network resilience and the philosophy of Resilience will be key in the 5G era as the mobile
communications networks network is being explicitly asked to support ultra-
Resilience is integral to the technical designs of mobile reliable and critical systems. This is a key selling point
networks, but it is at ‘best effort’ level only for 5G and is reflected in the identification of Ultra
There is an ongoing paradigm shift in the underlying Reliable and Low Latency Communications (URLLC)
philosophy of telecoms networks. Since the internet as one of the key pillars of the 5G opportunity. 3GPP
went mainstream in the early 1980s, and prior to the 5G has also specified that the reliability of the 5G network
era, it has typically been assumed that networks can should be such that there is a 1-10^(-5) success
deliver ‘best effort’ connectivity over variable quality probability of transmitting a layer 2 PDU (protocol data
networks. unit) of 32 bytes within 1ms.
Operators consider a lot of factors in designing and cars). This suggests a need for clearer messaging on
provisioning mobile networks and services. These what 5G will deliver and what it will definitely offer for
have been explored in detail in the 5G Readiness selected use cases.
chapter. The outcome of these considerations is that
the network is dimensioned to cope with peak usage, Second, the operation of 5G era networks should
and most customers can expect to receive the same recognise that different use cases may require different
experience. These considerations will not change, service levels, especially in atypical operating scenarios.
in general, in the 5G era. However, operators should This is the promise of network slicing, to offer a
consider at least two adaptations to ensure that 5G differentiated experience to different use cases such
era networks and services system are designed for that each use case is optimally addressed. Operators
resilience. have begun adapting their propositions in the 4G era
using static categories (e.g. IoT devices that upload
First, as is clear from the enterprise interviews, some data during off-peak only). In the 5G era, network
users are not sure of the 5G value proposition and may automation should make it possible to dynamically
not rely on it for their product roadmap (e.g. driverless provision different levels of services.
Regardless of the robustness of its design and 3.9.3.1 Access control for resilient networks
provisioning, 5G era networks will at times be Operators need a secure way to authorise devices and
challenged to deliver on their designed promise. to block devices en masse
These challenges could be accidental (e.g. equipment A robust identity, authentication and authorisation
failures, bugs in software, natural disasters, human framework is integral to providing preventive resilience
errors etc.) or malicious (e.g. hacking, software viruses, for 5G era systems. Assets need to be correctly
unauthorised access, vandalism, theft etc.). In many identified and authenticated to the right services, while
ways, the overall resilience of 5G systems will be ensuring that devices are restricted from using services
determined by the resilience of its weakest component. they are not entitled to. Services should also have an
ability to recognise a subscriber and to compare the
For some emerging 5G use cases (e.g. for the security capabilities required, and then respond in near
healthcare industry), operators will be tasked real time. The subscriber may move between networks
with providing assurances and stringent Service and services within these networks meaning the
Level Agreements (SLAs) for customers. Likewise, security parameters may alter.
policymakers and insurers will be keen to know what
policies and processes operators have in place to assure In addition to restricting services, it may be necessary
security of 5G era systems. for an operator to block devices when the 5G era
system is compromised or attacked. This is the case
Other stakeholders in the 5G ecosystem will benefit when numerous devices send data traffic to a specific
from a clearly articulated industry view on how to target, resulting in a distributed denial of service
deliver preventive resilience to support the 5G value (DDoS) attack.
proposition. Accordingly, this calls for concerted efforts
to develop common QoS and SLA frameworks for
different industry verticals and use cases.
3.9.3.2 Supply chain risks in the 5G era liability fall. The supply chain applies to suppliers
Supply chain resilience and control will be required in providing any aspect of a specified service; this may
5G due the complexity of the ecosystem be 5G components, service management, software
While there may not be as many players in the market utilisation, device ownership and numerous other
during early 5G deployment, new opportunities in aspects of service delivery.
the 5G era could extend existing relationships and
create new supplier relationships for operators. This is A notable example of supply chain risk is that the
emerging to be a major consideration for preventive failure to risk-assess supply interlinks may result in data
resilience in the 5G era, and can assume strategic and leakage through insecure Network Exposure Functions
geopolitical dimensions. (NEF) and Application Programmable Interfaces (API).
Industry standards such as ISO 2800, 2700 and 3100
Accordingly, operators need to understand their place address supply chain and risk management controls.
within the end-to-end supply chain for each service
and where ultimate accountability, responsibility and
When a fault or failure does occur, customers will need For example, connections for emergency and critical
assurances that operators will quickly identify, isolate services could rely on a fall-back connection in the
and rectify the fault so that service can continue. This event of a fault. This is the explicit requirement from a
expectation will only grow in the 5G era as critical team of surgeons exploring the opportunity for remote
systems and services become increasingly dependent surgery in the US54. While low latency is being touted as
on the mobile network. the enabler for remote surgery, the surgeons note that
they could perform surgeries with worst case latencies
Proper business continuity planning recognises the of up to 250 milliseconds. However, they dread the
potential risks that can hamper 5G service delivery to unreliability of the connectivity and would require
customers, support customers in assessing the impact dedicated networks with multiple connectivity options
to their day-to-day operations and mitigate the risks, to assure resilience.
and provide assurances on minimising the downtime.
54. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/jul/29/the-robot-will-see-you-now-could-computers-take-over-medicine-entirely#comment-118850420
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Horizontal APIs provide the interface between the 5G network and the needs of enterprises
in different industry verticals.
• 3GPP has taken a big step towards harmonising horizontal APIs for the 5G era, providing a
common global structure for exposing network and service capabilities to third parties.
• Capability exposure, platformisation and developer ecosystems are the ingredients for a
successful API ecosystem.
The telecoms industry, like other sectors since the longer be enough. Enterprises, especially those across
Industrial Revolution of the 19th century, has ridden different industries, often require bespoke solutions and
on the back of a mass-produced service to deliver operators have traditionally sought to work with large
Transformation
transformational
TRANSFORM success to society. This worked also enterprises to customise their mobile proposition.
because the service produced was similar to every
n
o
customer, allowing operators to drive scale and market Horizontal APIs provide the Visi interface between the
penetration fast. In the 5G era, such mass produced 5G network and the needs of enterprises in different
Breadth of Portfolio
services will continue to be the main proposition for industry verticals. In practice, APIs will provide a more
EMPOWER
consumers and many enterprises. efficient tool to customise, on a larger scale, the 5G
Operator
IoT Prime Contrator
proposition to the needs of both large and the vastly Roles
However, if 5G is to become embedded deeper into greater pool of smaller enterprises. This is the 5G mass
industrial processes in other sectors and unlock the customisation opportunity.
Big Data, Analytics & AI
Ecosystem Orchestration
moreCONNECT
than $400 billion revenue opportunity, then
offering only the default service proposition willIoTno
Infrastructure Vertical Specialisation
IoT Connectivity
IoT Security
IoT Service Management
>$400bn
TARGETABLE REVENUE OPPORTUNITY BY 2025
The technical landscape for APIs in the 5G era is a lot Architecture. These will simplify the retrieval of data,
more promising than in previous mobile generations. In management of devices by the customer of the
its recent releases 3GPP provided a means to securely network and allows operators to design better services.
expose and discover the services and capabilities Some of these principles include:
provided by 3GPP network interfaces, via horizontal • Use of HTTP/2 (Hyper Text Transfer Protocol 2)
APIs. These are the Network Exposure Function (NEF) adopted as the application layer protocol for the
and the Service Capability Exposure Function (SCEF). service based interfaces
When successfully implemented, these will provide a • TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) adopted as
common global structure for exposing network and the transport layer protocol, and TLS (Transport
service capabilities to third parties. This will allow Layer Security) for security. UDP (User Datagram
operators to enable new services, provide better SLAs Protocol) yet to be defined but will be added in
and ensure better quality of service (QoS) that feature future 3GPP releases.
as key enterprise requirements for operators. • JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) adopted as the
serialisation protocol.
Another technical evolution of the API landscape in
• REST-style (Representational State Transfer) service
the 5G era is that the APIs will be using established
design whenever possible.
IT principles to deliver on the 5G Service Based
APIs are not new in the telecoms industry, and are prefer a market exchange which provides a hub for API
already widely used across the internet economy exchanges and interconnections. Owners/managers of
where billions of API-based transactions are made with the platform become the interface between operators
minimal commercial agreements. However, the history and the API users.
of APIs in the telecoms industry and beyond offers
SUBSCRIPTION BASED USAGE BASED DIFFERENTIATED PRICING AD-FUNDED
three insights on what is needed to ensure that APIs in Third, APIs can only thrive in the market if there is an
the 5G era are successful. active ecosystem of developers who are building new
User pays VR platform, VR platform shares User pays VR store: PPV/Pay per products and services
User pays VR platform for superior based onUser
thepays
APIs.
to enjoy VR content
theFirst,
paymentthe
withfoundation for every
the content producer successful
download; APIpayment
Platform shares is thatwith network experience (incl. QoS on uplink, Adv. Company pays VR platform by CPM
content
it provides a standard interface to expose network or producer downlink
SMS & latency
is an based on of
example 5G a very successful API, with good
capabilities)
service capabilities to third parties. While it is possible capability exposure, established platforms and market
to design and develop bespoke APIs for every use exchanges, and a healthy developer
Adv.
ecosystem. This is
Subscriber
case for each customer, it is much more Subscriber
efficient to Subscriber
now being evolved into RCS. Company
agree standard Payindustry-level
by
common APIsPaywhichby usage: Pay by CPM based
can be used globally.
subscription Crucially too, history shows
Pay per view/ Figure 3.10.2 is anQoSexample of the interlinks
Payment between
download
that these APIs start off for internal use before being APIs, platforms and platform providers for the 5G era.
commercialised for external use. VR Platform/App VR VR
VR Platform/App VR Platform/App
Platform Platform
Payment
Second, potential users of APIs may not want to set
Payment Payment Payment Watch VR
up contractual relationships with the 800+ operators
in the world for each individual API. Instead, they
VR Content Producer VR Content Producer VR Content Producer Subscriber
FIGURE 3.10.2
APIs
ETSI
MEC
Capability
exposure Network Operator N
3GPP NEF, offering capabilities (incl. edge)
SCEF, …
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• The Operator Cloud will combine the best of both cloud and edge to enable the 5G ‘Service
Delivery Model’.
• Edge computing in 5G networks will be delivered as Multi-access Edge Computing to
reduce latency.
• An Operator Cloud can help operators to save up to 2% of capex by improving operational
efficiency and customer experience.
• If operators can create competitive global platforms for edge/cloud services, this could
unlock a new revenue opportunity of up to $100bn.
The Operator Cloud (see Figure 3.11.1), a distributed To realise this, the Operator Cloud needs to incorporate
cloud/edge infrastructure, is central to the new ‘Service the best properties of cloud-based service delivery
Delivery Model’ of the 5G era and how operators can while also leveraging edge-computing technologies.
create value for their customers. 5G is a cloud-native The ultimate goal is to cost-effectively provide a
platform that will support a plethora of network resilient network to deliver the consistency, reliability,
microservices. latency and compliance expectations of customers in
the 5G era.
Operators are much smaller than existing cloud
providers and need to manage a cloud infrastructure In practice the Operator Cloud will support and
that will deliver the flexibility and scalability of today’s optimally distribute computing and intelligence
internet services. Likewise, the existing cloud providers capabilities, between the core network and the access
will need to move services closer to the edge to deliver network. This will enable high bandwidth and ultra-
low latency capabilities. Co-locating their equipment low latency access to cloud computing/IT services at
or hosting their application in the Operator Cloud is an the cloud and edge to be accessed by applications
option. developers and content providers.
FIGURE 3.11.1
OPERATOR CLOUD
4G AND PREVIOUS
INFRASTRUCTURE STRATEGY
A
Synergies with Build a combined “5G + Operator Cloud”
NFV/SDN rollout investment case and deployment strategy
Cost Telco
Saving Internal
5G
B Value Creation and Capture 149
Backhaul and Core Traffic
Reduction
Recognise these as opportunities to
THE 5G GUIDE
Edge Computing, architected as Multi-access edge quality data is preferred over high volume of data
computing (MEC) for mobile networks, is most suitable would be more cost effectively addressed using
for use cases that require at least one of the following: traditional core/cloud approach. Therefore, while MEC
low latency; real-time analytics; and high volume provides operators with new capability to address new
data transfers (see Figure 3.11.2). As edge computing use cases, it is important for the operator to consider
reduces the physical distance of communications all of its infrastructure and capabilities to be ready to
nodes, latency can be reduced significantly while address all 5G use cases.
allowing real-time analytics to take place. Having
the core functionality at the edge also allows a more Section 4.5, in the 5G Cost Considerations chapter,
efficient transfer of massive volumes of data. explores the cost aspects of deploying MEC in a
globalCLOUD
OPERATOR operator’s 5G network and recommends that
On the other hand, use cases that are not very delay MEC should be integrated into the 5G business case
sensitive, where intelligence and insight are more and investment plan. MEC APIs standards are being
important than real-time analytics, and where high developed by ETSI.
4G AND PREVIOUS
INFRASTRUCTURE STRATEGY
A
Synergies with Build a combined “5G + Operator Cloud”
NFV/SDN rollout investment case and deployment strategy
Cost Telco
Saving Internal
Backhaul and Core Traffic B
Reduction
Recognise these as opportunities to
sweat an asset that is already used in
(A)
INNOVATION STRATEGY Like with 2G/3G/4G or CDN business
OPERATOR cases, there is a
‘build-it-and-they-will-come’
CLOUD
Customised System expectation
Integration Explore different business models
(based on their risk-reward profile &
Telco as complexity)
Turnkey B2B
solution Consider partnerships, whether
Solutions
provider Operator-led (e.g. MobileEdgeX) or
with other ecosystem players
End Customer
150 5G Value Creation and CaptureRevenue Applications
Generation
THE 5G GUIDE
55. https://mavenir.com/sites/default/files/2018-12/Mavenir-MEC-at-the-edge-vMBC-WP.pdf
56. https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/content-delivery-networks-cdn-market-657.html
57. http://www.businessofapps.com/data/app-revenues/
FIGURE 3.11.3
DATA TYPE High volume High quality
OPERATOR CLOUD AS, FIRSTLY, AN INFRASTRUCTURE PLAY
(SOURCE: GSMA ANALYSIS, ADAPTED FROM DEUTSCHE TELEKOM)
INFRASTRUCTURE STRATEGY
A
Synergies with Build a combined “5G + Operator Cloud”
NFV/SDN rollout investment case and deployment strategy
Cost Telco
Saving Internal
Backhaul and Core Traffic B
Reduction
Recognise these as opportunities to
sweat an asset that is already used in
(A)
INNOVATION STRATEGY Like with 2G/3G/4G or CDN business
OPERATOR cases, there is a
‘build-it-and-they-will-come’
CLOUD
Customised System expectation
Integration Explore different business models
(based on their risk-reward profile &
Telco as complexity)
Turnkey B2B
solution Consider partnerships, whether
Solutions
provider Operator-led (e.g. MobileEdgeX) or
with other ecosystem players
End Customer
Revenue Applications
Generation
Edge Hosting /
Co-location
Telco as
Enabler Edge laaS /
PaaS offering
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Network Slicing offers the biggest commercial innovation opportunity in the 5G era.
• It enables operators to create pre-defined, differing levels of services to both their own
customer segments and different enterprise verticals.
• For Network Slicing to succeed as a commercial solution for enterprises, the industry needs
to deliver on four key ingredients:
– Aligned technical standards
– Clear guidelines on how to engage the ecosystem and potential customers from
enterprises
– The implementation roadmap for Network Slicing should be well documented early
enough to ensure broader industry consensus on how to implement slicing
– The business model for Network Slicing should be anchored in the reality of what is
achievable rather than hype
• Upselling Network Slicing capabilities to existing customers ought to be an easier
opportunity than targeting new customers.
Network Slicing offers the biggest commercial will provide an end-to-end segmentation beyond what
innovation opportunity in the 5G era. It will enable can be achieved by segmenting based on SIM cards,
operators to create predefined, differing levels of or within the billing or customer care systems. A home
services for different enterprise verticals, enabling operator can also offer ‘roaming slices’ to foreign
them to customise their own operations. As noted by operators, enabling them to tailor services for their
Ericsson58, Network Slicing will give operators more roaming customers.
value levers to achieve simpler resource management,
deliver better customer experience, provision new But the big, new opportunity for operators is to
services with a shorter time-to-market, and unlock the use Network Slicing to tap into new horizons in the
wider enterprise market. enterprise space. Network Slicing is one of the 5G era
enablers for operators to tap into the over $400 billion
Figure 3.12.1 highlights three focus areas, in two enterprise revenue opportunity. Operators, with the
categories, for Network Slicing. right device capabilities, operators can create slices for
different enterprise segments and tailor these slices to
For the in-house opportunity, an operator can dedicate their needs.
separate slices to existing customer segments. This
FIGURE 3.12.1
1 2 3
High Net
Low Latency Country D Country C Utilities Finance
Worth
Is it more difficult
to start here? Stages of the
“Business Buying Behaviour”
C 1
Needs Recognition
3 B A
& Specification
1. Prove value of Network 1. Existing customers 1. Finalise technical details
Slicing 2. Existing sales channels 2. Identify internal uses
Supplier Search
2. New customers 2 2 3. Existing performance 3. Deploy Network Slicing for
& Selection
3. New sales channels
58. https://www.ericsson.com/en/networks/insights/economic-study-5g-network-slicing validation internal use
4. No existing performance Order Placement & 4. Prove value of Network 4. Refine and validate the
validation 3 1 Slicing Network Slicing proposition
Performance Review 5G Value Creation and Capture 155
Is it easier
THE 5G GUIDE
For Network Slicing to succeed as a commercial Third, the implementation roadmap for Network Slicing
solution for enterprises, the industry needs to deliver should be well documented early enough to ensure
on four key ingredients. broader industry consensus on how to implement
slicing. The GSMA has published “Network Slicing: Use
First, the technical standards need to be ready to avoid Case Requirements59” to support in providing clarity
the proliferation of proprietary solutions. This will help on slicing templates, APIs etc. that will be needed to
to minimise complexity in the implementation, create achieve global commercial scale.
common interfaces, assure global interoperability and
deliver service continuity and roaming. Fourth, the business model for Network Slicing should
be anchored in the reality of what is achievable.
Second, the industry needs clear guidelines on how Accordingly, operators and their customers need
to engage the ecosystem and potential customers commercial templates and proof-of-concepts to
from enterprises. A starting point is to be sure that the showcase the reality and marketability of Network
industry’s Network Slicing value proposition is clear and Slicing.
that potential customers understand them.
59. https://www.gsma.com/futurenetworks/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Network-Slicing-Use-Case-Requirements-fixed.pdf
Selling Network Slicing may be a new experience for customers and based on the typical buying behaviour
mobile operators and sales teams will have to come of business customers, upselling Network Slicing
up to speed quickly on how to sell the proposition. A capabilities to these customers ought to be an
helpful place to start is to learn from how enterprise easier opportunity than targeting new customers.
1 telecoms have sold similar products2
sales teams in fixed 3 points and
These customers can then become proof
such as leased lines, ISDN, Managed WAN, Ethernet advocates for the new capabilities.
VPN, etc. Based on this, a three-stage go-to-market
strategy Prepaidto
IoT would help operators / unlock the Network In theCountry
third Bstage, operators
Country A Health can now target Transport
to sell
Postpaid
Slicing opportunity. Network Slicing to new enterprise customers. This is
the last group of customers to target as they often
In the first stage, operators should productise and require a proven solution and seek market validation
deploy NetworkOPERATOR A for internal use to prove its OPERATORbefore
Slicing A OPERATORthat
they buy. Figure 3.12.2 illustrates A the go-to-
PRODUCT X
validity. This option offers a low risk opportunity to market strategy for Network Slicing will be easier if it
experiment to validate the proposition and refine it follows the reverse order on the stages of the “Business
High Net
ahead of rollout to commercial customers.Country D
Low Latency Buying Behaviour”.
Country C Utilities Finance
Worth
Is it more difficult
to start here? Stages of the
“Business Buying Behaviour”
C 1
Needs Recognition
3 B A
& Specification
1. Prove value of Network 1. Existing customers 1. Finalise technical details
Slicing 2. Existing sales channels 2. Identify internal uses
Supplier Search
2. New customers 2 2 3. Existing performance 3. Deploy Network Slicing for
& Selection
3. New sales channels validation internal use
4. No existing performance Order Placement & 4. Prove value of Network 4. Refine and validate the
validation 3 1 Slicing Network Slicing proposition
Performance Review
Is it easier
to start here?
GO-TO-MARKET STRATEGIES
USE CASES SERVICE REQUIREMENTS OPERATOR CAPABILITIES
& BUSINESS MODELS
5G ERA USE CASES SERVICE REQUIREMENTS OPERATOR ENABLERS & IDENTIFICATION &
FOR THE USE CASES CAPABILITIES TO MEET USE EVALUATION OF
Identify & quantify opportunities
Identify specific requirements for CASE REQUIREMENTS GO-TO-MARKET
that can be addressed by
use cases that can be fulfilled by Match use case requirements to STRATEGIES AND
operators in the 5G era
cellular specific & monetisable 5G era BUSINESS MODELS
solutions
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• 5G era business models need to focus on what the customer wants and values. This is the
only way for operators to create and capture value in the 5G era.
• Operators will evolve their existing business models into the 5G era and then develop new
ones to capture value from 5G assets, capabilities and attributes.
• There is a lot of talk about new business models for 5G. While that is true for some use
cases and scenarios, existing business models will still dominate in the 5G era.
• Operators have a wide choice of business models to choose from. But it is likely that a
combination of these 6 business models will dominate. These include subscription, usage-
based, bundling, differentiated pricing, platforms, and outcome-based models.
• Other models that could also play a role include ad-funded, sponsored, rental and managed
services models.
High Net
Low Latency Country D Country C Utilities Finance
Worth
Operators receive lots of advice on how to create management theorist Peter Drucker, a starting point
new business models for 5G. Much of it promotes the for evaluating 5G era business models ought to be an
view that without new
Is it more business models, operators
difficult understanding of who the customers are, and what the
Stages of the
may struggle totocreatestart here?
and capture value
“Business BuyinginBehaviour”
the 5G customers value.
era. This is the ‘disrupt or be disrupted’ Needs Recognition and
paradigm
C 1 3 B A
“Re-inventing your business model60 ” offers insights
& Specification Figure 3.13.1 illustrates this customer-centric view.
1. Prove value of Network 1. Existing customers 1. Finalise technical details
that operators can use to explore how disruptive new
Slicing It considers operator business models for the 5G
2. Existing sales channels 2. Identify internal uses
entrants might be for the industry. Supplier Search era by first evaluating potential3. 5G use cases, then
2. New customers 2 2 3. Existing performance Deploy Network Slicing for
& Selection
3. New sales channels understanding
validation the service requirements
internal usefor them,
4.But the reality
No existing is more nuanced, and
performance new
Order business
Placement & moving to identifying
4. Prove value of Network operator4.capabilities to address
Refine and validate the
validation 3 1 Slicing Network Slicing proposition
models are more likely to coexistPerformance
with existing practises
Review the requirements, and then finally the go-to-market
well into the 5G era. Drawing on lessons from the strategies for market success.
Is it easier
to start here?
FIGURE 3.13.1
GO-TO-MARKET STRATEGIES
USE CASES SERVICE REQUIREMENTS OPERATOR CAPABILITIES
& BUSINESS MODELS
5G ERA USE CASES SERVICE REQUIREMENTS OPERATOR ENABLERS & IDENTIFICATION &
FOR THE USE CASES CAPABILITIES TO MEET USE EVALUATION OF
Identify & quantify opportunities
Identify specific requirements for CASE REQUIREMENTS GO-TO-MARKET
that can be addressed by
use cases that can be fulfilled by Match use case requirements to STRATEGIES AND
operators in the 5G era
cellular specific & monetisable 5G era BUSINESS MODELS
solutions
60. https://hbr.org/2008/12/reinventing-your-business-model
5G business models will be anchored on the Existing attributes that will be improved include speed,
monetisable assets and capabilities of operators. 5G latency, and security. Operators will have a chance to
will create several new ones, improve several existing offer enhanced versions of these to consumer and
ones, and potentially undermine some too. This is the enterprise customers.
context that will shape the evolution of 5G era business
models. While each of these assets, attributes, capabilities
could be offered to customers individually, Figure 3.13.2
New 5G era monetisable attributes include network shows that operators can offer a more compelling
slicing and Edge computing, two attributes at the proposition if these are integrated into, and sold as a
centre of creating new value in the 5G era. Also, for the platform proposition.
first time in the history of the cellular industry, 5G could
make ‘uplink characteristics’ a distinct monetisable
attribute. This is feasible because the abundant 5G
capacity could make it possible for operators to
productise ‘uplink’ in the same way that ‘downlink’
has been productised for over 20 years. This will be
valuable for the Cloud AR/VR opportunity.
FIGURE 3.13.2
API’s
API’s
API’s
MEC
MEC MEC
PUBLIC SAFETY
COMMUNICATION SERVICES
RAN (SMALL CELLS)
MEC
FIGURE 3.13.3
Affinity Club
Brokerage
Bundling Subscription
Cell phone
Crowdsourcing Pay-as-you-use
Disintermediation
Fractionalisation
B2C Bundling
Freemium
Leasing
B2B Low touch Differentiated Pricing
Negative operating cycle
B2X2C Pay as you go Platform
Razor
Reverse razor blades
Outcome based
Reverse auction
Product to service
Standardisation Others
Subscription
User communities
61. https://books.google.com/books/about/Seizing_the_White_Space.html?id=3AzNGapxmXMC
3.13.3.4 Differentiated pricing models Given their central role as the managers of the market
Economically optimal to match demand, supply and exchange, platform owners can enter new markets by
ability to pay offering subsidies to customers, and then capture value
Operators have always sought to differentiate the in the core business. This asymmetric business model is
capability (e.g. QoS) of the core proposition and market the basis of how many internet companies have grown
it to different customers for different prices. This has (e.g. Amazon with books, Facebook with news, Google
often been offered as a superior product (e.g. leased with directory services, Apple with apps).
lines for businesses) or inferior product (e.g. low-cost
sub-brands). The main benefit of the platform model is that it
creates new value or revenue streams from two-sided
This will continue into the 5G era and could and asymmetric sources. And if operators want to
become central to unlocking incremental value become platform owners in the 5G era, at least at the
in 5G. For example, network slicing in the 5G era national rather than international level, there are two
would give mobile operators the opportunity to key success factors.
market differentiated value propositions for mobile
connectivity in a similar way that fixed operators have First, they must ‘seed’ the platform with new products
sold leased lines, ATM, Carrier Ethernet and MPLS for and services. Operators can do this by exposing the
decades. capabilities they already have and make sure they
are well known to the community. Horizontal APIs is
The main benefit of differentiated pricing is that it is the the major interface for operators to harmonise the
most economically optimal way for operators to match technical, commercial and policy positions on the most
demand and supply, allowing customers to pay for the frequently used features.
product and the capability they need, when they need it.
Secondly, operators must design the platforms to
3.13.3.5 Platform business models support many customers. This means that the platform
Ideal to create two-sided and asymmetric revenue cannot just be reserved for a few deep-pocketed
streams; need APIs to see the platform and an enterprises. Instead, operators need an ‘industrialised’
industrialised partnership strategy to woo developers model that encourages thousands or even millions of
and users customers to engage the platform seamlessly. This is
The platform model is the most publicised option the major lesson from the Apple App Store and Google
for operators in the 5G era. Its advocates promote it Play.
as the only approach for operators to develop new
ecosystems by bringing together buyers and sellers
of 5G era products, services and attributes. Platform
owners are able to charge a fee per transaction to one
or several parties (two-sided models), use a freemium
model to attract users and can use APIs to standardise
a previously personalised service to lower cost.
3.13.3.6 Outcome-based models The main benefit of the outcome-based model is that it
Ideal for embedded connectivity and for product-to- is an opportunity for operators to become embedded
service propositions deeper into the enterprise market and tap into a bigger
Outcome-based business models may become share of the revenue pool.
more prominent in the 5G era as managed mobile
connectivity becomes a critical enabler of select 3.13.3.7 Other business models
enterprise products and services. Outcome-based • Ad-funded model: a model often talked about, but it
models are also the focus of a broader shift from is difficult to see how operators can rely on the ad-
technology to business outcomes in enterprise funded model for their business in the 5G era.
technology sourcing, where technology and service
• Sponsored model: a model where a business
providers begin to contract with a focus on business
subsidises a service in order to provide other
level outcomes instead of seeking pure technology
services (e.g. Facebook’s Internet.org). It has
centric SLAs. GSMA Intelligence has explored how such
received a lot of attention given its implications for
outcome-based thinking can be used for IoT62.
net neutrality and has so far not delivered on its
earlier promise63. It is a model to watch for in the 5G
The rapidly growing involvement of business buyers
era.
in technology purchases such as IoT is one of the key
drivers for the future growth of outcome-based pricing. • Rental model: an unsophisticated model for
Stakeholders such as CMOs and CFOs often want to see operators to rent out their assets in return for
a closer link between the technology services they buy a recurring fee. For consumers, this could be
and the business outcomes they seek. Linking a portion applicable to expensive 5G devices whereas
of the contract revenues to business centric SLAs such for enterprises, this could be providing physical
as product shipments, customer net adds, churn and space at the operator central office or cell site for
even revenues; in addition to the technology SLAs such businesses to install their own equipment.
as speed, latency and reliability, focuses the minds of • Managed services model: a model where the
operators and other technology providers on clients’ operator acts as an integrator or consultant to
broader business issues, rather than looking narrowly businesses and is paid for project delivery.
on the delivery of a pure technology service.
Cloud AR/VR is emerging as one of the early 5G era Customers can use Cloud AR/VR via a thick client
opportunity for operators. Huawei notes that this with sufficient computational resources on the device,
market will be worth $292 billion by 2025 and the or a thin client with most of the computational task
operator addressable market value will $93 billion offloaded to the cloud/edge. Figure 3.13.4 illustrates the
(about 30% of the total). different types of business models that could be used
for cloud AR/VR.
FIGURE 3.13.4
User pays VR platform, VR platform shares User pays VR store: PPV/Pay per User pays VR platform for superior User pays to enjoy VR content
the payment with the content producer download; Platform shares payment with network experience (incl. QoS on uplink, Adv. Company pays VR platform by CPM
content producer downlink & latency based on 5G
capabilities)
Adv.
Subscriber Subscriber Subscriber
Company
VR VR
VR Platform/App VR Platform/App VR Platform/App
Platform Platform
Payment
APIs
ETSI
MEC
Capability
exposure Network Operator N
3GPP NEF, offering capabilities (incl. edge)
SCEF, …
4 5G Cost
Considerations
Chapter 4 examines cost evolution in the 5G era, outlining how innovations in
5G network architecture, capability and ownership will introduce more drivers
of cost into the operator business model.
Readers will gain a better understanding of the costs of building and operating
5G networks, including granular insights into the major economic opportunities
and challenges.
166
166 5G Cost Considerations
THE 5G GUIDE
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Cost dynamics in 5G will not only be influenced by traditional network factors (e.g. capacity
and coverage), but also new factors such as network flexibility and ownership.
• The impact of some of these new cost factors can be foreseen or are already being put into
practice in 4G networks e.g. network virtualisation.
• However, the impact of some cost factors cannot be foreseen. Examples include network
ownership (e.g. Private 5G networks) and new network management approaches (e.g. AI-
based automation).
5G networks are distinct from previous generations equipment vendors and managed by an army of network
because of the level of heterogeneity, flexibility and engineers. But a revolution is looming which will see
automation that is inherent in their design. Therefore, the introduction of new models of network ownership
cost dynamics of 5G networks will not only be influenced (e.g. Private 5G networks), new ways of building
by traditional factors (e.g. capacity and coverage), but networks (e.g. using Open Source concepts) and new
also new factors such as network flexibility and network network management approaches (e.g. using AI-based
ownership. automation).
Some of these new themes can be foreseen or are already This chapter uses a novel theme-based (could also be
topical in 4G networks. NFV/SDN are already being intent-based or outcome-based) approach to explore the
adopted to provide flexibility for 4G networks. Likewise, main cost drivers for 5G, instead of the typical technology-
there are active industry discussions on how to introduce focused approach. Figure 4.1.1 contextualises the impact
edge computing into the network architecture to provide of these different themes into a known known, known
low latency capabilities. However, while there is a lot unknown and unknown unknown framework. The benefit
of enthusiasm for these transformational factors, their of this approach is that it focuses on the business goals
impact on the cost of 5G network rollout and operations in that need to be addressed rather than fixating on the
practice is less clear. technicalities of the underlying technology.
An even bigger set of unknown unknown impact factors The GSMA seeks to bring better understanding of the
exist for 5G rollout and operation. Much of the industry impact of these drivers and the Future Network’s Network
consensus has been shaped by infrastructure competition Economics programme has developed several case
among operators, with networks built by established studies in this area64.
FIGURE 4.1.1
9 8
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• There are four main considerations for network capacity: spectral efficiency, spectral capacity,
spectral reuse and backhaul.
• With 4G spectral efficiency close to the theoretical maximum, the spectral efficiency gains
from 4G to 5G will be smaller than the gains from 3G to 4G.
• As spectral efficiency gains reach a peak with 5G, increasing the bandwidth of the
communications channel (spectral capacity) increases data throughput.
• 5G will require network densification (spectral reuse) to meet both coverage and capacity
objectives. Both macro cells and small cells will grow in the 5G era.
• Demand for higher capacity backhaul will grow in 5G. While fibre remains the ideal, higher
capacity microwave options could deliver a lower cost alternative.
The importance of spectral efficiency and spectral Densification is the most important determinant of
capacity stems from the Shannon-Hartley Theorem access network capacity. As noted in 5G Network
which determines the theoretical maximum capacity Capacity: Key Elements and Technologies65 and Mobile
of a cellular system. Spectral efficiency dictates how Broadband Transformation: LTE to 5G66, if 5G is to
much data can be carried per unit of bandwidth of deliver a 1000x improvement over 4G, then spectral
a communications channel at a time given the ratio reuse will account for 40-50x.
ENERGY EFFICIENCY NETWORK But densification cannot
AUTOMATION
of signal toNETWORK
unwantedCAPACITY
noise. Spectral capacity NETWORK
is continue ad infinitum and
FLEXIBILITY interference
NETWORK eventually puts
OWNERSHIP
determined NETWORK
by the COVERAGE
number of spectrum channels in use. a limit to how many times a cell can be split. Continuing
NETWORK LATENCY NETWORK EQUIPMENT SOURCING
with the candle analogy, at some point, diminishing
Spectral reuse (e.g. with network densification) makes returns sets in and adding more candles will ‘burn’
it possible to use the available spectrum channels many rather than illuminate. Figure 4.2.1 summarises the
more times. A good analogy is lighting multiple candles spectral factors that will drive capacity for 5G networks.
alongside an existing lit candle. As more candles are lit,
the overall luminosity is increased without changes to9 The transport
8 network determines the rate of
the luminosity of the original candle. transferring traffic from the cell site to the core
CAPEX & OPEXnetwork.
EVOLUTION It can be backhaul or fronthaul depending on
which nodes of the radio access network are connected
through the transport.
FIGURE 4.2.1
65. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/6730679
66. http://www.5gamericas.org/files/2214/7257/3276/Final_Mobile_Broadband_Transformation_Rsavy_whitepaper.pdf
As spectral efficiency gains reach a peak with 5G, significantly, from the 80-100MHz awarded to Korean
increasing the bandwidth of the communications operators, to the 20-50MHz awarded to UK operators.
channel increases traffic capacity. This is the crux of the
ENERGY These mean that average
EFFICIENCY cell siteAUTOMATION
NETWORK throughput would
NETWORK CAPACITY
industry’s focus on securing wider spectrum bands for
NETWORK vary from 0.6Gbps to 2.0Gbps, as outlined in Figure
FLEXIBILITY NETWORK OWNERSHIP
NETWORK COVERAGE
5G. In this context, higher spectrum bands (e.g., 3.5GHz LATENCY
NETWORK 4.2.2 below. In the 5G era, many
NETWORK operators
EQUIPMENT will be
SOURCING
bands and mmWave bands) are great 5G options aggressively targeting the lucrative vertical market -
as they offer from 80MHz to 1,000MHz contiguous including using customised technologies like NB-IoT
bandwidth for 5G use per operator depending on etc.
spectrum band considered.
Of course, disjointed spectrum bands can also be
Furthermore, higher order MIMO and massive MIMO 9 8 using carrier aggregation technology,
aggregated
provides even more data throughput than conventional whereby up to five disparate 20MHz spectrum bands
radio systems, and would be more efficient when used
CAPEX & OPEXcan be aggregated as a single data pipe of up to
EVOLUTION
in large contiguous bandwidth. This highlights the 100MHz bandwidth – a single 100MHz block offers
importance of contiguous bandwidth and hence the a more uniform capacity or user experience though.
role of higher spectrum bands in meeting 5G network Carrier aggregation is also used in 4G today, so it is not
capacity. unique to 5G.
5G – 30 MHz
bandwidth
5G – 100 MHz
bandwidth
5G will require network densification to meet both The cost of adding new sites varies from country to
coverage and capacity objectives. However, one of country and from operator to operator. The modelling
the biggest cost uncertainties is the level of network in Chapter 5 explores the incremental cost of 5G based
densification needed. on the hypothetical cost of new macro and small cells in
different regions and for different operator archetypes.
ABI Research estimates that the number of wireless
cells will grow by at an average annual rate of 5.7%,
from 11.8 million in 2017 to reach 18.4 million by 2025.
This will be driven by the need for more capacity, the
use of higher band spectrum, continued growth in 4G
networks, and new 5G cells to deliver new capabilities.
FIGURE 4.2.3
20,000
18,000
16,000
Installed Bases Stations (000s)
14,000
12,000
10,000
8,000
6,000
4,000
2,000
0
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
100%
90%
80%
Macro Cell-site Backhaul Usage
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
172 5G Cost Considerations
10%
THE 5G GUIDE
4.2.4.1 Macro cells will grow steadily 4.2.4.2 Small cells will grow rapidly
The number of macro cells will grow by 3% on average Small cells will grow by 25% on average annually from
annually from 11.1 million in 2017 to reach 14.1 million in 0.7 million in 2017 to reach 4.3 million in 2025 (Source:
2025 (Source: ABI Research, see Figure 4.2.3). Macro ABI Research). Small cells are low-powered radio
cells are the primary means for operators to reach access nodes or base stations operating in licensed/
their customers and will still be important in the 5G era unlicensed spectrum that have a coverage range from a
despite the growth of small cells. They provide large few metres up to a few hundred metres.
coverage ranges (1 ~ 20km), delivered via high power
cell sites combined with tall towers/masts. Small Cells will be essential for mobile usage inside
buildings, where over 80% of mobile usage occurs in
Macro cells coordinate the small cells and connectivity developed markets, as shown in Figure 4.2.3. Therefore,
to the core network, and are critical for effective dense urban areas will see significant increase of small
small cell deployment and operation. In addition, cells in the 5G era, while sparsely populated areas can
macro cells are appropriate for use cases that require be covered by densifying macro cells.
significant coverage, but not necessarily high capacity
requirements (e.g., high data rate or low latency).
4.2.5.1 Backhaul requirements per site requirements will differ depending on the size of the
5G networks will require more capacity for backhaul site, access spectrum and network types, it is clear that
than 4G networks. Ericsson estimates the vastly the demand for higher-capacity backhaul will grow in
different bandwidth and latency requirements of 5G.
5G NR versus 4G in Table 4.2.1. While the actual 5G
TABLE 4.2.1
NR F1 1-10Gbps 5ms
TABLE 4.2.2
Outdoor Cell-site
Suitability for Heterogeneous Outdoor Cell-site / Outdoor Cell-site / Outdoor Cell-site / Indoor Access
/ Access Network Rural only
Networks Access Network Access Network Access Network Network
/ Core
Support for Mesh/Ring Yes where
Yes Yes Yes Indoors Yes
Topology avaialble
Interference Immunity Medium High High Very High Very High Medium
BACKHAUL ECONOMICS PER SITE (10-YEAR NPV OF COSTS IN EUR): FIBRE VS. IP
MICROWAVE (SOURCE: OFCOM, BT OPENREACH, BERNSTEIN)
IP Microwave Fibre
136
111 39
33
74
68 67 -10%
-57%
53 96
29 52 46 -12%
41 78
44
31 35
22 23 27 27
19 39 9 10
19 17 18 22 19 23
12 14
155 620 1240 Urban Sub- Urban Sub- Urban Sub- Urban Sub-
Mbps Mbps Mbps urban urban urban urban
Note: WACC: 10%; GBP/EUR: 1.2; urban/sub-urban cell site distance from aggregation point: 750m/1250m; average competitor MNO site
distance from nearest fibre entry point: 25% of total circuit length
18,000
16,000
Installed Bases Stations (000s)
4.2.5.4
14,000 Macro cell backhaul options fibre penetration (e.g., North East Asia and North
The higher capacity requirements of 5G will drive America), fibre will remain the dominant choice for
12,000 of fibre and microwave links in higher
adoption macro backhaul, as reusing existing fibre infrastructure
spectrum
10,000
bands (V-band and E-band). As a result, most is the most economic option compared to deploying
macro cell backhaul will be delivered by microwave new microwave links. On the other hand, wireless links
links, followed by fibre, with some significant regional
8,000 will be prevalent in regions with relatively low fibre
variations. Satellite will provide coverage in remote penetration, while fibre adoption will grow in these
6,000
areas. regions to accommodate capacity demand.
4,000
The uptake of macro backhaul will be closely linked to
2,000 regulatory context and fibre penetration, as
regional
shown 0in Figure 4.2.5. In regions with relatively higher
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
90%
80%
Macro Cell-site Backhaul Usage
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
EU EU NE Asia NE Asia S&SE S&SE NA NA LAC LAC MENA MENA SSA SSA
2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025
4.2.5.5 Small Cell backhaul options In developed nations, where cities tend to have higher
While market and regulatory context also play a role, fibre penetration (e.g., Europe, North East Asia and
fibre will be much more prevalent in small cell backhaul, North America), fibre will remain the dominant choice
compared to macro cells. This is because small cells are for small cell backhaul while wireless links will be
mostly targeted to address hotspot scenarios in large more prevalent in developing nations (see Figure 4.2.6
urban centres where there is more likely to be existing below).
fibre connections and wireless links require control
terminals to be placed at small cells making small cells
heavier and more spacious.
FIGURE 4.2.6
100%
90%
80%
Small Cell-site Backhaul Usage
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
EU EU NE Asia NE Asia S&SE S&SE NA NA LAC LAC MENA MENA SSA SSA
2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Sub-1GHz bands (e.g. 700 MHz band) is the first of three bands for 5G. Its signal propagation
is excellent, making it suitable for rural and wide area coverage.
• The 1GHz-6GHz bands (e.g. 3.5GHz) come with large bandwidths for capacity to support a
very high number of 5G devices. It is suitable for urban macro cells.
• Spectrum above 6GHz (e.g. mmWave) can provide very high data rates. But as it is more
susceptible to attenuation, it is most suitable for urban hotspots, including FWA.
• Early deployments of 5G will focus on providing capacity relief in congested areas and high-
traffic locations, largely in urban and suburban areas.
• As with 2G/3G/4G, the operator business case for 5G rural roll-outs is challenging (e.g. rural
uses up 79% of the hypothetical total capex to deliver 50Mbps across the UK).
for different coverage ranges as shown in Figure 4.3.1. provides higher data rates and therefore is well suited
70%
to urban macro cells but could extend more widely.
60%
First, the sub-1GHz bands (e.g. 700MHz band) can
cover
50%large areas. While this spectrum band cannot Third, higher spectrum bands (6GHz or above) such as
provide high data rates because of narrow spectrum the mmWave bands can be used to provide very high
40%
availability/allocations, signal propagation is excellent, data rates that come with the very large contiguous
30% it suitable for rural coverage.
making bandwidth of spectrum available in those bands. The
20% downside with this spectrum band is that the mobile
Second,
10%
the mid-range spectrum bands (1GHz-6GHz signal reach is very limited and more susceptible to
bands), such as the 3.4GHz to 3.8GHz band, come with attenuation than other bands. Therefore, this band is
large0%
bandwidths to provide the necessary capacity to often associated with urban hotspots and FWA.
EU EU NE Asia NE Asia S&SE S&SE NA NA LAC LAC MENA MENA SSA SSA
support a very
2017 high number
2025 2017of 5G devices.
2025 Although
2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025 2017 2025
DEVELOPED DEVELOPING
Due to the lower traffic density, the limitations of the SPRAWLING CROWDED
macro network are reached later and fewer or no METROPOLIS CITY
small cells are required
Examples: Examples:
SPARSE Paris, London, Los Angels Manila, Lagos, Lima
Early deployments of 5G will focus on NSA (Option 3 experience capacity crunch with 4G rather than places
of the possible 5G configurations) to provide capacity that are already reasonably addressed by 4G. Therefore,
relief in congested areas and high-traffic locations. 5G SA rollouts will also begin with addressing the
This is to be expected given that the higher spectrum hotspots in dense locations (e.g., stadiums, airports and
bands to be used by 5G NR can provide ample capacity. train stations).
The NSA option ensures that this 5G configuration is
integrated with 4G networks. While the 3.5GHz band looks set to be the most
common band used, early maturity of mmWave
Even with SA (Option 2), the higher spectrum band technologies and available devices will encourage the
of 5G NR makes it more suitable for places that use of mmWave in early 5G hotspots.
Cities are centres of excellence, with a high Figure 4.3.3 shows that the four megacity archetypes
concentration of technology-savvy and relatively often face similar network capacity challenges and
affluent users. Given these socio-political realities, need continuous upgrade of their infrastructure to
operators need to work together with other support high traffic density (gigabytes per square km)
stakeholders to showcase large-scale deployment and in dense urban areas.
commercialisation of 5G in cities.
However, the cost of upgrading urban networks
In Delivering the Digital Revolution: Will mobile to 5G will vary across cities based on their unique
infrastructure keep up with rising demand?68, the circumstances and characteristics. An analysis
GSMA and BCG evaluated the mobile broadband conducted for the UK shows that, in a hypothetical plan
infrastructure needs of the world’s megacities. The to deliver 50Mbps to the entire country, network costs
analysis examined four big-city archetypes, each with for urban centres is only 2% of the total and suburban
its own network infrastructure needs, and was based 19% of the overall capex.
on the stage of development of the cities and projected
traffic density (defined by gigabytes per square km).
This is illustrated in Figure 4.3.2
68. https://www.gsma.com/publicpolicy/delivering-the-digital-revolution
DEVELOPED DEVELOPING
Due to the lower traffic density, the limitations of the SPRAWLING CROWDED
macro network are reached later and fewer or no METROPOLIS CITY
small cells are required
Examples: Examples:
SPARSE Paris, London, Los Angels Manila, Lagos, Lima
FIGURE 4.3.3
Urban
40 35%CAGR powerhouse
Developing
51% CAGR mega-hub
Sprawling
30
42%CAGR metropolis
GB/Month/Sub
Crowded
20 54% CAGR city
10
0
2017 2019 2021 2023 2025
MOBILE DATA TRAFFIC IS EXPECTED TO GROW RAPIDLY WITH CAGR BETWEEN 35% AND 54% UNTIL 2025
Urban
40
4.3.4 Network coverage: rural 35%CAGR powerhouse
Developing
51% CAGR mega-hub
Closing the rural - urban broadband gap is a key socio-economic challenge Sprawling
30
42%CAGR metropolis
Building resilient broadband infrastructure is a key To remain central for all society, whether urban or
GB/Month/Sub
goal for society (UN Sustainable Development Goal 9) rural in both developed and emerging markets, it is
and 5G, coexisting with 4G well into the 2030s, will be suggested that all stakeholders plan for 5G in aCrowded
20 54% CAGR cityway
the bedrock for providing high speed, next generation that avoids widening the digital divide, as outlined in
broadband services to communities. However, Will 5G see its blind side? Evolving 5G for Universal
operators will be challenged by economics. Internet Access70. This should also include use of
10 universal service funds to solve network coverage in
Figure 4.3.4 shows that in a hypothetical plan to deliver remote areas.
50Mbps 5G services across the UK, the rural regions will
account for 79% of the total capex. Yet rural regions are 3GPP has taken a supporting step, recommending the
0
often unviable because there are not enough revenue- 600MHz and 700MHz bands as 5G NR spectrum. 3GPP
2017 2019 2021 2023 2025
generating users. For example, the average cellular has also introduced mechanisms to support cells of ‘up
revenue per rural square mile in the US is $262 whereas to’ 100km in radius71.
the average cellular revenue
MOBILE DATAper urban
TRAFFIC square mile
IS EXPECTED is RAPIDLY WITH CAGR BETWEEN 35% AND 54% UNTIL 2025
TO GROW
$248,000, as noted in Is anyone out there? 5G, rural
coverage and the next 1 billion69.
FIGURE 4.3.4
Rural 79%
Sub-urban 19%
Urban 2%
Railways 21.8%
Motorways 6.0%
10
Rural 79%
Using estimates of capex for covering the road and
railway networks in the UK with 5G in Exploring the
Sub-urban 19%
cost, coverage and rollout implications of 5G in Britain
Urban 2%
Railways 21.8%
Motorways 6.0%
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• 5G era networks will be flexible and modularized by design with technologies such as NFV /
SDN, network slicing, and Cloud RAN.
• Virtualisation can generate significant cost savings, but it comes with a number of
complexities. There is a risk that it may even end up costing same as before.
• On network slicing, common attributes need to be agreed by the industry to minimise the
complexities and ensure interoperability.
• A Kings’ College London study demonstrated the potential for network slicing, whilst
highlighting required key enablers (automation, templates and interoperability).
• Cloud RAN can enable significant savings with some vendors reporting substantial capex and
opex savings over a 5-year period vs. traditional approach.
5G era networks will be flexible and modularised by expectations for cost savings is stronger for new services
design with technologies such as network slicing, where a virtualised architecture can offer better scaling
SDN/NFV, cloud RAN and Open RAN. At a basic level, for the traffic demand than the traditional architecture,
these changes in mobile network technology and hence resulting in lower capex/opex.
architecture seek to reduce costs and provide flexibility
for customised services tailored for major customers. Second, whilst the solutions for greater network
However, they are also likely to have more profound flexibility enables a wider ecosystem of players
impact on the mobile industry in two ways. and hence more competition among suppliers, this
architectural change makes it difficult to isolate
Firstly, there are concerns that virtualisation and responsibility, role and issue associated with specific
softwarisation promise a lot, but can be quite network elements. This is the focus of the Network
challenging to implement, and may ultimately cost Equipment Sourcing section.
the same as physical networks in the long term. Some
operators note that virtualisation does not deliver a Three key enablers of flexibility for 5G networks are
cost advantage for them for existing services. However, considered: NFV/SDN, network slicing, Cloud RAN.
4.4.2 NFV/SDN
NFV/SDN technologies bring flexibility and cost savings, but at a price
Network virtualisation is not a 5G-specific cost issue as through standardized APIs and networks resources
it has already begun on 4G networks. However, it is a abstraction, in order to obtain the required operational
prerequisite to deploying and operating a 5G network flexibility and dynamicity required for 5G, at the speed
because 5G networks are virtualised and cloud native of signaling network control protocols propagating
by design. to the networks. Additionally, the centralized control
plane capabilities of SDN provide E2E visibility of
As Figure 4.4.1 shows, NFV enables network network resources for establishing and maintaining an
functions to be isolated as software that can run over optimized connectivity.
Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) hardware. NFV
enables cost reduction, faster time-to-market and Experience from operators who have virtualised their
a broader ecosystem with more specialist market 4G EPC networks is that virtualisation can generate
players. SDN is where network control planes and cost savings of 40% of Total Cost of Ownership. This
user planes are separated, and the control plane is comes from the use of COTS, reduced time to market,
centralised. Centralising the control plane enables the and reduced need to over-provision network capacity
network to make globally optimised routing decisions, and redundancy. Nevertheless, the complexities
makes the network flow programmable to fit specific associated with decoupling the layers and increasing
requirements and also broadens the ecosystem with the vendor combinations must not be overlooked in
layer decoupling. virtualising the network and the operator will need to
balance the long-term cost savings and short-term
Therefore, SDN can enable a programmable transport investment required.
network, which is able to create multiple and
isolated transport slices. The transport resources Operators should, therefore, note that virtualising the
can be dynamically allocated to different clients, network is not just an engineering challenge, but a
interconnecting virtualized and physical network people challenge: whatever the eventual cost benefits
functions distributed geographically, which are likely that virtualisation may bring, it is going to get more
to be located across different network domains. SDN expensive in the short-term.
is also able to provide network programmability
FIGURE 4.4.1
NFV
EPC CDN Video IMS Firewall
Optimizer Virtualization (resource pooling)
Cost-efficient, easy to scale and elastic
4.4.2.1 Lessons from the IT industry on virtualisation • performing the specific day-to-day tasks of
The mobile telecoms industry can look at the lessons hardware maintenance, rolling back from
from the IT industry which has been deploying unsuccessful patches and rolling back from
virtualisation technologies for over 30 years. unsuccessful configuration changes each took at
Virtualisation has helped organisations manage and least 75% less time with virtualisation.
shift IT resources from mundane tasks to strategic
RAN 2 (MACRO) INTERNET OF THINGS
• The simplification and automation of ordinary
projects that create value for the business.
IT activities
PUBLIC SAFETY can dramatically reduce routine
management and maintenance tasks and their
In a research study with 30 customers in a variety of
RAN (SMALL CELLS) associated SERVICES
COMMUNICATION labour hours, saving organisations
industries, VMware, a key player in the virtualisation
energy that can be reapplied to new business
space, found that the operational impact of
efforts and enabling companies to improve
virtualisation on IT operations resulted in:
productivity and service availability, while reducing
• RAN
94% of respondents realising operational savings
1 (MACRO) MOBILE BROADBAND
operating costs.
with virtual infrastructure for both one-time and
day-to-day tasks Appendix 7.4, co-authored by VMware, provides a
detailed analysis of the virtualisation journey for the
• one-time tasks of provisioning, decommissioning IT industry
Access and how theComputing
Storage mobile telecoms
MANOindustry can
Connectivity
and migrating servers from one data centre to Node Node Node
apply the same lessons for 5G.
another each took at least 75% less time with
virtualisation.
NETWORKS OFFER SAME CAPABILITIES TO ALL NETWORKS SUBDIVIDED VIRTUALLY AND OPTIMISED FOR DIFFERENT NEEDS
UTILITIES UTILITIES
AUTOMOTIVE AUTOMOTIVE
MANUFACTURING MANUFACTURING
5G Cost Considerations 187
5G NETWORK 5G NETWORK
THE 5G GUIDE
NFV
EPC CDN Video IMS Firewall
Optimizer Virtualization (resource pooling)
Cost-efficient, easy to scale and elastic
Enabled by NFV and SDN, Network Slicing enables the experience. In this context, standardising a general set
creation of two or more virtual networks with different of attributes that characterise different network slices
performance parameters over a single physical network would be beneficial (e.g. the Generic Slice Templates
infrastructure, so each of the virtual/logical networks (GST) defined by the GSMA Network Slicing Templates
can serve a specific purpose. Conceptually, it can Taskforce).
be depicted as slicing a physical network into many
networks to serve specific use cases (see Figure 4.4.2).
RAN 2 (MACRO) The GST OF
INTERNET is THINGS
an industry-agreed list of all the necessary
With network slicing, operators can address a variety slicing parameters. This does not mean that values
of different client requirements, especially enterprises, ofPUBLIC
the parameters
SAFETY need to be agreed, but rather the
with one physical network. attributes would be agreed such that a slice provided
RAN (SMALL CELLS) byCOMMUNICATION
an operator SERVICES
is easily emulated by another operator
Network slicing, however, also comes with complexities when the template is transferred, providing a baseline
in the context of interoperability and roaming. A and reference for potential customers.
customer using one network when switching to another
RAN 1 (MACRO) MOBILE BROADBAND
network will expect a comparable, if not the same,
FIGURE 4.4.2
NETWORKS OFFER SAME CAPABILITIES TO ALL NETWORKS SUBDIVIDED VIRTUALLY AND OPTIMISED FOR DIFFERENT NEEDS
UTILITIES UTILITIES
AUTOMOTIVE AUTOMOTIVE
MANUFACTURING MANUFACTURING
5G NETWORK 5G NETWORK
Rural 79%
Sub-urban 19%
4.4.3.1 The investment case for network slicing focusing on a few slicing templates that can achieve
Urban 2% case will be much easier if it is only
The Investment wide adoption. Lastly, the investment case needs to be
marginal to0%
the broader 5G investment
20%
case 40%
marginal to
60%
the broader 5G investment
80%
case. 100%
For network slicing to deliver on its promise, it needs to
be provisioned in a way that does not create a massive As Figure 4.4.3 shows, responsibility to achieve these
return-on-investment hurdle for operators. There are will depend on several stakeholders across the industry
three considerations to make this happen. – Standard Defining Organisations (SDOs) such as
3GPP, industry groups such as GSMA and operators all
First, and as described above, is to minimise the
A&B Roads have a role to ensure that the investment case does 99.8%
not
complexities in its design and conceptualisation. impose a high barrier to the deployment and adoption
Second,
Railwaysthere is a need to drive economies
21.8% of scale by of network slicing.
Motorways 6.0%
FIGURE 4.4.3
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
4.4.3.2 Lessons from a network slicing Based on their experience, King’s College London
implementation provide the following recommendations for operators:
In 2017-18, King’s College London together with the • Network slicing should be an enabler for commercial
University of Surrey and the University of Bristol in the value propositions and customers should not have
UK ran the world’s first 5G end-to-end network slicing to worry about its technical complexities.
implementation.
• Granularity of network slices can vary, allowing
A major goal of the study was to demonstrate the for more differentiation and service creation.
potential of network slicing in delivering low-latency But increased granularity will increase cost of
applications over multiple operator networks, whilst provisioning a slice.
relying on the interoperability of the participating • Network slicing can be used to provide a dedicated
operator’s slices. The implementation involved service to some customers, and a means to specify
intelligent cameras and real-time social media a set of QoS for some applications.
connections across London, plus innovative 5G music
• Interoperability and inter-operator cooperation is
performances with artists in distributed locations.
critical because network slices for global businesses
will require the orchestration of various resources
One implementation tested was for a low-latency
from different parts of the network.
control of a drone, which is launched both from a local
operator’s core network and a remote operator’s core • Automation is essential and without it, network
network. In the latter case, a low-latency network slice slicing will struggle for scalability.
is stretched from local operator’s core network to the
• Network slicing templates, with predefined and
remote operator’s core network, where the application
optional fields, will help to bring down the cost
server runs. While the proof-of-concept successfully
and time to deploy, guarantee interoperability and
demonstrated the feasibility of stitching together
enable automation of slice management on global
network slices across two operators’ domains, it also
scale.
demonstrated that manual configuration of a cross-
operator slice is a time-consuming process requiring • New business models and ways of working will
significant coordination. emerge from network slicing and operators should
get ready to play new roles (e.g. Infrastructure-as-a-
service).
• The relationship between operators and end
customers could undergo a fundamental change
if verticals (e.g. automotive companies) leverage
network slicing to reach directly to customers.
Appendix 7.5, commissioned by the GSMA, provides the
full analysis from Kings College London’s experience of
network slicing.
Cloud RAN is a radio access technology where some Cloud RAN enables significant savings that would
components of the radio access network are virtualised not have been possible with traditional configuration.
and centralised so that one physical location handles For example, according to a Mavenir and Senza Fili
hundreds of cells, reducing the cost and complexity of Consulting study73, Cloud RAN can yield 49% capex
operating a cell site. savings and 31% opex savings over a five-year period
compared to the DRAN architecture – see Figure 4.4.4.
The Cloud RAN architecture is possible because
virtualisation allows for the baseband processing to be It should be noted that the CAPEX and OPEX savings
done in virtual equipment running on generic hardware. above depends strongly on the availability of fiber and
The result is that fewer and lower cost COTS servers space for the baseband farms. Having to build or rent
are used when compared to a distributed RAN (DRAN) these may change the case significantly, as additional
architecture, today’s predominant approach. The Cloud build/rent costs may offset the savings.
RAN also simplifies network management and enables
resource pooling. The Cloud RAN architecture is
highly suitable for the small cell era, where lower cost,
flexibility and scalability are key operational factors.
FIGURE 4.4.4
5 YEARS CUMULATIVE TCO FOR CLOUD RAN – CAPEX AND OPEX (SOURCE: MAVENIR, SENZA FILI CONSULTING)
DRAN
37% TCO savings
Capex
(capex and opex)
Cloud RAN
49% capex savings
Capex
DRAN
Opex
Cloud RAN
31% opex savings
Opex
$0 $10 $20 $30 $40 $50
$ Million
Capex Opex
Major breakthroughs
in the last 10 years
Fields
Predictive analytics Text to speech Machine vision Translation Expert systems 191
5G Cost Considerations
Deep learning Speech to text Image recognition Information extraction Planning, scheduling and
THE 5G GUIDE
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Low latency is often cited as the key capability that operators will be able to monetise in
the 5G era; but delivering it will inevitably increase the cost of the network.
• MEC (Multi-access edge computing) for mobile networks is the critical component to
achieve low latency in mobile networks.
• GSMA estimates that the cost of adding a MEC server to every cell site in the world would
be $140bn; limiting the roll-out to aggregation points reduces this figure to $5bn.
• Opex may be challenging for operators given on-site space and power constraints.
Latency is primarily governed by the laws of physics Where the content is not owned by the serving
(maximum theoretical speed c of 299,792,458 metres operator (e.g. AR content from a social network), this
per second;
Capacity 300 kilometres in 1 millisecond). Figure
Opimisation also means that there has to be interconnection points
Deployment
4.5.1 shows the different sources of delay in actual at those edge computing servers so that third parties
networks. Latency is also affected by network topology can host or cache their content. This is the rationale for
(no of hops), protocols
0% implemented 20%in the transport 40% exposing APIs60%
for edge computing.
80% 100%
Content
5G SERVICE SUB-1MS
<0.5ms <0.5ms
NETWORK
OPEX
Energy Other
74. https://www.gsmaintelligence.com/research/?file=141208-5g.pdf&download
Edge computing, architected as MEC for mobile will be $140 billion, about 74% of total industry capex in
networks, is the critical component to achieve low 2017. In contrast, putting MEC at aggregation points will
latency in mobile networks. Its conceptual development cost $5 billion.
aims for sub-1 millisecond latency, but its design
architecture deals with the reality that not many MEC opex may be even more challenging than capex
services will need such low latency. for individual operators. Physical space at many cell
sites is limited and energy to power the additional
Accordingly, rather than push for MEC sites to be on equipment may not be easily available. There will also
every cell site, MEC is being designed to be deployable be a higher risk of theft in some countries for MEC
at alternative locations. The locations can be regional equipment, so security costs may rise. Unsurprisingly,
DCs (large central offices), local central offices and there are discussions on sharing MEC sites, and there
aggregation sites, where progressive approach will are also tower companies and start-ups (e.g. Vapor
flow from the regional DCs all the way to aggregation IO) who seek to build out the hardware for ‘Edge’
sites. GSMA estimates (see Figure 4.5.2) that the cost infrastructure and partner with operators to use it.
of adding a MEC server at every cell site in the world
FIGURE 4.5.2
MEC
X1,000s/operator X100s/operator X10/operator
$140bn
74% OF CAPEX
$5bn
3% OF CAPEX
$28mn
0.01% OF CAPEX
vs.
• Traditional Infrastructure Sharing (incl. TowerCos) • Neutral Host: hotspots & 5G corridors
• Neutral host: Single Wholesale Networks (SWF) • Private 5G networks
• Aerial networks (incl. satellites, drones, balloons) • Wi-Fi 6
• Bring-Your-Own-Small Cells
IP Microwave Fibre
194 5G Cost Considerations
THE 5G GUIDE
The MEC business case is a chicken and egg quandary. this approach is that MEC is progressively trialled and
There are not enough confirmed paying customers built out, without a big bang investment case. GSMA
for MEC capabilities to meet the investment criteria modelling suggests that for the three 5G deployment
for many operators. Yet, without a rollout of MEC, the scenarios explored in Chapter 5, MEC, at the
business opportunity will not be developed. aggregation sites, will account for 2-4% of hypothetical
5G era capex (see Figure 4.5.3). Please refer to Chapter
GSMA’s consideration of this is that MEC rollout should 5 for methodology and disclaimer.
be included in the 5G business case and its cost should
be integrated into 5G capex planning. The advantage of
FIGURE 4.5.3
Rapid, Full-Scale
Deployment
Enterprise Focused
Deployment
Capacity Opimisation
Deployment
Content
5G SERVICE SUB-1MS
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Costs and growing global commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions require radical
energy efficiency for 5G networks.
• 5G promises to deliver up to 1,000 times as much data as today’s networks, the
infrastructure to deliver this may potentially consume up to 2-3 times more energy.
• Operators can deliver a greener 5G by using renewable energy sources and by adopting
practices that increase energy efficiency.
• Solar energy is the key option for operators wishing to supply their own renewable energy,
though in some markets (e.g. Nordics) wind energy solutions are preferred.
• 5G era networks power management will be optimised as part of an intelligent
infrastructure.
Enterprise Focused
Deployment
5G SERVICE SUB-1MS
FIGURE 4.6.1
<0.5ms <0.5ms
PROJECTED IMPACT OF ENERGY OPTIMISATION IN 5G NETWORKS (SOURCE: ORANGE)
NETWORK
OPEX
Energy Other
75. http://mdpi.com/2078-1547/6/1/117
DRAN
37% TCO savings
Capex
(capex and opex)
Cloud RAN
49% capex savings
Capex
DRAN
4.6.2
Opex Network energy costs: industry debate
Cloud RAN
Energy
Opex consumption constitutes between 20 – 40% of network OPEX
31% opexand
savingsthere are two
schools
$0 of thought on $10
how this will evolve
$20 for 5G $30 $40 $50
$ Million
There are two opposing schools of thought with on a breakthrough in “efficient 5G technologies”,
regards to network energy consumption Capex in 5G. Some a delay of which could see Opex
global energy usage
stakeholders pointEquipment
to no overall net increase
(BBU, RRU, SCGW)
in the increasing bySite
an additional
lease
incremental 30%.
energy consumption of 5G networks
BH and FH equipment by virtue of the Operations, maintenance, power
equipment being more efficient.network
Site aquisitions, For example,
planningTelia and In addition toBackhaul
the dataand
load question, i.e., equipment
fronthaul
Ericsson believe that Installation
the increase in energy usage will will be able to handle more bandwidth with the same
be offset by more efficient equipment resulting in no or lower energy consumption, this does not address the
net increase in energy usage76. This view is also shared increase in cell sites with Huawei pointing to a doubling
by Nokia77, who in addition, in 2017 found that existing of network energy consumption. It is worth highlighting
site Major
equipment renewal delivered efficiencies of 44%
breakthroughs that issues of power capacity at existing sites, may also
which arelast
in the 10 years to offset any increase78.
expected affect CAPEX and deployment times79.
On the other hand, other stakeholders believe that the Figure 4.6.2 highlights the cost contributions and total
energy consumption of wireless networks will initially cost of ownership (TCO) for a hypothetical operator in
Fields
fall before picking up again. Huawei estimates that a developed market. It is based on the GSMA’s Network
energy consumption will fall initially until “around 2021” Economics Model and has been developed to support
(MDPI Machine
report).Learning Speech
However, in the Vision
same way 5G data traffic NLP (Natural
operators the key value leversOther
in understandingRobotics to
Language Processing)
(and network deployments) increase, so does energy deliver lower TCO.
usage. They calculate this increase to be at a rate of 5%
Examples
FIGURE 4.6.2
32%
37%
23%
76. http://kth.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A1177210&dswid=5306
77. https://gsacom.com/paper/5g-network-energy-efficiency-nokia-white-paper/
78. https://www.nokia.com/sites/default/files/nokia_people_and_planet_report_2017.pdf
79. https://www.huawei.com/en/press-events/news/2018/10/huawei-first-5g-power-solution - more than 70% of the sites will face the challenge of insufficiency capacity of
power, battery, distribution, and more than 30% of the sites need grid modernization, with inevitable CAPEX increases
Operators are increasingly shifting their energy The optimal choice of renewable energy will differ
sourcing away from carbon sources towards green depending on the context of the operator (e.g.,
renewable technologies and alternative energy sources, fossil fuel costs in the nation, power outages, carbon
such as photovoltaic modules and fuel cell generators emissions regulation), but alternative energy source
as their cost continues to fall. Such non-carbon energy solutions can be cost effective. This is important
sources can exempt an operator from the burdens of because energy costs from the central grid or by
carbon emissions regulation and enables the networks energy generators with fossil fuels is a major concern
to be more resilient to natural disasters or power for operators: the former because the electricity
outages. needs depend on the utilities and the latter because
carbon emissions are being regulated/taxed by some
regulators.
Operators have three options for alternative energy option in some regions, such as the Middle East or
sourcing. First, operators may purchase green energy Africa – with average solar radiation ranging between
directly from their utility provider (often at a premium). 5 KWh/m2 and 7KWh/m2 – where output can be up to
1000GWh per country, per year.
Second, they can use a third-party power purchase
agreement (PPA) as a means to shift supply to Solar energy is becoming cheaper than traditional
renewables without the initial capex investment, fossil fuels and is now either the same price or cheaper
agreeing to purchase energy from the solar or wind than new fossil fuel capacity in more than 30 countries
farm at a specific rate for a specific period of time e.g. according to a World Economic Forum report80.
5-20 years.
The GSMA expects that solar will play a key role in
Thirdly, operators can self-generate energy either the 5G era. The construction of more solar parks, with
at the base station with standalone or hybrid solar- a useful life of 20-30 years, will result in a gradual
based solutions, (which can be extended to off-grid reduction of emissions for operators by incorporating
scenarios); or with larger scale solar and wind farms, more base stations and charging points in a growing
requiring capex investment. network.
80. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2018/05/one-simple-chart-shows-why-an-energy-revolution-is-coming-and-who-is-likely-to-come-out-on-top
4.6.4.2 Renewable energy: power purchase purchased over 800 megawatts (MW) of wind energy
agreement (PPA) in the first six months of 2018, in one of the largest
To avoid the capex for self-supplied renewable PPA in US corporate history. The carbon savings from
energy solutions, operators can enter into a financial this project is equivalent to taking more than 530,000
agreement where a developer designs, funds and vehicles off the road each year or providing electricity
installs a solar energy system on operators’ property. for more than 372,000 homes per year.
Under PPA, mostly considered for solar and wind
energy solutions, the developer sells the power The cost of production of renewable energy continues
generated to the host operator at a rate that is typically to fall, so operators should structure their PPAs to
lower than the local utility’s retail rate. ensure they continue to benefit from future cost
efficiencies over the duration of these contracts. PPAs
PPAs typically range from 10 to 25 years and the should also factor in energy storage within the solution
developer remains responsible for the operation and (e.g. concentrated solar power thermal energy storage)
maintenance of the system for the duration of the to ensure reliability and security of supply.
agreement. As an example, a North American operator
Network load optimisation is essential to ensure that elements for access network infrastructure such as
total energy consumption is reduced. This is a prescient power systems, batteries, air conditioners, free cooling
requirement for 5G era networks. Improving energy and generators (gen-sets) often do not come with
efficiency to consume less energy can be achieved holistic, well-developed energy management systems.
through a multitude of solutions, including smart
building, virtualising the core, and improving RAN Remote monitoring and automation of management
efficiency through modernisation of legacy equipment functions for the main site infrastructure elements
and implementation of low-powered solutions. allow operators to identify capex and opex reduction
opportunities and develop energy efficiency strategies.
While existing core networks enjoy the benefits of Further energy efficiency gains will also come from
having well-established energy management systems network automation and using a shared network
(including remote management systems), the critical infrastructure.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Network automation, where technology is applied in network deployment and operation to
reduce human effort, is not new.
• 5G era networks will need more automation because they are more complex; have a higher
management workload to deal with more customers and data traffic; and the increasing
sophistication of customers and types of services.
• Automation in the 5G era will either be based on the traditional approach (using pre-
programmed rules to run processes) or based on AI or a combination of both.
• AI will enable cognitive functions that have not been possible before, supporting predictive
maintenance, long-term network optimisation, network planning, security and deployment
automation.
Network automation, where technology is applied in While the overall impact of network automation is a
network deployment and operation to reduce human big unknown for operators, there are two benefits that
effort, is not new. Operators already have a degree of operators should seek to unlock. Firstly, automation
network automation implemented: e.g. specific network is the logical step to dealing with growing network
faults trigger an alarm to the operations staff and complexity, given the limitation of cost and finding
networks treat traffic automatically based on pre-set personnel with the right expertise. Secondly,
policies. automation is the optimal means to deliver networks
and services in a more agile way and with reduced
5G era networks will need more automation because provisioning times.
they are more complex and have a higher management
workload to deal with more customers and data traffic, Network automation in the 5G era will either be based
and the increasing sophistication of customers and on the traditional approach (using pre-programmed
types of services. This trend is set to grow further in rules to run processes) or based on AI or a combination
the 5G era, when billions of devices will be connected, of both.
potentially opening up new opportunities for both
revenue growth and cost reduction.
The growing maturity of machine learning and other and finally to other fields such as optimisation. The
AI technologies will dramatically expand the scope for most relevant fields for network automation are
network automation. AI enables learning algorithms machine learning and optimisation.
that can take cognitive decisions on network operation
that were previously taken by humans. This will be In addition, AI can be used for network planning, to
beneficial for predictive maintenance, long-term enhance the efficiency of the network and reduce
network optimisation, network planning, and network cost of deployment. Speech, vision, natural language
deployment automation. processing and robotics are also important but are
not as related to network automation as the two fields
The possibility of using AI for network automation is mentioned above. However, operators should always be
largely thanks to the drop in the cost of computing, the attentive to AI-driven innovations that can be utilised
accumulation of large datasets, and the development for network automation (e.g. image recognition of heat
of learning algorithms to process the datasets. AI is a patterns within data centres).
broad term and covers different fields and techniques
(see Figure 4.7.1). Examples include machine learning,
speech, vision, natural language processing, robotics
Capex Opex
Major breakthroughs
in the last 10 years
Fields
5%
3%
Broadly speaking, most forms of network automation aggregation and balance the load in the RAN. Others
implement pre-programmed rules or implement new
37% use machine learning models, to predict failures in
rules that have been informed by an analysis of large virtualised core network or software defined networks
operational datasets. Accordingly, there are three deployed in enterprise customers’ premise.
network automation mechanisms for operators to
consider. Thirdly, operators can take a holistic approach and
create a network operations platform that is AI-
Firstly, operators can, and should continue automating powered. This is achieved by developing in-house
23%
routine processes to streamline network element or adopting open source framework (or even the
provisioning and management.
NetworkingThese doNetwork
not involve Operations
combinationSpectrum
of the two). ForFinance
example, an operator
AI, and are based on delegating a computer
Infrastructure or
Components integrates open source in different layers (network
intelligent system to take action based on pre- cloud, edge computing system and AI marketplace) to
configured parameters. This is the traditional approach form a full-stack AI platform.
to automation and, for example, would be needed to
accelerate service provisioning for network slices in 5G.
Operators should consider three types of limits helpful for network and service provisioning, especially
in defining their automation strategy. Firstly, the considering that operators need to provide assurances
usefulness of automation needs to be proven for each to customers to incentivise some 5G era use cases
use scenario and operators should limit their use of that require a highly reliable and resilient network
automation to where there are clear business benefits. performance.
As was argued for in Automation and AI in Telco Ops
— A Reality Check81, while computer-driven automation Thirdly, for AI use cases, the data and the algorithms
promises a lot of efficiency gains, it will not always to extract insights from it, present challenges that
follow that automation is more effective than human operators need to prepare and plan for. These scenarios
action for some initiatives. require huge datasets, and the data requires structuring
to make it suitable for training an AI model. Also, the
Secondly, the nature of AI could bring additional outcomes can, potentially, be biased based on the
unpredictability to network operations if its closed prejudices of its human handlers, and it can be difficult
loop system becomes a black box with little human to explain and generalise its learnings.
understanding. This technology limitation may not be
81. https://www.sdxcentral.com/articles/analysis/automation-and-ai-in-telco-ops-a-reality-check/2018/08/
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• To manage costs in the 5G world, new network ownership models will apply at both the
macro and small scale.
• The traditional infrastructure sharing model will continue into the 5G era, with passive
infrastructure sharing and the use of tower companies becoming more widespread.
• The benefits of single wholesale networks are appealing but dangerous given the lack of
wholesale competition and related pricing constraints.
• Aerial networks (e.g. LEO satellites) may provide backhaul for operators in remote/rural areas
where economically justified.
• Given that it may be both physically difficult and aesthetically challenging to install multiple
small cells on public infrastructure, neutral host small cells may be needed.
• Private networks are likely to proliferate in the 5G era; operators need to consider the most
economically viable method to support them.
• Improvements to Wi-Fi (e.g. with Wi-Fi 6) could create a complement to 5G small cells and
private networks.
The need to meet the throughput and coverage Figure 4.8.1 outlines two aspects to these discussions:
requirements for 5G era networks would, on paper, at macro scale, to provide coverage across populations
lead to higher costs. This is fuelling active discussions and geography; and small scale, to provide capacity in
in industry, academia, financial and policy circles on hotspots and 5G corridors, network deployments.
how different forms of ownership and management of
5G-era networks, among other things, can reduce costs. Each of the seven approaches under consideration
can reduce the cost burden for operators in deploying
These discussions
SITES AGGREGATION
challenge the historical network 5GPOINTS
era networks, but some of them inadvertently
CENTRAL
AREAS / LAC / POPs
ownership and management paradigm - where an undermine the historical role of operators as the
OFFICES
operator owns and manages the network infrastructure owners and managers of the public broadband
it deploys/operates - that has prevailed across the infrastructure. The discussions, and how they will
industry for the past few decades. Crucially, they eventually play out, are major unknown considerations
are also happening at the same time
MEC as the operator for operators.
community is seeking to make the case for, and raise
X1,000s/operator
the funds, to invest in 5G.
X100s/operator X10/operator
$140bn
74% OF CAPEX
$5bn
3% OF CAPEX
$28mn
0.01% OF CAPEX
FIGURE 4.8.1
vs.
• Traditional Infrastructure Sharing (incl. TowerCos) • Neutral Host: hotspots & 5G corridors
• Neutral host: Single Wholesale Networks (SWF) • Private 5G networks
• Aerial networks (incl. satellites, drones, balloons) • Wi-Fi 6
• Bring-Your-Own-Small Cells
IP Microwave Fibre
136
111 39
33
74
68 67 -10%
-57%
53 96
29 52 46 -12%
41 78
44
31 35
22 23 27 27
206 5G Cost Considerations
19 39 9 10
19 17 18 22 19 23
THE 5G GUIDE
At the macro scale, many operators across the world clear risks must be addressed. First, infrastructure
will, most certainly, embark on more infrastructure sharing should not create a disincentive for operators
sharing for 5G. This is expected given that many to invest in providing adequate coverage to customers
operators have achieved capex and opex savings from across all environments. Secondly, the need for
infrastructure sharing in 2G, 3G and 4G networks. The resilience in 5G era networks means that network
GSMA has detailed operator case studies showing redundancy will remain a key consideration to assure
capex and opex savings of up to 50% on shared overall system resilience.
infrastructure. The format of 5G era infrastructure
sharing will follow the same pattern since in earlier As such, while some governments (e.g. South Korea82)
versions of infrastructure sharing as shown in Figure are being proactive to encourage infrastructure
4.8.2. sharing for 5G, it is important that governments have a
regulatory framework that allows voluntary sharing of
The benefits of infrastructure sharing must be infrastructure among operators.
contrasted against the risks of hindering infrastructure
competition that has served the industry so well. Two
FIGURE 4.8.2
Passive Active
Key Assets
140
120
100
8082. https://www.mobileworldlive.com/asia/asia-news/korea-operators-to-build-shared-5g-infrastructure/
Passive Active
4.8.2.1 Trends in infrastructure
Site SharingsharingShared Backhaul companies,
MORAN where tower MOCN
companies own,CN deploy
Sharingand
With densification of networks from 2G to 4G, more operate the infrastructure that tenant operators lease.
Key Assets
operators have adopted infrastructure sharing.
Core Network
Accordingly, A sharing
infrastructure B has rapidly
A B A is that Bpassive infrastructure
An Aobvious Bobservation Shared
FIGURE 4.8.3
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
A recurring question, given the merits of infrastructure The GSMA has evaluated SWNs or Wholesale Open
sharing, is whether to combine all the networks into a Access Networks (WOAN) extensively and noted that
Single Wholesale Network (SWN) or to build a single while the stated vision and goals are often ambitious,
greenfield 5G network. This approach would reject turning the vision into reality is difficult83. Experience
the infrastructure competition model at a time when from Rwanda (deployed an WOAN), Kenya, Russia,
most countries have three operators and there is little Mexico, South Africa and USA (SWN or WOAN
enthusiasm to return to a single operator market. considered), indicated a number of challenges and
unmet targets. These include affordable price targets,
For 5G, some governments have either publicly (e.g. lack of competition and challenges with hitting
US) or privately called for an SWN to ensure fast rollout coverage targets.
of 5G. These would be built using some form of public-
private partnership. Some other ecosystem players,
e.g. tower companies, are also exploring moving up
the chain to deploy their own, and operate 5G neutral
hosts.
There is a clear rationale for aerial networks. Given might be an option, focusing on verticals that need
their elevated altitude, they can provide coverage geographic coverage (e.g. driverless cars); require unit
for a much larger footprint, above and beyond what tracking across large distances (e.g. military vehicles,
can be covered using terrestrial networks (see Figure commercial trucking, shipping); or that operate in
4.8.4). There is now improved technology (e.g. better remote areas out of reach of land-based networks (e.g.
launch rockets) and more funding for LEO satellites and offshore oil rigs, mining pits).
drones (e.g. OneWeb and SpaceX plan to more than
double to number of LEO satellites to over 20,000 by Aerial networks already act as partners or competitors
2027, according to CelesTrak SATCAT84). to operators. As partners, they support operators to
reach remote/rural areas at a lower cost, or fill in the
However, it is less clear how these systems can be gaps to address gaps in coverage for some verticals
commercially viable (cf. the commercial challenges (e.g. connected cars).
of previous LEO constellations such as Iridium and
Globalstar). For example, internal documents from
SpaceX suggest a target ARPU of $62.5085. But
GSMA Intelligence data indicates only Bahamas
had an ARPU higher than $50 globally in 2018. IoT
83. https://www.gsma.com/spectrum/woan-report/
84. https://www.economist.com/briefing/2018/12/08/satellites-may-connect-the-entire-world-to-the-internet
85. https://www.gsmaintelligence.com/research/?file=b30810aee2588382d0b0d3b1302da031&download
FIGURE 4.8.4
40,000
Weakening signal strength
Increasing area coverage
Altitude (km)
1,000
20
Civilian airspace 10
Sea 0
level
Ground coverage
Own Shared Leased Operator’s Small Shared Operator’s Neutral host Unlicenced
Core Core Core 5G Cells 5G 4G small cells (cellular and WiFi)
Private
Business / networks will proliferate
5GAA in the
ZVEI5G era; operators
IIC need
... to consider how to
Requirement
support them
86. Unlicensed spectrum includes the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz “Wi-Fi” bands. Shared spectrum is typically a band that is occupied by an incumbent but that is made available to
others in areas and at times when it is not being used (e.g. a prominent example is the US’ CBRS sharing plan in the 3.5 GHz band.)
87. According to an SNS Telecom & IT study (2017)
88. E.g. German Industry wants to setup their own 5G networks & several US companies/groups are campaigning to the FCC for terms which will suit private mobile networks
in the 3.5 GHz band.
For enterprises requiring a private 5G network standard to adopt OFDMA (Orthogonal Frequency
on their premises, an improved Wi-Fi could be a Division Multiple Access), a technology also adopted in
complementary solution. Owing to the use of licensed LTE that will vastly increase the efficiency and quality
spectrum, cellular systems can efficiently manage of the data link, especially in dense deployments.
interference and provide mechanisms to deliver
quality of service with high reliability and predictability Given that the vast proportion of traffic in most
especially in controlled environments such as a campus developed markets flows through Wi-Fi, and the
network. Conversely, currently adopted Wi-Fi solutions expectation that these will migrate to cellular in the
rely on unlicensed spectrum and have a much less search for higher quality, an improved Wi-Fi 6 could
developed quality of service framework, making these impact the cost dynamics for 5G small cells and private
systems inherently unable to offer guaranteed services. networks.
As private networks proliferate in the 5G era for use in For cellular networks this could be the radio engineer’s
enterprise settings, it raises the prospect of a future nightmare, but it is the model for Wi-Fi for many
for Bring-Your-Own-Small Cells (BYO-Small Cells) for residential users. It is also the model for most other
residential premises. utility services (e.g. electricity, gas, fixed telephone/
broadband) where the responsibility for the service
The potential for BYO-Small Cells is that it begins provider ends at the boundary of the premises and the
to transfer responsibility for indoor coverage from customer is responsible for internal wiring/piping.
operators to customers. Some variant of this model
has already been unsuccessfully tried with earlier
generations of femtocells. However, neutral host small
cells and advances in self-organising networks could
provide the breakthrough.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• The disaggregation of software from hardware and the decoupling of layers of the network
should enable more players to become network equipment suppliers to operators.
• In practice, operators require carrier-grade performance for hardware and software and this
could limit the number of OEMs that are able to provide the requisite accountability and
performance assurances.
• Open source supply could offer new opportunities for innovation and cost reduction, but
operators will need to adapt their approach to the very different philosophy of open source
organisations.
• It will be important to establish well defined liability boundaries for service assurance in the
disaggregated model and adapt operational procedures accordingly.
In theory, the disaggregation of software from In reality, it is a big unknown if the decoupling of layers
hardware and the decoupling of layers of the network would bring as many new players to the ecosystem
should enable more players to become network as expected and if this will lead to realisable cost
equipment suppliers to operators. This will bring more savings over the long term. Operators require carrier-
competition and lower prices into the ecosystem. For grade performance for hardware and software. But
example, Mavenir notes that an operator with 10,000 not many OEMs will be able to meet the performance
cell sites would be paying less than 10% for COTS requirements and not many are well capitalised
hardware and software licences for Baseband Unit (financially) to provide the requisite accountability and
(BBU) when compared to purchasing dedicated BBU performance assurances.
appliances.
Likewise, initial cost savings from outsourcing could
Adopting open architecture solutions can also be undone by complexities from hard-to-troubleshoot
provide operators with significant cost reduction hardware and software, plus the need to maintain
through the use of open source and white-boxes the engineering capability to deal with continuously
as a supply alternative, or by using standardised changing configurations.
interfaces (e.g. from Open RAN). This is especially true
if the operators invest in or possess the engineering
capabilities/resources to understand the knowledge of
virtualization.
Traditional OEM business model is based on a tightly on a software firm B. In each of these domains, the
integrated product where dedicated hardware expectation of carrier-grade requirement limits
appliances, licences for the software running on it the number of vendors that can participate in the
and maintenance/support are sold, integrated and ecosystem and only few vendors would be able
maintained as a package by the vendor. to deliver the quality and support in the scale that
operators require.
However, the decoupling of layers does not mean that
operators would no longer experience lock-in to a It is also important to highlight that there could be a
few vendors. Whilst it is true that operators would be lock-in to specific open source solutions when adopting
able to extricate themselves from the lock-in of siloed open source de-facto-standards. The risk of lock-in
products provided by traditional equipment vendors, grows if implementations rely on any specific solutions
operators are likely to experience lock-in to specific that prevents its interoperability with other elements
vendors in each layer. not included in the open source project (e.g. CORD).
With disaggregation of hardware and software, Operators will, therefore, have to make a choice
however, vendors will be focused on developing either between becoming the integrator of the system or
software or hardware, and the integration of hardware delegating the integrator role completely to one single
and software will be, in most part, the responsibility capable vendor. For the former, operators will need to
of the operator. This is important to assure service maintain “an army of IT and telecoms engineers” to
recovery in the event of a network failure. For example, perform and manage the integration in-house. For the
in the case of network fault, it would be difficult to latter, the operator will be establishing a “managed
identify the root cause and, crucially, where liability lies, services” contract with the single vendor to operate
as the number of possible combinations of hardware and troubleshoot the network.
and software increases drastically. Even if the vendors
have the responsibility for troubleshooting, it will take
significant time to identify which vendor would be
responsible for the cause.
We
THE 5G GUIDE
Civilian airspace 10
Sea 0
level
Ground coverage
4.9.4 Proliferation of open source organisations
The standardisation landscape is becoming too fragmented
Mobile base Balloon Drone/unmanned Satellite Satellite
station
An important consequence of softwarising the aircraft Figure (Low
4.9.1,Earth orbit, (Geosynchronous
for network slicing, is an example of the
LEO) Earth orbit, GEO)
network is that more organisations are involved in proliferation of new standardisation groups in ETSI
the standardisation landscape. Whereas traditional (e.g., ETSI MEC and ETSI NFV) and various open source
networks required standards from 3GPP, ETSI, IETF, organisations. Consequently, tracking the progress of
BBF and sometimes IEEE to
Core/Transport Layer be implemented, the new relevant organisations,
Access Layer studying the specifications/
network technologies required for disaggregation code and representing the operator’s opinion in the
of software from hardware are standardised and organisations will become more complex and costly.
developed in many other organisations.
Own Shared Leased Operator’s Small Shared Operator’s Neutral host Unlicenced
Core Core Core 5G Cells 5G 4G small cells (cellular and WiFi)
FIGURE 4.9.1
Business /
Requirement
5GAA ZVEI IIC ...
Network IETF
RAN3
Service
There are four clear philosophical differences between 4.9.5.3 Changeability of code
the traditional standardisation approach and the open The power of open source lays in the possibility for the
source approach. user (i.e. the mobile operator) to make any changes to
the code that is deemed necessary. It is probably only a
4.9.5.1 Focus on implementation handful of operators in the world that possess the skills
Open source organisations focus on implementations. and resources necessary to be able to leverage this
Whilst documents and specifications can be drafted asset: for most operators, the nature of the source code
to guide users of the technology, the ultimate form of in their equipment (open or closed) will be immaterial.
contribution in open source organisations is lines of
code and merely submitting requirements/requests 4.9.5.4 Proliferation of organisations
does not drive the organisation forward. Also, while in As can be seen in the network slicing standardisation
the more traditional Standards Defining Organisations landscape, there are many organisations that develop
(SDOs), meaningful changes can only be realised the technology overall and coordination is necessary
through technical contributions (e.g., change request to maintain coherent and consistent development of
to technical specifications). Therefore, to drive open technology. Therefore, the coordination of various
source organisations, operators need to possess the SDOs and open source organisations is necessary. This
engineering capability to be able to interpret open would also minimise the potential issues that open
source codes and to contribute code to the open source implementations may generate that would
source organisations. be problematic to resolve. Operators would have to
coordinate these various standardisation organisations
4.9.5.2 Product liability along with open source organisations by sending
Open source organisations are not liable for the delegates and making relevant contributions.
technology developed. Although purchase of licences
may be required depending on the policy of the
organisations, the open source organisations usually
do not take responsibility for fault and issues that
arise from the implementation of its technology in
commercial networks. This means that mobile networks
need to maintain engineering capability to verify the
implementation and understand the open source codes
to the extent that troubleshooting is feasible.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• There is no industry consensus for a major bump in capex for the 5G era and the funding
envelope is expected to remain similar to 4G.
• Exponential growth in data traffic is the biggest 5G opex driver.
Having explored the cost considerations in this chapter, In most markets, capex will grow progressively, in line
it is clear that, 5G is, and should be, targeted to be cost with operator revenue growth, rather than requiring
effective. Therefore, there is no industry consensus for a ‘big bang’ and will vary by operator/region due to
a major bump in capex for the 5G era and the funding varying levels of business maturity.
envelop is expected to remain similar to 4G.
These considerations form the basis of the assumption
This conclusion derives from several industry research used for the GSMA’s hypothetical 5G business case
studies, sentiment analysis from major global network model that is described in Chapter 5.
vendors and mobile network operators, which largely
conclude the use cases of 5G will revolve around eMBB
in the early 5G era. Consequently, the expectation is
that 5G era capex will grow incrementally, given that
5G capacity would be deployed incrementally, when
and where needed, through this forecast period (2018-
2025).
Mobile network opex has been stubbornly high in to increase almost eight-fold by the end of 2023 (see
recent years, whilst it is essential to the 5G business Figure 4.10.1), with a CAGR of 39%. At that time, it
case that it falls. An Analysys Mason survey suggests is expected that 20% of global mobile data traffic
that operators are seeking a 30% reduction in opex by worldwide will be carried by 5G networks, and the
202589. Yet, there is no single solution that will achieve figure will be much higher in regions with early 5G
this and operators will need to rely on a combination of deployments. This is 1.5-times more than the total of
tactics to deliver savings on this scale in the 5G era. 4G/3G/2G traffic today.
FIGURE 4.10.1
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
2013 2018 2023
5G 4G/3G/2G
data traffic data traffic
With the increased demand putting strain on network consumption is expected to reach over a quarter of the
components and infrastructure, operators must global total.
realise a pragmatic and efficient approach to running
networks. Network transformation strategies, with Similar to the capex, these opex considerations form
energy being a core focus, will be key to ensuring the basis of the assumption used for the GSMA’s
efficiencies. This assumption applies to the GSMA opex hypothetical 5G business case model that is described
forecast for operators in developed or high/middle in Chapter 5.
income countries but also Asia Pacific, where data
89. http://www.analysysmason.com/Research/Content/Reports/5g-opex-strategy-rma16/
Readers will gain insight into how different rollout strategies will impact the
overall economics of 5G.
Chapter 5 - including the model, scenarios and archetypes that inform it - is a general guide
developed exclusively by the GSMA and does not make reference to any specific geographic
market or operator.
Its cost and revenue assumptions have been developed using publicly available sources only.
Neither the model, nor its constituent parts, have been validated by any operator or vendor.
The model is basic and does not include several major cost considerations such as spectrum,
licensing conditions, impact of planning laws etc.
Accordingly, the model does not represent nor make reference to concrete plans or views
of specific operators. In the same vein, the model cannot nor should be used to establish a
benchmark regarding any particular operator.
Use of the model is at the user’s discretion and, save for the changeable levers included in it,
any modification of the model is forbidden without an explicit written permission from the
GSMA.
Given the extensive analysis in the previous chapters In particular, the BEMECS 5G Readiness framework
of the book, the GSMA believes that 5G is inevitable: it provides a framework for identifying and evaluating the
is only a question of when, rather than if, operators will economic and market conditions that are favourable for
deploy 5G. Accordingly, the two pertinent question for commencing a 5G rollout.
operators to consider in their 5G rollout are:
1. When should I start 5G rollout? For the ‘how’, the GSMA has developed this model to
assist operators in evaluating if their unique operational
2. How should I roll out 5G? realities can support a rapid 5G deployment or if
For the ‘when’ question, the economic, social and 5G should be rolled out gradually in an evolutionary
political drivers that will influence when an operator approach.
commences 5G rollout were explored in Chapter 2.
Operators will have their own set of objectives to revenues from the enterprise segment. However, if the
justify their 5G rollout plan. However, throughout the enterprise 5G use cases (e.g. based on the Ericsson
engagements with operators and other stakeholders, market sizing) are realised, an average operator could
three particular objectives emerged. earn 40% of its revenues from the enterprise segment.
The 40% share of revenues from enterprises is therefore
First, given the challenges of low revenue growth for used in the model as an optimistic expectation for the
operators, a meaningful increase in revenue attributable 5G era.
to 5G will be expected. A 5% revenue increase mark
is used in the model as the pragmatic and realistic Third, the model has been designed with the
minimum expectation for the 5G era. assumption that the cost intensity (ratio of cost to
revenue) will be unchanged into the 5G era. This means
Second, given the maturity of the consumer market, that there will be no extra capex for 5G, unless it is
it is expected that the enterprise segment will drive matched by a corresponding increase in revenues.
the incremental 5G opportunity for many operators.
Most operators do not currently get up to 20% of their
The model provides a stylised study of potential costs The model takes a stylised high-level scenario based
and projected revenues for select deployment options, approach in considering potential cost and revenue
or types. It sets eight operator archetypes in developing implications. The GSMA objective for this model is
and developed regions, in three deployment scenarios to provide an indicative support to operators in their
that reflect variances in target segments and speed of own 5G business case modelling, rather than outline a
5G rollouts. The model combines existing and historical specific, local and granular economic study.
operator/market data (GSMAi, other) with additional
5G cost and revenue assumptions. Figure 5.1.1 provides a high level overview of the
business case model developed by the GSMA.
FIGURE 5.1.1
Major Player,
Cost Assumptions Cost Intensity
Integrated Products
CAPEX OPEX
Major Player,
5G ‘Time to Build’
Mobile Only FIBRE SITES OTHER NE SAVINGS VIRTUALISATION
Minor Player,
Revenue Assumptions Revenue
Integrated Products
Minor Player,
COMMS CLOUD AR/VR ENTERPRISE/IoT FWA
Mobile Only
A B C
RAPID FULL-SCALE DEPLOYMENT ENTERPRISE FOCUSED DEPLOYMENT CAPACITY OPTIMISATION DEPLOYMENT
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• The operator archetypes modelled are:
– Major Player, Integrated Products
– Major Player Mobile Only
– Minor Player, Integrated Products
– Minor Player, Mobile Only
• The deployment scenarios are based on the speed and purpose of the rollout:
– Deployment Option A: Rapid, full scale deployment
– Deployment Option B: Enterprise focused deployment
– Deployment Option C: Capacity optimisation deployment
Minor Player,
Revenue Assumptions Revenue
Integrated Products
Minor Player,
FIGURE 5.2.1 COMMS CLOUD AR/VR ENTERPRISE/IoT FWA
Mobile Only
5.2.1.1 Major Player, Integrated Products 5.2.1.3 Minor Player, Integrated Products
A B C
An incumbent operator with market share (of An operator with market share less than 25% in its
RAPID FULL-SCALE DEPLOYMENT ENTERPRISE FOCUSED DEPLOYMENT CAPACITY OPTIMISATION DEPLOYMENT
subscribers) of more than 25% in its operating country; operating country; product portfolio consists of
product portfolio consists of integrated products
• 60% of 5G Subscribers impacted
such integrated products •such
• 40% of 5G Subscribers impacted
as strong fibre products and
20% of 5G Subscribers impacted
as •strong fibre
3GHz to 60% products
Urban and bundled services.
sites; 40% Rural • 3GHz to 40% Urban sites bundled services. • 3GHz to 20% Urban sites; 20% Rural
• No fall back to 4G • Fall back to 4G • Fall back to 4G
• 100% Fibre • 60% Fibre • 40% Fibre
5.2.1.2 Major Player Mobile Only 5.2.1.4 Minor Player, Mobile Only
• No site sharing, full virtualisation, no Network • Private partnerships site sharing; full virtualis- • Part virtualisation; Network Economic savings
An incumbent
Economic savings operator with market share of over 25% An operator
ation, limited Network Economic savings with market share under
(Infrastructure 25%energy)
share, backhaul, in its
in its operating country; products and services consist
• ARPU – Access only scenario and Full Service • ARPU – 30 - 40% operating country, products and services consist
Enterprise Revenue split (i.e. • ARPU – Access only scenario and of
Full Service
scenario growth by 40%) by year 5 scenario
of core mobile only core mobile only.
Major Player,
Cost Assumptions Cost Intensity
Integrated Products
CAPEX OPEX
Major Player,
5G ‘Time to Build’
5.2.2 Deployment scenarios
Mobile Only FIBRE SITES OTHER NE SAVINGS VIRTUALISATION
Minor Player,
The deployment
Integrated Productsscenarios are based on the speed and purpose of the rollout
Revenue Assumptions Revenue
Minor Player,
The modelMobile
setsOnly
three deploymentCOMMS scenariosCLOUD
to outline
AR/VR five years of commercial
ENTERPRISE/IoT FWA launch of 5G. For these, the
the approaches an operator could take based on its main top-level levers are the degree of investment in
expectations for speed and purpose of 5G rollout. new sites and fibre backhaul; the urban vs. rural split;
These scenarios are identified using industry expertise, and the incremental ARPU from 5G era use cases.
operator survey data and Major Player, Integrated
historical studiesProducts
related to Minor Player, Integrated Products
Developed
previous generation rollouts. Figure 5.2.2 summarises the key assumptions for the
Major Player, Mobile Only Minor Player, Mobile Only
three deployment scenarios.
The three deployment scenarios evaluate the
investments/costs and revenue projections for the first
Major Player, Integrated Products Minor Player, Integrated Products
Developing
Major Player, Mobile Only Minor Player, Mobile Only
FIGURE 5.2.2
A B C
RAPID FULL-SCALE DEPLOYMENT ENTERPRISE FOCUSED DEPLOYMENT CAPACITY OPTIMISATION DEPLOYMENT
5.2.4.1 Deployment Option A: Rapid, full scale 5.2.4.3 Deployment Option C: Capacity optimisation
deployment deployment
For Option A, the model applies the estimates For Option C, the model starts with the assumption
associated with the rapid build out of a 5G network that initial 5G launches will focus on capacity and
which is independent of 4G systems and includes a coverage enhancements for eMBB. Many elements
new 5G core. This scenario will be the most investment- of this 5G rollout build on 4G networks, rather than
heavy for operators to consider, with assumed representing a complete departure, and that means
higher number of new sites, site upgrades and fibre operators can take an evolutionary approach to
investment. infrastructure investment.
5.2.4.2 Deployment Option B: Enterprise focused Operators taking this approach may begin by
deployment upgrading the capacity of their existing 4G macro
For Option B, the model explores the hypothesis that network by refarming a portion of their 2G and 3G
an enterprise targeted (SA) 5G deployment, supportive spectrum, or by acquiring additional 5G spectrum when
of enterprise specific use cases, can generate return available. This way, they can align investments in 5G by
on investment and/or does not deviate vastly from a also evolving to LTE and LTE-Pro features, such as 4x4
sustainable cost intensity. This option still assumes a 5G or massive MIMO.
core, but uses a lower level of infrastructure investment
relative to Option A, but greater than Option C.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Key capex assumptions:
– 5G networks will require a much higher capillarity of fibre to meet capacity and latency
requirements
– 5G will require a much denser network
– Spectrum is a major capex consideration for operators when deploying 5G
• Key opex assumptions:
– Savings from virtualisation in the IT industry suggest that operators could achieve similar
benefits
– Energy efficiency and backhaul relief will provide additional Opex savings
The model evaluates the major levers that drive the cost differences between three rollout scenarios, for
capex and opex dynamics in a 5G buildout. It provides varying archetypal operators in the ‘5G era’. Figure 5.3.1
a high-level calculation across the core scenarios provides a summary of the major cost levers for the
of 5G commercial rollout based on an itemised list model, which are assessed in detail below.
of cost levers. The purpose is to highlight potential
FIGURE 5.3.1
5.3.2 CAPEX
• 5G new sites – the number of newly built 5G cell The race for spectrum will continue across high and
0.020
$/Mhz/Pop/Yr (PPP)
-
FIGURE 5.3.2
Italy Korea, South Australia United Kingdom Ireland Finland Latvia Spain Czech Republic
2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018 2018
SUMMARY OF THE COST OF SPECTRUM FOR 3.5GHZ (SOURCE: GSMA INTELLIGENCE)
Italy
2018 0.027
Korea, South
2018
0.023
Australia
2018
0.018
United Kingdom
2018 0.008
Ireland
2018 0.003
Finland
2018 0.003
Latvia
2018 0.015
Spain
2018 0.004
Czech Republic
2018
0.002
Prices for mmWave have been very low, but there acquired XO Communications for $1.8 billion and
is a risk of them getting higher with the recently Straight Path Communications for $3.1 billion; AT&T
completed mmWave auctions in South Korea, Italy or paid $207 million for Fiber Tower and spectrum in
the US. For now, considering prices paid by operators 39 GHz. Figure 5.3.3 highlights the range of prices
through acquisition is a related indicator in considering paid so far for mmWave spectrum (values for US are
spectrum prices for other countries. In the US, Verizon provisional as at 1 January 2019).
FIGURE 5.3.3
South Korea
2018 (28 GHz) 0.00113
Italy
2018 (26 GHz) 0.00025
USA
2019 (28 GHz)
0.00112
$/Mhz/Pop/Yr (PPP)
5.3.3 OPEX
especially with sophisticated management, allows APPLICATION percentage reduction of average opex per site. This is
SCHEDULER
significant operational expense savings. 5G networks taken from the GSMA’s Network Economics work where
willDifferent
present parameterisation of PDCP, RLC,
an opportunity for operators to reproduce
MAC, and PHY per slice.
the economic impact of various network transformation
such benefits. RRC strategies
RRC is modelled. RRC
RLC’’: non-real-time functions of RLC PDCP PDCP PDCP
RLC’: real_time functions of RLC
PHY
90. https://www.vmware.com/files/pdf/vmware-solution-opex-reducing-opex-wp-en.pdf
5.3.3.2 Additional OPEX savings Backhaul relief provides operators a means of reducing
Energy efficiency and backhaul relief will provide their opex and capex by minimising the need for
additional Opex savings incremental spending to expand capacity. This can be
Recent work within the GSMA’s Future Networks achieved by using innovative transport architecture
Programme has explored and identified significant with RAN to cope with the challenges and optimisation
potential cost savings from energy efficiency and of the transport demand. As networks evolve through
backhaul relief that were incorporated in the model. 4.5G to 5G with more complexity, network densification
and intelligence at the edge, the need will be even
Energy efficiency savings can come from either greater to optimise transport network architecture
alternative energy sources to take the network off within mobile RAN to resolve the challenges of
the main power grid and network load optimisation backhaul/fronthaul demand and the corresponding
to reduce the energy consumption. The GSMA has increase in cost (Capex and Opex).
identified and estimated average saving of 10-30%
per annum in total network opex. This is reused in the The GSMA has identified and estimated an average
model. saving of 20-30% per annum in total network opex for
archetypal operators from backhaul relief: this has been
applied to the model.
KEY TAKEAWAY
• Incremental revenue growth in the core business will come from new consumer use cases
(e.g. AR/VR), enterprise/IoT use cases (e.g. real time automation), and new broadband
opportunities (e.g. FWA).
The model estimates the upside from new 5G use The model relies on these revenue assumptions to
cases and prioritised (based on extensive research) estimate:
value creation to capture revenue streams. The model a) the amount of incremental ARPU uplift for each of
assumes different revenue impacts (or incremental the three revenue streams.
ARPU uplift) dependant on region and archetype, and
also by scenario deployment. The focus of the model b) the amount of revenue required to maintain a
is on three revenue streams: new consumer use cases, sustainable cost intensity.
enterprise/IoT use cases and new broadband markets
(primarily FWA). For example, the model assumes a higher level of
incremental ARPU for Enterprise and IoT in the
enterprise-focused Option B compared to the capacity-
focused Option C. Table 5.4.1 summarises the impact of
the main 5G era value opportunities for a Major player,
integrated products operator in a developed market.
TABLE 5.4.1
SUMMARY OF THE ASSUMPTIONS FOR THE BEST-CASE INCREMENTAL ARPU INPUTS FOR
THE MODEL (5 YEARS POST 5G LAUNCH)
Option B Option C
Option A
Base case scenario (Enterprise focused 5G (Capacity optimisation 5G
(Rapid, full 5G deployment)
deployment) deployment)
Operators will continue to seek new consumer use As such, the model uses Cloud AR/VR as the
cases, in the 5G era to add to their current portfolio of exemplified consumer use case to drive incremental
value added services. This is the direct Business-to- ARPU in the fifth year post 5G launch. Huawei’s “5G
Consumer (B2C) opportunity for 5G and will shape how Unlocks a world of opportunities: top ten 5G use cases”
operators are able to complement and enrich their core report estimates the market size for Cloud AR/VR
mobile broadband proposition. by 2025 to be $292 billion. The operator addressable
market opportunity will reach more than $93 billion
Amongst all the possible new consumer use cases, (30% of the total). This is about 8% of overall operator
Cloud AR/VR is the clearest and, potentially, revenue in 2025, giving a potential ARPU increment of
most lucrative opportunity for operators. Its $1.60 for a major, integrated operator in a developed
conceptualisation, architecture and requirement make it market.
reliant on a super-fast, low latency, mobile connectivity.
As much of the incremental 5G opportunity will come identifying a $204 billion to $619 billion addressable
from the enterprise segment, a clear understanding of opportunity for operators by 2026. The upper threshold
the requirements and market opportunity is needed. of $619 billion is equivalent to 53% of overall operator
This opportunity will be best addressed with rollout revenue in 2026, giving a potential ARPU increment of
Options A or B – rapid or enterprise focused 5G $10.70 for a major, integrated operator in a developed
deployments. market.
5G promises to unlock the FWA opportunity for 2019 to $40 billion by 2025. This is about 3% of overall
operators, thanks to its ample capacity. This is a major operator revenues in 2025, giving a potential ARPU
development for operators, because 5G will provide increment of $0.70 for a major, integrated operator in a
competing broadband technology that can match or developed market.
better some fixed broadband options.
With operators now working towards 5G FWA to
SNS Telecom reports in 5G for FWA: 2017 – 2030 – provide high speed broadband to residential users,
Opportunities, Challenges, Strategies & Forecasts92 that fixed wireless broadband will be a revenue growth
FWA subscriptions will grow from about $1 billion in opportunity.
91. https://www.ericsson.com/assets/local/networks/documents/report-bnew-18001324.pdf
92. http://www.snstelecom.com/5gfwa
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• The model suggests that the Option C deployment model delivers a 5% revenue uplift with
minimal change in the cost intensity.
• Unsurprisingly, there are significant increases in capex and opex for the more intensive
deployment scenarios (A&B) across both developed and developing markets.
• Revenue modelling suggests that incremental revenues across both developed and
developing markets will be insufficient in the more intensive deployment scenarios to
outweigh the increase in costs.
• Option C will deliver the most efficient return on investment of the 5G scenarios assessed
across both developed and developing markets.
The results presented in this section detail initial Based on the analysis, it is clear that the evolutionary
simulation from the deployment cost options and approach will be the natural path for most operators,
value creation models. They attempt to cover all eight allowing them to minimise investments while the
operator archetypes, with assumed variations and incremental revenue potential of 5G remains uncertain.
sensitivities applied for each scenario.
FIGURE 5.5.1
Enterprise Capacity
Rapid, Full-Scale
Country Profile Operator Archetypes Measure Focused Opimisation
Deployment
Deployment Deployment
Cost Intensity Change 29% 10% -4%
1 Major Player, Integrated Products
Revenue Uplift 147% 10% 5%
Cost Intensity Change 28% 10% -2%
2 Major Player, Mobile Only
Revenue Uplift 145% 10% 5%
Developed
Cost Intensity Change 47% 19% -1%
3 Minor Player, Integrated Products
Revenue Uplift 149% 11% 5%
Cost Intensity Change 42% 18% 1%
4 Minor Player, Mobile Only
Revenue Uplift 152% 10% 5%
Cost Intensity Change 35% 14% -2%
5 Major Player, Integrated Products
Revenue Uplift 135% 11% 5%
Cost Intensity Change 29% 11% -2%
6 Major Player, Mobile Only
Revenue Uplift 131% 11% 5%
Developing
Cost Intensity Change 51% 19% -7%
7 Minor Player, Integrated Products
Revenue Uplift 111% 11% 5%
Cost Intensity Change 43% 19% 0%
8 Minor Player, Mobile Only
Revenue Uplift 130% 11% 5%
For Options B and C, revenue uplift is simply defined maintain a sustainable cost intensity (in this simulation
as the delta between year five revenue and year zero the default assumption is that the ‘sustainable’ cost
revenue for each operator archetype. For Option A, intensity level is within a threshold of 0-2% of base
instead the model calculates the increased amount of [year zero] cost intensity).
revenue the operator is required to generate in order to
Cost results in the model sum total network capex and developed country, between baseline and end of year
total network opex. five of 5G rollout. The results are shown in Figure 5.5.2.
Where applicable, the cost lines have adjustable Across the board there are expected increases in costs
parameters which can be toggled to reflect the for operators in developed markets, for both scenario
expectations of the user. The cost line assumptions in Options A and B. Relatively, the largest increase is
the simulations in these results can be found within the expected for mobile only players, largely due to the
deployment cost model. estimated increase required on fibre spend. Though still
estimated to see cost lowered/flat in scenario Option C,
5.5.2.1 Cost results – Developed market ‘Minor players’ are expected to reap the benefits from
In the initial simulations for developed markets, the network economics strategies at a slower rate than
model estimates the total cost (CAPEX + OPEX) major players, which see a more significant cost saving
deltas for four operator archetypes in a hypothetical at the end of year five.
FIGURE 5.5.2
246% 245%
150% 155%
100% 100% 100% 90% 100% 100% 100% 98%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
249% 252%
159% 164%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
150% 155%
100% 100% 100% 90% 100% 100% 100% 98%
5.5.2.2 Cost results – Developing market ‘Major Player, Integrated Products’ which is estimated
For first model simulations with ‘developing’ markets, to have a 234% (indexed) increase in total cost at end
the model estimates the
Rapid, Full-Scale totalFocused
Enterprise cost (CAPEX + OPEX)
Capacity Optimisation of year five
Rapid, compared
Full-Scale to base
Enterprise year. Capacity
Focused This is Optimisation
owing to an
deltas for four operator Deployment
Deployment archetypes in a hypothetical
Deployment estimated annual capexDeployment
Deployment increase (relative to existing
Deployment
developing country, between baseline and end of year annual capex levels) of 114% from rapid large-scale
MINOR PLAYER, INTEGRATED PRODUCTS MINOR PLAYER, MOBILE ONLY
five of each 5G deployment scenario. The results are infrastructure investment. Though still estimated to see
shown in Figure 5.5.3. cost lowered/flat
252% in Option C, operators in developing
249%
regions are expected to reap the benefits from network
Similar to operators in developed markets, there are economics strategies at a slower rate than those in
159% 164%
estimated to be significant jumps in capital expenditure developed markets, which see a more significant OPEX
for operators
100% in developing 100% 103%
100% markets, especially for cost saving
100% at the end of 100%year 5. 100% 106%
Options A and B. The largest increase is expected for a
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
FIGURE 5.5.3
234% 230%
152% 148%
100% 100% 100% 97% 100% 100% 100% 94%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
230%
211%
142% 156%
100% 100% 100% 92% 100% 100% 100% 103%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
The changes are calculated using estimations of 5.5.3.1 Revenue results – Developed market
increases in service ARPU from specific 5G use cases as For first model simulations with ‘developed’ markets,
described in section 4 of this chapter the model estimates the (average) indexed revenue
deltas of four operator archetypes in a hypothetical
Within the model, the incremental service revenue developed country, between baseline and end of year
ARPU estimations have changeable inputs which can five of each 5G deployment scenario. The results in
be adjusted to reflect the expectations of the user. figure 5.5.4 show the average revenue changes of four
These initial simulations are based on default revenue operator archetypes in the developed country profile,
assumptions which are also described in Section 5.4. per scenario.
FIGURE 5.5.4
117.6%
109.9% 104.4%
100% 100% 100%
Revenue Revenue
(Year 5) (Base)
115.9% 109.7%
100% 100% 100% 104.6%
Revenue Revenue
(Year 5) (Base)
209% 209%
THE 5G GUIDE
117.6%
109.9% 104.4%
100%
A key revenue assumption behind each scenario is 100% That strongest revenue uplift is100%
estimated to be
the percentage of subscribers ‘impacted’ by 5G, i.e. in a rapid full-scale 5G deployment, with a higher
the proportion of total subscribers/connections that proportion of subscribers impacted but also due to a
operators will realise 5G revenues from. The default higher estimated contribution of revenues from both
parameters used in these assumptions are as follows: A: enterprise/IoT and consumer use cases.
60%, B: 40% and C: 20%.
Revenue Revenue
(Year 5) (Base)
FIGURE 5.5.5
115.9% 109.7%
100% 100% 100% 104.6%
Revenue Revenue
(Year 5) (Base)
5.5.3.2 Revenue results – Developing market relatively stronger expected growth, with improved
MAJOR
Considering the PLAYER,
default INTEGRATED PRODUCTS
assumptions, the outcome for infrastructure MAJOR PLAYER,
investment MOBILE
(incl. ONLY
fibre) and considering a
operators in developing markets portray a similar result stronger uptake of the service in more rural regions.
for those developed markets.
209% 209%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
211% 215%
144% 149%
100% 100% 100% 98% 100% 100% 100% 102%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
Following the modelling of both total costs and revenues it is important to provide context
Revenue Revenue
to the results in the form of a ‘cost intensity’
(Year 5)consideration.
(Base)
This is an important measure for operators as it an objective to maintain their cost intensity of minimal
gauges the economic sustainability
115.9% of the network. For deviation
109.7%
from the percentage at year zero, throughout
example, from the100%
revenue results we understand there100% the 5G era. 100% 104.6%
to be a strong uplift in Option B which may paint it as
the desirable deployment scenario, but once costs are 5.5.4.1 Cost intensity results – Developed market
taken into account we see cost intensity percentages Cost intensity levels for developed market operators
increase by over 2x. Thus to ensure a desired cost is estimated to increase significantly through Option
intensity percentage, the operator must in fact generate A, owing to higher CAPEX and OPEX through the
massive revenues. It is assumed that operators have deployment period.
Rapid, Full-Scale Deployment Enterprise Focused Deployment Capacity Optimisation Deployment
Revenue Revenue
(Year 5) (Base)
FIGURE 5.5.6
209% 209%
137% 141%
100% 100% 100% 86% 93%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
211% 215%
144% 149%
100% 100% 100% 98% 100% 100% 100% 102%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
In scenario Option C, however, there is potential 5.5.4.2 Cost intensity results – Developing market
for operators to see a reduction in this measure, Thought still high, the estimated growth of total cost
owing largely to the assumption that operators intensities for operators in developing regions are not
benefit well from network economic strategies such as pronounced, with the average level of change in
as infrastructure sharing and energy efficiencies. Option A, for example, around 200%.
Operators in the region can realise strong savings in
OPEX from these, for example the archetypical major
player with integrated products, with cost intensity
reduced to 86% of its baseline measure.
FIGURE 5.5.7
203% 200%
139% 135%
100% 100% 100% 93% 100% 100% 100% 90%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
199%
183%
129% 142%
100% 100% 100% 88% 100% 100% 100% 99%
Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation Rapid, Full-Scale Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment Deployment
For scenario Option B, indexed cost intensities increase Similar to developed markets, operators in developing
by an average of 135% across 246%the four archetypes. countries are also able to realise cost intensity
Most operators correctly would consider this too reduction following the deployment of 5G in a capacity
large a spike in this measure, but considering the level optimisation-driven approach. The assumption here
of investment and the anticipated capex increase highlights a stronger saving from infrastructure sharing,
involved, this may not be a feasible deployment option particular
150% for major players.
for some.
100% 100% 100%
90%
5.5.5 Deployment
Rapid, Full-Scale
Deployment
cost Capacity
Enterprise Focused
Deployment
model simulation –Rapid,
Optimisation
Deployment
example
Full-Scale
Deployment
Enterprise Focused Capacity Optimisation
Deployment Deployment
246%
150%
Revenue Revenue
(Year 5) (Base)
5.5.5.2 Cost Intensity (indexed) Owing to a more refined, targeted deployment, CAPEX
The initial simulation for this archetype shows that is not predicted to be as substantial as full standalone.
cost intensity (capex + opex / revenue) relative to
baseline (indexed) for deployment Option A almost However, it is clear that if cost efficiency and
doubles. Owing to huge costs associated with a new pragmatism is at the forefront of operator’s minds
infrastructure, as well as increased operational costs when considering various deployment options,
from network complexity with a standalone core. choosing Option C is very likely to be most sensible.
After extrapolating estimated network economic
An alternative, and potentially viable, deployment efficiencies, especially savings in OPEX, there is actually
option for operators with matching profiling is Option B a potential to lower cost intensities. This is, however,
rollout where cost intensity is estimated to be 1.3-times also dependant on the additional revenue that can be
higher than that in the baseline year (see Figure 5.5.9). generated from 5G.
FIGURE 5.5.9
209%
137%
Revenue Revenue
(Year 5) (Base)
FIGURE 5.5.10
118%
110% 104%
100% 100% 100%
Revenue Revenue
(Year 5) (Base)
Cumulative capex required to deploy 5G (for each scenario), ($)/estimated annual capex envelope, ($)
FIGURE 5.5.11
The table of results (see Figure 5.5.11), for this particular for scenario Option C, which is a more expected level of
archetype, deploying based on Option A, would take up investment and/or spend for operators categorised in
to six years longer than deploying based on Option C; this segment.
with an annual capex increase of 125% compared to 14%
KEY TAKEAWAY
• The GSMA leadership is clear about the significance of 5G and how it will benefit
citizens, enterprises and society. At the same time, the related challenges are
understood.
“The arrival of 5G is very significant... with the arrival of 5G things which are now in the realm
of science fiction will become reality.”
Sunil Mittal, Chairman, GSMA 2017/18
“Mobile operators and our wider industry have a key role to play in promoting a safer and
more inclusive digital world, while building the infrastructure and services that will carry us
forward as we enter this new era of intelligent connectivity.”
Stéphane Richard, Chairman, GSMA 2019/20
“5G is a giant step forward in the global race to connect and digitise economies and
societies: it is an opportunity to create an agile, purpose-built network tailored to the
different needs of citizens and the economy. But it is vital that all stakeholders work together
to ensure that 5G is successfully brought to market.”
“One of the biggest challenges for the 5G future is to ensure that there is a supportive
regulatory environment – one that fuels investment and fosters innovation. A policy
framework that reflects the changing digital landscape while minimising costs and barriers to
network deployment will deliver the best outcomes for society and the economy is needed.”
“The timely release of spectrum, flexibility to share networks under commercial agreements
and facilitation of small cell deployments will encourage the infrastructure investments
required in order to deliver the global benefits of the 5G Era.”
Mats Granryd, Director General, GSMA
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• The GSMA encourages common messaging and terminology in members’ communications
to ensure that the industry conveys a clearer and more impactful narrative on 5G.
• Intelligent Connectivity will enable revolutionary new products and services to be
developed, benefiting governments, businesses, consumers and society in general.
• Examples of new services will include:
– Remote control of robots in real time increasing industrial productivity
– Remote training and telepresence for increased efficiency and effectiveness
– Smart agriculture – enhanced food production and efficient distribution
– Connected care – real time, intelligent health and home monitoring
– Proactive environment management with Predictive Modeling and Monitoring
– Autonomous transportation – convenient, safe, independent travel
– Cloud-based mobile gaming – immersive gaming anywhere, without a console
Building on and working together with 4G, 5G provides the ability to connect people and
things better, faster and more efficiently in a 5G Era.
The faster mobile internet speeds, seamless connectivity, increased capacity and greater
flexibility that 5G provides – together with Mobile IoT, big data analytics and artificial
intelligence – will fundamentally improve the way we live and work in an age of Intelligent
Connectivity.
As demand for seamless connectivity grows, especially in cities and industrial areas, 5G will
facilitate the opportunity to create even more agile, purpose-built networks tailored to the
different needs of citizens, enterprises and society.
5G will drive future innovation and economic growth: it will be an evolutionary step with
a revolutionary impact, delivering greater societal benefit than any previous mobile
generation and enabling new digital services and business models to thrive.
Intelligent Connectivity will sit at the heart of new smarter ecosystems that benefit
everyone: society will use technology to tackle the world’s biggest challenges; consumers
will enjoy immersive, contextual experiences and enterprises will be able to embrace the
Fourth Industrial Revolution.
4G will continue to deliver high-speed mobile broadband, supporting the numerous and
increasing connectivity needs of citizens and the economy, and it will help to support 5G.
4G is also key to continuing the drive to connect even more of the world’s unconnected
people to mobile broadband for the first time.
With 4G networks already covering 81% of the global population across 208 countries
– increasing to 86% by 2025 – and 5G networks set to cover nearly 40% of the global
population by 2025 (source: GSMA Intelligence), the 5G Era is truly upon us.
The following section comprises additional messages Please also refer to the results of the enterprise
oriented specifically towards the enterprise sector research conducted as part of this work (see
setting out the significant benefits that the 5G era can Section 3.4).
deliver to businesses.
5G is a giant step forward in the global drive to digitise economies and societies, acting as an
innovation platform upon which new transformational digital services and business models
will evolve and thrive.
Smarter platforms facilitated by 5G, AI and machine learning, will use data collected from
the IoT to enable improved decision-making and business efficiencies, resulting in the
cost-effective delivery of new and improved products and services in an age of Intelligent
Connectivity.
This intelligently connected world will enable a new, unprecedented era of automation,
facilitating enhanced services - from personalised healthcare and enhanced welfare, to smart
cities and transport.
Anything that needs to be connected will be connected. The IoT is scaling with more
and more connected products and sensors providing essential data to improve device
performance, with an anticipated 25 billion connections by 2025.
5G will provide the opportunity for individual enterprises’ needs to be met by dynamically
tailoring and configuring mobile networks to their particular requirements (Source: GSMAi
Intelligence).
Operators are trusted, proven and experienced enterprise partners with the capabilities,
experience and licences to operate secure mobile networks based on global, interoperable
standards, that deliver economies of scale and are future-proof.
5G mobile broadband will deliver download speeds 5G, together with the IoT, facilitated by operators’
of over 1Gbps and enable a consistently high-quality LPWA networks, combined with AI and machine
mobile broadband experience with reliable internet learning, will fundamentally alter the way we live and
access at home, in the office and on the move. This work in an age of Intelligent Connectivity, see Figure
enhanced, reliable and high-speed mobile broadband 6.2.1.
will facilitate so-called “hyperconnectivity”, a world of
always-available communication, entertainment and
services.
FIGURE 6.2.1
INTELLIGENT CONNECTIVITY
The Fusion of 5G, AI and IoT
Intelligently connecting everyone and everything to a better future
TOMORROW
5G ERA:
INTEROPERABLE NETWORKS ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: INTERNET OF THINGS
5G / 4G / 3G / MOBILE IoT / WIFI / COMPUTER IQ: 10,000+ 25 BILLION CONNECTED DEVICES
FIXED BROADBAND / SATELLITE
Flexible, reliable, high-speed, low-latency, Smarter platforms for enhanced Everything will be securely connected
high capacity networks decision making & automation enabling rich new products & services
TODAY
6.2.3.1 Remote control of robots in real time AI and machine learning-assisted intelligent platforms
increasing industrial productivity enhanced by 5G will enable better robotic coordination
High speed, low latency 5G mobile networks will and collaboration processes thereby improving
enable a tactile internet delivering haptic experiences production performance to cost-effectively deliver
for new use cases. With tactile internet, users can higher quality products and services. Businesses will
actuate precise control, through instantaneous also be able to use 5G to control remotely located
communications, to support touch-based interaction machinery used in industrial production based on input
with visual feedback. Automation, robotics and from sensors and cameras located on-site. If necessary,
telepresence are already growing in importance in specialist machines will be able to print 3D objects on
industrial applications like smart factories and the demand, enabling them to repair broken components.
remote operation of industrial machinery. Data from a Over time, factories will become increasingly
multitude of new connected sensors will provide more automated, enabling them to be controlled largely by
valuable data to smart platforms to further enhance the staff in another location. This will mean more flexibility
industrial benefits. about where to locate production plants.
The tactile internet, i.e. low latency combined with 6.2.3.2 Remote training and telepresence for
high availability and reliability, will take the possibilities increased efficiency and effectiveness
still further, enabling the efficient manufacturing of High speed, low latency 5G mobile networks
highly customised products, and remote inspection, combined with VR and AR technologies will enable
maintenance and repair of everything from industrial new opportunities in training and education with
plant to aeroplanes, and, for example, remote mining in telepresence, for example by experiencing high-
high-risk areas. risk situations from the safety of a control room or
office. 5G and the combination of new generations of
headsets will enable AR/VR devices to be wireless and
completely mobile.
6.2.3.3 Smart Agriculture – enhanced food 6.2.3.4 Connected Care – better and more affordable
production and efficient distribution healthcare
Mobile IoT is already enabling increased crop yields, The digital health solutions enabled by 5G and
crop quality and livestock management through Intelligent Connectivity will support healthcare
enhanced monitoring of soil conditions, improved use professionals in delivering higher quality, more
of pesticides and fertilisers, animal welfare, and tracking consistent and efficient healthcare. They will assist
of weather conditions. Facilitated by 5G, AI-assisted governments and healthcare providers in increasing
agriculture big data platforms will utilise multiple real access or managing epidemics and empower
time data feeds to help make more informed food individuals to manage their own health more
production decisions. proactively and effectively. Examples, according to
PwC, are that digital health at scale could save €99
For example, 5G era technologies can be used to help billion in healthcare costs in the EU, $14 billion in Brazil
monitor and control the conditions inside greenhouses and $3.8 billion in Mexico (GSMA digital healthcare
to optimise the growth of the crop. Mounted inside the report 2016). The elderly and the chronically ill will
greenhouse, connected sensors can transmit data to benefit from mobile-enabled wearable and smart
an application that gives the grower a clear and real- home devices which will provide everyday activity
time overview of the temperature and humidity levels monitoring in addition to medication regime assistance
throughout the structure. The grower can then adjust and reassurance. “Always on” connected devices will
conditions, for example, by applying heated air to the enable relatives and carers to stay in touch for day-
crop. to-day contact, as well as emergency assistance to be
provided.
Intelligently connected transportation will increase
the efficiency of distribution through optimal routing Wearable wellness devices will monitor key biometrics
and monitoring of temperature control of food in indicators securely networked to remote health
transit. This more effective management of vehicle platforms for real-time analytics against personal
refrigeration will lead to crops and food being delivered medical profiles to assess current and future
in better condition with longer market and shelf lives. health. This will enable enhanced personal wellness
management at scale, better access to health
Connected drones are already being used for crop information and more effective professional treatment.
spraying, land management and aerial surveillance:
intelligent AI-assisted agricultural platforms with
machine learning will further enable long-term
improvements to farm production through better
understanding of the agricultural process.
6.2.3.5 Proactive environment management with In the coming years customers will be able to summon
predictive modeling and monitoring intelligently connected, automated vehicles, controlled
Predictive modelling enhanced by 5G will be used to via their mobile device for pick up virtually anywhere,
reduce pollution in smart city scenarios by providing Uber and Volvo’s partnership being but one example of
more data to enable accurate pollution forecasting development in this space.
models.
Fleets of drones and road-based unmanned,
Real-time AI-assisted monitoring platforms will enable autonomous, delivery vehicles will enable fast, low-cost,
even more sophisticated big data models through the secure delivery directly to customers, with smart homes
smarter analysis of weather, commuter information and enabling enhanced, flexible delivery access options.
town planning information.
6.2.3.7 Cloud-based Mobile Gaming – immersive
5G will accelerate and enhance this predictive gaming anywhere, without a console
modelling ability, enabling it to be applied to more Fast, mobile, low latency access to powerful cloud-
societal problems such as disease control, weather based gaming servers will enable gamers to enjoy the
and natural disaster management in addition to day- latest titles without the need to purchase expensive
to-day challenges such as city traffic optimisation. consoles and hardware: as an example, Oculus Quest
For example, in China, mobile is already being is already being positioned as “No PC, No Worries, No
used to facilitate anti-flood and other waterway Limits”.
analysis, enabling monitoring and management of
hydroelectricity, water transfer and environmental The gaming experience will be enhanced with more
situations. freedom of movement, player orientation and better
interaction with the game and the real world: the
6.2.3.6 Autonomous Transportation – convenient, Vive wireless gaming adapter is being promoted as
safe, independent travel “Untethered Virtual Reality”.
The rise of smart cars and intelligent transport systems
facilitated by 5G will optimise traffic flows, further Gaming will become more immersive thanks to AR and
enhance travel safety and reduce journey times. VR enabled by 5G; it will be more social, more realistic
Connected transportation will be augmented with and more contextual and engaging. Machine learning
“conditional automation” offering self-driving abilities remote gaming platforms will intelligently alter games
under specific conditions. by improving players’ online experiences based on
historical and real-time data.
On-board sensors will enable these automated
connected vehicles to be responsive and intelligent
enough to travel safely and efficiently. They will use
data from multiple sources to adapt to changes in
climate, traffic and other road users as necessary.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• The GSMA’s Policy Group has developed policy considerations to support the sustainable
rollout and commercialisation of 5G.
• Policymakers are urged to streamline the conditions for 5G deployment by setting a national
mobile network deployment policy that simplifies planning procedures for small cells, grants
operators access to public sites for antenna siting, and establishes uniform electromagnetic
field (EMF) rules that are based on internationally agreed levels.
• Network flexibility to meet the varied connectivity requirements of 5G services and open
internet principles are not mutually exclusive, and regulators should encourage the efficient
use of network resources through features such as network slicing.
• Regulators that get as close as possible to assigning 100 MHz per operator in 5G mid-bands
(e.g. 3.5 GHz) and 1 GHz per operator in millimetre wave bands (e.g., 26 GHz and 28 GHz) will
best support robust 5G services.
• Licensed spectrum is essential to guarantee the necessary long-term heavy network
investment needed for 5G and to deliver a high quality of service. Licences should be
technology neutral and have a long duration with a predictable renewal process.
• The financial demands of 5G deployment on mobile operators will be significant, requiring
a high level of investment with uncertain returns. To support their digital policy aspirations,
governments should act to ease the cost burden faced by the mobile industry to roll out 5G
networks.
THE 5G GUIDE
FIGURE 6.3.1
Simple planning procedures and Technical and commercial flexibility Contiguous spectrum for each Recognition of steep investment
regulations for operators operator with uncertain returns
Access to public sites Regulatory flexibility that allows Reasonable terms and prices Reduce mobile specific taxes
dynamic network configuration and fees
EMF rules and compliance Exclusive licensing of spectrum
processes aligned with Avoid prescriptive rules that limit bands Modernise policy framework to
international guidance innovation and investment create a better investment
environment
6.3.1.1 Network Deployment Millimetre wave mobile bands will largely be agreed
Mobile operators’ ability to deliver high-speed, at WRC-19 where the GSMA recommends support for
high-capacity 5G connectivity is dependent on the the 26GHz, 40GHz and 66GHz to 71GHz bands. The
deployment of small cells, including more densely 28GHz band is not being considered at WRC-19 but
distributed antennas and the provision of backhaul to will be used by 5G in several leading countries (e.g.,
connect a far greater number of mobile base stations, Japan, South Korea and the US) and so should also be
particularly in cities. Policymakers are urged to supported where possible.
streamline the conditions for 5G deployment by setting
a national mobile network deployment policy that On spectrum assignment, licensed spectrum is essential
simplifies planning procedures for small cells, grants to guarantee the necessary long-term heavy network
operators access to public sites for antenna siting, and investment needed for 5G and to deliver a high quality
establishes uniform electromagnetic field (EMF) rules of service. Licences should be technology neutral
that are based on internationally agreed levels. and have a long duration with a predictable renewal
process. Policymakers are also encouraged to support
6.3.1.2 Network Flexibility voluntary spectrum pooling between operators to help
One of the central capabilities of 5G is its ability to drive faster services and maximise spectrum efficiency.
‘virtualise’ the network, dynamically configuring
network resources to increase efficiency and to deliver 6.3.1.4 Regulatory Costs and Fees
bespoke managed connectivity for innovative products The financial demands of 5G deployment on mobile
and services. To realise the full economic potential of operators will be significant, requiring a high level of
5G at the earliest stages of its deployment, regulators investment with uncertain returns. To support their
should establish technical and commercial flexibility for digital policy aspirations, governments should take
mobile operators and for companies developing new action to ease the cost burden faced by the mobile
services that will rely on the capabilities of 5G. industry to rollout 5G networks.
6.3.1.3 Spectrum Allocation & Assignment Steps should be taken in many areas, including
5G networks require access to spectrum in low, medium increasing regulatory certainty, reducing or eliminating
and high radio frequencies and in larger contiguous mobile-sector taxes and lowering administrative fees.
blocks than previous mobile generations require. It is especially vital that regulators avoid inflating
Regulators that get as close as possible to assigning 5G spectrum prices (e.g., through excessive reserve
100MHz per operator in 5G mid-bands (e.g. 3.5GHz) prices or annual fees) as this risks limiting 5G network
and 1GHz per operator in millimetre wave bands investment and driving up the cost of services for users.
(e.g., 26GHz and 28GHz) will best support robust 5G
services.
7 Appendix
The appendix covers the following five topics:
1. 5G NR spectrum bands
258
258 Appendix
THE 5G GUIDE
TABLE 7.1.1
Downlink Uplink
Frequency Downlink Downlink Bandwidth Uplink Uplink Duplex
Band Name Mode (MHz)- (MHz)-
range (MHz)- Low (MHz)- High (MHz) (MHz)-Low (MHz)-High spacing
Middle Middle
Sub-1GHz n71 600 FD 617 634.5 652 35 663 680.5 698 -46
Sub-1GHz n28 700 APT FD 758 780.5 803 45 703 725.5 748 55
Sub-1GHz n20 800 FD 791 806 821 30 832 847 862 -41
1-6GHz n70 AWS-4 FD 1995 2007.5 2020 25 / 15 1695 1702.5 1710 300
1-6GHz n66 AWS-3 FD 2110 2155 2200 90 / 70 1710 1745 1780 400
Appendix 259
THE 5G GUIDE
The NB-IoT and LTE-M technologies are in constant uniquely identify LTE-M and NB-IoT traffic, giving the
evolution as they are being refined to better support opportunity to combine them in a single Network Slice
increasing market demand. Release 13 established and also have a variety of advantages, such as applying
the initial base of LTE-M and NB-IoT functionality a dedicated charging model for Massive IoT. At this
for massive IoT. As indicated in the preliminary stage there are no expected major modifications or
self-assessment in 3GPP, Release 15 will add the improvements planned for LTE-M and NB-IoT in 3GPP
functionality to fulfil all the requirements of IMT-2020 Release 16, where most of the effort will be on the ultra-
with respect to the Massive IoT. reliable low latency communication (URLLC) aspects
for fulfilling IMT-2020.
Release 14 and 15 address the aspects of mobility,
throughput, power consumption and positioning. The table below provides a high level overview of
Another important addition is a RAT type for LTE-M the set of capabilities that have been defined in the
(NB-IoT already has a unique RAT type from Release different 3GPP releases. The GSMA Deployment Guides
13). One of the main purposes of such an identifier for NB-IoT93 and LTE-M94 provide details for all features
is the ability to distinguish LTE-M traffic from the and guidelines for their deployment.
traditional LTE traffic. This allows mobile operators to
TABLE 7.2.1
LTE-M
3GPP Release 13 (Category M1) 3GPP Release 14 (added Category M2) 3GPP Release 15
FDD and TDD support VoLTE support LTE-M traffic identifier (RAT Type)
Coverage Extension (CE Mode A and CE Mode B) Higher data rate available
SMS support
93. https://www.gsma.com/iot/nb-iot-deployment-guide/
94. https://www.gsma.com/iot/lte-m-deployment-guide/
260 Appendix
THE 5G GUIDE
TABLE 7.2.1
NB-IoT
FDD support only Non-Anchor PRB Enhancements Local RRM Policy Information storage
Non-IP Data Delivery (NIDD) Higher data rate available TDD Support
Coverage Extension
Release Assistance Indication
(CE Mode 0, CE Mode 1 and CE Mode 2)
Two power classes for the UE Added a new lower power class
Appendix 261
THE 5G GUIDE
The GSMA has developed the BEMECS (Basic, The BEMECS framework tool covers 160+ countries
Economic, Market, Enterprise, Consumer, Spectrum and uses a traffic light system (Green, Amber, Red) to
indicators) framework to provide an evaluation tool to analyse each indicator for each market.
assess the 5G market readiness of different countries.
TABLE 7.3.1
Region GSMA
These indicators provide the socio-political context that will shape the 5G era in each
B - Basic Indicators Population World Bank
country. They are exogenous and independent of the telecoms industry
GDP (Constant)/
World Bank
Capita (2010 - 2017)
262
THE 5G GUIDE
TABLE 7.3.1
Total Subscribers These indicators reflect the market status ahead of the 5G era in each country GSMAi
Given recent trends towards consolidation, 3-player markets are considered optimal for
No of operators
5G readiness: competition is healthy enough to encourage 5G deployment but not too GSMAi
(>95% of market)
much to cause deflationary hyper-competition
>100% suggests a mature market where customers are keen for the next new thing.
Mobile Connections
<70% is indicative of a challenged operating environment with a sizeable pent up GSMAi
Penetration
demand for basic connection
This indicator clarifies whether the general penetration levels is as a result of multi-SIM
Unique Subscribers
ownership. >80% suggests a mature market while <50% is indicative of a suggests that GSMAi
Penetration
there is a sizeable unconnected population
Operators eventually deployed 2G/3G/4G in all markets regardless of ARPU. Same will
Average ARPU (Q2
happen for 5G. However, ARPU of <$10 are unlikely to correlate with a market that can GSMAi
2017 - Q2 2018)
absorb the higher cost of networks and devices in the early 5G era
ARPU Growth (2018 ARPU is projected to fall for most markets. However a <-5% forecasted decline over the
GSMAi
- 2025) early 5G era suggests that operators need to be doing more to stabilise their business
Mobile Services
>100% is indicative of a healthy operating environment and a positive future outlook
Revenue Growth /
that is attractive to operators for 5G commercialisation. <0% is indicative of a GSMAi
GDP growth (2018
challenged operating environment where operators are struggling to grow
- 2023)
M - Market Indicators
(both mobile & fixed) Average Download >40Mbps suggests 5G is next logical step. <10Mbps suggests market can still provide a
Ookla
Speed (Mbps) lot of value with 4G
>70% suggests a market that has attained 4G maturity and ready for the next leap in
4G penetration technology. <40% means the market is not optimal for NSA 5G and may have to wait GSMAi
for 5G SA availability
>70% suggests widespread consumer readiness for a next generation device. <40%
Smartphone
indicates that there is more work to do to increase adoption of high-end/high-tech GSMAi
penetration
devices
Markets with >20% fixed broadband penetration are already used to high-speed
Fixed broadband
internet services (and extensive availability of Wi-Fi) for consumer and enterprise ITU
penetration
customers. These markets should be readier to welcome 5G
While high capacity microwave links are emerging, fibre will remain key as backhaul for
Fibre (FTTH)
5G base stations. >20% FTTH suggests a healthy fibre capillarity that can support low ITU
penetration
cost 5G rollout. <5% suggests that there is little fibre backhaul for 5G
>100% (compared to the USA) suggests there is enough international internet
Internet backbone
backbone to support a thriving domestic ICT sector. <50% suggests that the market ITU
penetration
needs more international connectivity options
The 5G era will support the digital transformation of all sectors of the economy. >90%
Electricity availability suggests that energy/electricity availability is not a constraint to this. <60% suggests
SE4ALL
per population an economy where the energy needs of consumers and enterprises are yet to be fully
met
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TABLE 7.3.1
Current Status:
>15% suggests a market that is already actively exploiting the opportunity presented
IoT connections / GSMAi
by IoT. <5% suggests that the market has yet to tap its IoT potential
Population
>50% suggests that there is a sufficient pipeline of intellectual creativity to develop
Innovation Potential:
new 5G-enabled solutions that are applicable to the local market. <20% suggests
Population with UN
that a critical mass of young people are not being properly equipped to create new
Tertiary education
5G-enabled services.
Innovation >172 (Median + 1 Standard Deviation for all countries) suggests an ecosystem that is
Potential: registered prolific and diversified in creating an internet-based frontend for local services. <11
ZookNIC
websites/1000 (Median for all countries) suggests that more needs to be done to provide an internet
people frontend for local services.
Innovation >3.7 (Median + 1 Standard Deviation for all countries) suggests an ecosystem that
E - Enterprise Potential: apps is prolific and diversified in creating an app-based frontend for local services. <0.4
AppFigures
Indicators developed/1000 (Median for all countries) suggests that more needs to be done to provide an app
people frontend for local services.
Operators need an innovation and investment friendly regulatory environment to fully
Barriers to
explore 5G era business opportunities. >70% suggests a market with fewer obstacles to
innovation: Ease of World Bank
innovation. <40% suggests that policymakers should be doing a lot more to encourage
doing business
investment and innovation
Barriers to >70% suggests that Enterprises have a vibrant ecosystem of locally-relevant internet/
AppFigures/
innovation: apps in app resources. <30% suggests that more needs to be done to localise and use digital
Ethnologue
national language technology in enterprise environments
Government is often the biggest 'enterprise' vertical and >70% availability of
Enterprise Example:
e-Government services is an indication that the market has gone far to use digital
E-Government UN
technology for enterprise applications. <30% suggests that more needs to be done to
availability
use digital technology in enterprise environments
Affordability: ARPU/ <3% suggests that most customers can, in general, afford to pay for premium 5G
GDP per capita services. >6% is indicative of a market where mobile telecom’s share of the consumer GSMAi
(monthly analysis) wallet has little room for growth.
Affordability: <3% suggests that most customers can afford the cheapest internet device, either by
Internet Device ASP paying for it out rightly or via some of subsidy or financing scheme. >6% is indicative Tarifica
/ GDP per capita of a market where the cheapest internet device is still seen as an unaffordable luxury.
>80% suggests most consumers can, with minimal effort, embrace new 5G-enabled
services and enterprises can be assured of adoption of new 5G-enabled services. <50%
Ability: Literacy rates UN
is indicative of a market that has yet to reach tipping point on literacy and where many
customers are mostly comfortable with basic voice and video services only.
C - Consumer Several 5G era use cases (e.g. Cloud AR/VR) will require new hardware/gadgets.
Usability: Household
Indicators Markets with >70% household computer penetration are indicative of a readiness to
computer ITU
acquire the next entertainment or productivity-enhancing gadget. <30% suggests
penetration
there are affordability challenges to buying new gadgets.
A "mostly Blue Ocean opportunity" for 5G FWA exists where there is high household
Consumer example:
computer penetration but low Fixed Broadband (FBB) penetration. In "mostly Red
mass market Fixed
Ocean" markets, 5G FWA will compete aggressively with existing FBB. Other markets GSMA
Wireless Access
are "Deserts" for 5G FWA. However, every market will have 'oasis' of FWA opportunities
(FWA) opportunity
for affluent residential areas or business districts
Social media has been a flagship consumer use case in the 4G era. >60% suggests
Consumer example:
that this service has reached maturity levels and customers are ready for new 5G era
mobile social media We Are Social
flagship use cases. <30% suggests that not enough consumers can afford, or are eager
accounts (% of pop)
to embrace new use cases
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TABLE 7.3.1
>161MHz (Median + 1 Standard Deviation for all countries) are markets where operators
<1GHz availability have substantial spectrum in the recognised sub 1GHz 5G NR bands. 0 means GSMAi
operators do not have any spectrum in the recognised sub 1GHz 5G NR bands
S - Spectrum >300 MHz (assume 3 operators with 100MHz blocks each) are markets where
1 - 6 GHz for 5G
Indicators operators have substantial spectrum in the recognised 1 - 6 GHz 5G NR bands. 0 means GSMAi
availability
operators do not have any spectrum in the recognised 1 - 6 GHz 5G NR bands
>6GHz for 5G Markets where operators have substantial spectrum in the recognised >6GHz 5G NR
GSMAi
availability bands are ready for 5G on mmWave spectrum.
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7.4.1 Best Practices for telcos learned from the IT Datacentre virtualisation market
The process of virtualisation for mobile operators variety of industries, VMware found that the operational
will bring the architecture of the software-defined impact of virtualisation on IT operations resulted in:
data centre into the telecom network domain, • 94% of respondents realised operational savings
delivering a common infrastructure platform for IT with virtual infrastructure for both one-time and
and network operations. Experts concur that there day-to-day tasks.
are two important benefits to virtualisation: cost and
agility. When combined, there is immense potential to • one-time tasks of provisioning servers,
realise value for mobile operators, particularly with the decommissioning servers and migrating servers
imminent arrival of 5G. Operators have a window of from one data centre to another each took at least
opportunity to transform their networks to distributed 75% less time with virtualisation.
network clouds, and in turn play a keystone role in the • performing the specific day-to-day tasks of
next generation of cloud evolution hardware maintenance, rolling back from
unsuccessful patches and rolling back from
The competitive landscape is changing on multiple unsuccessful configuration changes each took at
fronts for mobile operators, with new services and least 75% less time with virtualisation.
new players battling for subscribers with different
By simplifying and automating ordinary IT activities,
‘just-in-time’ or on-demand business models. This
virtualisation solutions can dramatically reduce
requires operators to embrace non-traditional areas,
routine management and maintenance tasks and
such as digital, and to work in faster, more agile ways.
their associated labour hours, saving organisations
This business imperative is analogous to the digital
energy that can be focused on new business efforts
transformation that the IT data centre has gone
and enabling companies to improve productivity and
through over the past two decades, culminating in
service availability, while reducing operating costs.
“datacentre clouds”, where business agility depended
on IT agility.
Another lesson that can be gleaned from the
transformation of the IT sector is that the performance
Cloudification (including Virtualisation and Software
and robustness that comes with virtualising IT
Definition of Network Assets and Services) helps
workloads and applications is significant. Similar to
organisations shift IT resources from mundane tasks
the early experiences with some operators as they
to more strategic projects that create value for the
deploy network functions virtualisation (NFV), the
business. VMware, a key player in the virtualisation
early days of the IT data centre market were met with
space, believes that well-executed virtualisation
trepidation about whether or not applications could
can reduce capex by up to 60%, with business
run as good or better in a virtualised environment as
infrastructure virtualisation solutions also enabling
they did on dedicated hardware. The industry quickly
organisations to significantly reduce IT opex. For
realised how robust the technology was and today
example, in a research study with 30 customers in a
the vast majority of all IT applications and workloads
are virtualised. Mobile operators are likely to follow a
similar path where initial deployments start off with
some scepticism, but once cost savings are realised, the
pace of VNF (Virtual Network Functions) onboarding
accelerates, technical barriers (such as performance
and latency) are progressively overcome and
confidence grows with each subsequent deployment.
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When looking at the business justification for Over the past two decades, tech innovation has
virtualisation of network functions and transforming reshaped our expectations and transformed almost
carrier networks into cloud-like infrastructure, operators every industry, from banking to media, healthcare
need to consider the holistic benefits beyond just the to retail, manufacturing to transportation that has
reduction in hardware and software costs. Across depended heavily on the underlying technology
multiple industries, the TCO of virtualisation has far infrastructure. Telecommunications is no different. As
reaching benefits including: these other industries have witnessed, virtualisation is
• Reducing costs by consolidating idle resources and the foundational principle leading to cloud like agility
redeploying those resources on new projects. and efficiency.
• Increasing efficiencies in IT operations. This benefit 5G essentially marks the “cloudification” of the telecom
is just as transferrable to network operations. industry, which requires a new mindset and culture. As
• Improving time to implementation of new services, mobile operators start to deploy 5G, NFV is an essential
leading to faster ‘time-to-revenue’. technology to compete and differentiate, creating new
value for their customers: new products, new services,
• Reducing cost of launching and operating new
new revenue streams. As the IT data centre market did
services through remote, software defined delivery
before, mobile operators will need to embrace the first
and management. No need for truck rolls and
rule of the cloud, which is to consistently automate
install/decommissioning of expensive hardware
everything and use industry standard platforms where
• Increasing disaster recovery capabilities, including possible for infrastructure. It also means embracing
decreasing recovery time on existing non-high core tenets of modern software development like
availability services. Agile/continuous delivery, which allows teams to
compress and accelerate their innovation cycles.
• Building cost-effective and consistent development
Equally important are business model transitions from
and test environments.
existing services to a new service model encompassing
• Reducing costs in troubleshooting, technical concepts like marketplaces, SaaS services, shared
support training and maintenance. revenue, shared cost and multi-tenancy. These are the
• Consistency in management and security through essential principles that define a cloud-centric culture
the ability to apply a common set of configuration and where operators can benefit from learning from
rules across large distributed environments. their IT predecessors.
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The evolution from static, appliance-based network Service agility is further enhanced through standard
elements to an agile, virtualised telco cloud and pre-defined tenant services that can be deployed
environment enables mobile operators to drive on-demand in response to changing customer and
down costs while establishing a common platform network requirements. Tenant-specific portals and
for new service innovation and revenue expansion. northbound APIs enable several operational intelligence
This secure NFV environment can be shared across capabilities including monitoring, issue isolation and
lines of businesses and multiple tenants, allowing for remediation, automation workflows, and capacity
convergence of telco network, IT, and B2B services into planning and forecasting.
a multi-cloud architecture.
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• Network slices were introduced as a concept • The paradigm of partial sharing creates the
in order to effectively support the diverse key tensions which must be managed in any
requirements of 5G applications. implementation of network slicing. First, in the
shared parts of the infrastructure, there is a tension
• Network slices provide a functional construct to
between separation by reserving resources and
achieve two orthogonal objectives: (i) isolation
the gains that can be achieved by statistical
between traffic which may interfere with each other;
multiplexing. Second, the difficulty of virtualising
and (ii) a network design which best supports the
and sharing radio resources imposes restrictions on
mix of applications that are running within the slice.
the number of slices. This leads to questions about
• Native support for isolation can provide strong where the network slice “ends” (i.e., whether the
security guarantees, which makes it attractive to slice reserves resources and provides guarantees all
new client groups, such as enterprise customers. the way up to the UE, or just in the core network,
However, cost factors and limited granularity of or the core and parts of the access network), and
slicing at UE or radio network may lead to (partial) whether slices will be shared amongst customers
sharing. who may have similar requirements.
7.5.2 Recommendations
The major takeaways for the telco industry are as 2. Optimise granularity of network slices: While a
follows: higher granularity in network slices allow for more
differentiation and can enable more innovative
1. Embrace the heterogeneity of tenants: If network business models, it also increases the costs of
slices become successful, they will disappear from provisioning a slice. The level of granularity is, hence,
public view and act as an enabler for different a critical decision. Current (Release 15) standards
applications that will excite more interest. However, specify that at any given time, a single UE may be
the engineering that will go into making this happen associated with up to eight distinct network slices.
can be the “make or break” factor for widening This places a hard constraint on the number of
the range of industry verticals as customers of 5G end-to-end network slices that can be pushed all
telecommunications offerings. This requires mobile the way to a client device. Negotiating this tension
operators to play at both ends of the economic between greater isolation through completely
spectrum, catering both to high end consumers separate network slices, and lower costs of sharing
who require high levels of differentiation and to slices will be a key component in the economics and
consumers who require low cost slices, requiring business models of network slicing.
operators to operate well-tuned and optimised
networks at high levels of efficiency to derive
revenue through volume.
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8. Prepare for new business models and new ways 9. Prepare for a fundamental change the relationship
of working: Network slicing creates new roles for between mobile operators and end customers: For
mobile operators as infrastructure providers and the first time, enterprises in industry verticals will
will draw in new industry verticals who will act as be able to create native and specialised networks
tenants that rent this infrastructure. Multi-tenancy that allow them to reach customers directly on top
and sharing of infrastructure in a transparent of mobile operators’ infrastructure. The implications
manner will create significant new revenue streams of this change are several: exchange of customer
for operators, but will also require fundamental information between verticals and mobile operators
operational changes to realise these benefits. need to comply with privacy laws in different
We expect that at least in the initial days, major jurisdictions; operators will need to consider that
companies with a worldwide presence will be able users may, in some cases, not be locked in as they
to ensure their bespoke slice requirements by are now, and this will need to be factored into
striking deals with all major operators in the markets the economic models of operation and pricing
they wish to operate in. In other circumstances, structures; and business operations will need to
mobile operators may need to come together change to accommodate the potential B2B (or
to cooperatively provide a type of network slice B2B2C) models of operation.
that is seen to have a high demand, but has not
10. New regulation will be required to identify how
been standardised yet (e.g., through the allocation
and to what extent users’ data can be mined: With
of a Slice/Service Type or SST value). We may
reaching out to the customers, verticals will also
also see the creation of specialised aggregators,
have some degree of access to customers’ data.
who help create a standardised network slice for
While some sectors (e.g., content providers, online
a particular industry requirement, and provide
advertising industry) have had significant revenue
the interoperability at the service level for an
by mining their users’ data in the past, regulations
industry, by working with different operators. Such
have not allowed other sectors such privilege. New
aggregators would be akin to special-purpose
regulations will be needed in how users’ data can be
MVNOs, providing a bespoke kind of network at
used by different verticals.
a lower price or higher efficiency or quality (for
instance, a network slice that is tuned for massive
IoT).
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Network slices provide a functional construct to achieve from different slices are using the same network
two orthogonal objectives: (i) isolation between traffic resources, it can lead to contention and congestion,
which may interfere with each other; and (ii) a network resulting in delays, dropped packets, etc. To achieve
design which best supports the mix of applications true isolation, network resources need to be reserved
that are running within the slice. Native support in advance. However, reservations greatly decrease
for isolation can be used to provide strong security the statistical multiplexing gains that can be derived
guarantees, which makes it attractive to new groups, from the network. Second, the difficulty of virtualising
such as enterprise customers. Because each slice can and sharing radio resources imposes restrictions on
be tailored to support a particular application or mix of the number of slices. This leads to questions about
applications, network slices can also be used to provide where the network slice ends, and whether slices will
strong quality of service guarantees (based on isolation be shared amongst customers who may have similar
from other network slices). As a corollary, this can also requirements (For example, to support connected
lead to differentiated services in different network slices cars on 5G, will/should there be a separate slice for
(a matter for policy debate). Ford cars and a separate slice for BMW cars, etc., or
will there be a single network slice for cars from all
Network slicing is achieved by using NFV techniques. manufacturers).
Virtualisation allows multiple logical network
functions to co-exist on the same physical hardware Generally, three solution groups are discussed with
infrastructure without interfering with each other. The varying levels of common functionality in 3GPP
performance guarantees required by the applications standards [2]: Group A is characterised by a common
are supported by reserving appropriate resources Radio Access Network (RAN) and completely
and chaining together virtualised network functions dedicated Core Network (CN) slices, i.e., independent
to create a network slice that delivers end-to-end subscription, session, and mobility management for
functionality between the network endpoints being each network slice handling the UE. Group B also
connected. Whereas partially shared infrastructure, assumes a common RAN, where identity, subscription,
which is composed of generic hardware resources and mobility management are common across all
such as Network Function Virtualization Infrastructure network slices, while other functions such as session
(NFVI) resources, work well in certain parts of the management reside in individual network slices. Group
network, it is harder to virtualise or slice other hardware C assumes a completely shared RAN and a common CN
resources, and may require dedicated hardware for control plane, while CN user planes belong to dedicated
network elements in the RAN. slices.
Appendix 273
Italy
2018 (26 GHz) 0.00025
USA
THE(28
2019 5GGHz)
GUIDE 0.00112
$/Mhz/Pop/Yr (PPP)
FIGURE 7.5.1
APPLICATION
SCHEDULER
PHY
As described in Mannweiler et al. [7], when spectrum part. The layer 2 Control-plane is split into cell related
is shared amongst mobile virtual network and service functions which are common to all slices, and session or
operators, the RAN is a typical example of a shared user specific radio resource control (RRC). Depending
network functionality, part of which is controlled on the underlying service, RRC can configure and tailor
by a single authority and part is shared. Figure 7.6.1 the User-plane protocol stack. For instance, Slice 1 has
illustrates the case of a common spectrum shared an application scheduler, not present in the other two
by three network slices, each with own RAN and CN slices.
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FIGURE 7.5.2
Usecase/Sector Automotive Energy Health Finance Manufacturing Retail Public safety Entertainment
Real-time manipulation
(automation)
Enhanced Video
AR & VR applications
Difficulty Level
- +
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It is also evident that a single vertical sector might assisted and autonomous driving functionalities will
be in-need of multiple use cases with different be exploited, there are also opportunities for providing
connectivity requirements and level of deployment on-the-move entertainment services, with different
difficulty. One of the examples of a vertical market is connectivity requirements that can potentially be
the automotive industry and the path to connected delivered through different slice(s).
autonomous driving. While the use of URLLC for
The challenges for achieving network slicing have to dominate as the main driver for continued usage of
do with business pressures and realities on the ground network slices. To enable this, it is key that network
that may make it difficult to achieve an implementation slices can be changed on the fly - for instance, the
that makes the network slice seamless and transparent amount of bandwidth reserved, or the latency, or
to its end users. To see what the challenges are, it may number of devices connected may change based on
help to consider some properties that would make for a business needs that are hard to anticipate when the
successful network slice. In the best case scenario, the slice is being setup. To enable wide adoption, it is
network slice will become an ICT commodity, just like imperative that operators should allow applications
today’s compute clouds. It will be: to start using network slices at the lowest price
point that makes sense for the tenants, and then
a) As easy to deploy network slices as a virtual expand or decrease their usage on the fly to suit
machine on today’s cloud providers: Today’s 4G business needs.
networks are complicated and complex beasts,
c) Granularity of radio resources and RAN
requiring highly trained network engineers.
slicing: Given providing isolation between radio
5G network slice functionality will be exposed
resources would also bring issues such as wireless
(potentially via intermediaries; see Section 7.6.2)
interference, slicing RAN is clearly constrained.
to verticals, whose core business practice does not
While in regular operation of the mobile network,
include telecommunications. If a slice takes more
RAN resources are dynamically allocated to users,
than a few minutes to deploy, it already becomes
when it comes to the end-to-end network slicing,
too complex and complicated for non-experts,
how dynamic and granular those could be linked
especially small and medium players who may
to a slice at core network is a challenge. Various
drive much of the operators’ revenue by sheer
models for association between radio resource
numbers. Note that network slices are much more
management and network slicing are studied
complicated than today’s cloud virtual machines,
including auctioning [5].
since slices require not only the allocation of
virtualised compute resources, but also radio d) Revenue associated to verticals: Not all vertical
resources, as well as co-ordinated orchestration and sectors and all associated use cases come with the
management of these resources, chaining them same revenue pattern. While some might ask for
together appropriately for end-to-end functionality. very strict requirements to the targeted network
slice, their revenue potential might be insignificant.
b) Easy to change the size and configuration
Market research have shown diverse levels of
of a slice on the fly, and at short notice: New
difficulty in addressing different verticals and use
applications and verticals for 5G networks will have
cases, not directly relevant to the difficulty of
two key incentives for adoption - new functionality
deployment (seen in Figure 7.6.2).
that enables their businesses to use 5G, and cost
reductions. Businesses will see immediate savings in
CAPEX by using a virtualised network infrastructure
that can be shared with other tenants without
compromising security. In the long-run however,
cost reductions through OPEX savings are likely to
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7.5.5.1 Example from KCL’s participation in the 5G Today, managing such devices and services is
testbed and trials straightforward, requiring only a Subscriber Identity
During 2017-18, King’s College London together with Module (SIM). Global interconnectivity and roaming is
University of Surrey and University of Bristol debuted managed behind the scenes by the mobile operators.
the world’s first 5G end-to-end network, which However, this interface is also restrictive, providing only
involved a number of cutting edge applications ranging a small set of well-known service levels. Network slicing
from intelligent cameras and real-time social media will allow much finer differentiation of services, allowing
collection across the city of London to innovative 5G different applications to fully utilise the power of 5G.
performances with artists in distributed locations. However, for this expectation to be fulfilled, there needs
Together with partners, we have developed a feasibility to be a common interface that allows the tenants to
study to examine what network slicing across multiple express their needs to different infrastructure providers,
operator domains can achieve. In this study, the low- and negotiate the service levels needed.
latency application is control of a drone, which is
launched both from a local operators’ core network Learning from the success and adoption of the SIM,
and a remote operator’s core network. In the latter such a common interface for creating and managing
case, a low-latency network slice is stretched from network slices needs to be simple, and universally
local operator’s core network to the remote operators’ supported. However, network slices allow a much richer
core network, where the application server runs interface for tenants to express their requirements, so
(further information is available in [6]). The study has is not an easy matter for network slices to achieve an
successfully demonstrated the potentials of network equivalent level of global support and common levels
slicing in delivering low-latency applications globally, of functionality. For this to happen, all operators will
and over multiple operators’ networks, relying however need to work together and standardise a common set
on the interoperability of the participating operators’ of supported functionalities, and a common language
slices. While this proof-of-concept has successfully or protocol for negotiating requirements.
demonstrated the feasibility of stitching network slices
across two operator domains, it has also indicated Support for standardised network slicing is already
that manual configuration of a cross-operator slice is a underway. Through the so-called Service/Slice type
timely process requiring significant coordination. or SST values, release 15 of the 3GPP architecture
specification [2] specifies standardised sets of network
7.5.5.2 Interoperability (consistent network slices functions for common use cases such as enhanced
across operators) mobile broadband (eMBB), ultra-reliable and low-
As mentioned above, network slices require the latency communications (URLLC) and massive IoT
orchestration of different kinds of resources from (MIoT). Standardised network slices can span multiple
different parts of the network. For instance, as operators, with functions potentially federated
mentioned above, in the 5G network slice demo at across geographies. However, these few standardised
King’s College London, a drone at KCL was remotely templates for network slices are unlikely to satisfy the
controlled from the USA, requiring an ultra-reliable low exact network requirements imposed by many major
latency slice which spanned a local operator in the USA industries and verticals (e.g., for a particular kind of
and a local operator in the UK. Although the demo was robotic surgery, or a particular kind of functionality
intended to stretch and showcase the capabilities of expected by an autonomous car), and support for
5G network slicing, such multi-operator network slices such specific requirements will only be satisfied with
will not be uncommon in the near future. Consider, bespoke network slices. This poses problems: consider,
for example, a network slice being used by FedEx or for instance, a car manufacturer which relies on a
UPS to monitor and manage a fleet of vehicles across bespoke kind of network slice for a special-purpose
different countries of the EU. This slice would have connected car application, created after extensive
to span different operators in different countries, discussions with a major mobile operator in Germany. If
providing seamless connectivity over a heterogeneous this car were to cross the German borders and a similar
set of radio devices, potentially operating at different arrangement has not been reached with operators
frequencies. The IoT and machine type communications on one or more countries in mainland Europe, the
in general will rely on a geographically distributed set connected car application may well not work as
of connected devices. intended, with potentially disastrous consequences for
road safety.
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We expect that at least in the initial days, major 7.5.5.4 Slice per service or slice per customer?
companies with a worldwide presence will be able to As indicated above, one major concern for the viability
ensure their bespoke slice requirements by striking of network slicing is the limitations in the granularity
deals with all major operators in the markets they wish of slicing radio resources. A further limitation is that, at
to operate in. In other circumstances, mobile operators the UE level, current 3GPP specifications (i.e., Release
may need to come together to cooperatively provide 15), allow a maximum of eight slices that the UE can
a type of network slice that is seen to have a high associate with.
demand, but has no standardised SST value (yet). We
may also see the creation of specialised aggregators, Given these real limitations, we expect to see two
who help create a standardised network slice for distinct models for network slicing deployment. The
a particular industry requirement, and provide the first model will associate a network slice with a unique
interoperability at the service level for an industry, by consumer. For instance, a car manufacturer may obtain
working with different operators. Such aggregators a network slice from a major mobile operator to deliver
would be akin to special-purpose MVNOs, providing a “connected car” feature for their entire car fleet. The
a bespoke kind of network at a lower price or higher second model is driven more by cost efficiency: mobile
efficiency or quality (for instance, a network slice that is operators may define a network slice for a particular
tuned for massive IoT). kind of service (e.g., mobile broadband, or fixed
wireless access). All customers requiring that service
7.5.5.3 Intra-operability (consistent network slices will then share a network slice.
within an operator)
A different concern from the above, and one that The difference between these two models is a trade-
operators themselves are likely to bear the burden of, off between security and cost: The first model enables
is ensuring uniform behaviour of a network slice within better isolation, but because of the inherent limitations
a single operator’s network. This arises because of of network slicing especially at the radio access
legacy radio hardware and software stacks. Because network, will involve a much higher price point than the
of cost issues, most operators will likely evolve their second model. We expect that the majority of network
infrastructure to 5G on top of existing investments, slice consumers will end up sharing a particular kind
both in software and hardware. They may even have of network slice (e.g., for enhanced mobile broadband
equipment and software from multiple vendors, with (eMBB), or massive IoT (MIoT)). In other words, the
different network stacks in a messy but coherent value realised by the customers of a shared slice is
co-existence. Deploying network slices will require simply in the bespoke kind of network that the slice
exposing abstractions on top of this infrastructure represents, which may provide better support for that
and may lead to bugs or inadvertent behavioural application (e.g., an MIoT slice may support much
differences in different parts of the network. This will higher levels of control plane or signalling traffic).
be an important challenge in the early days of network
slicing deployment. Among the benefits of network slicing mentioned
above, shared slices involve giving up the isolation
A further challenge arises because of the heterogeneity advantage and likely will not allow autonomy in
in 5G radio. Cost concerns may lead to only certain network slice management. However, within each slice,
kinds of radio being deployed in certain locations, it is possible to provide differentiated services and
which then may place restrictions on the universal improved QoS. Network slices, whether shared across
availability of bespoke network slices. customers or not, also provide a distinct advantage to
mobile network operators by separating different traffic
types. This will allow better service, billing and network
management, and the simplification of operator
networks that can result from principled application
of network slicing principles can itself justify the
introduction of network slices.
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7.5.5.5 Cost vs performance - hard vs soft network to require hard network slicing. Other applications
slices may be able to benefit from the cost savings that
Infrastructure providers and tenants alike will have can be achieved by soft slicing and overbooking of
a choice between so-called “hard” network slices, network resources among competing customers
wherein resources are reserved a priori, and “soft” who will likely not require those resources all at the
network slices, where the same network resources are same time. As above, aggregators may come in as
multiplexed among different slices. Certain application tenants of infrastructure providers (today’s mobile
and traffic types such as ultra-reliable and low latency network operators) and provide a lower cost service by
communications (URLLC) may have no option but apportioning the slice to their customers.
A number of technical, economic and business factors with low cost. One of the most prominent solution
will influence the final shape of network slicing as it to achieve this is the definition of a network slice
starts to be embraced around the world. Our vision template that could be adopted by operators globally.
of the work required within the telecommunications A template, as seen in Figure 7.5.3, including properties
industry for network slicing involves three principal of the slice, i.e. slice parameter-i, with the fixed size for
components: enabling automated network slice setup; different entries, could be filled either by the network
resolving issues created by limitations in granularity; operators, translating their users’ or vertical customers’
and defining network slicing with a view to the future, requirements. Having fixed and standard size slice-
and negotiating visibility to end consumers when parameter-i will also allow multiple operators to establish
network slices reach all the way to the UE. cross-operator slices, when needed, rapidly and through
an automated process. While the standard template will
7.5.6.1 Automation in setup of network slices allow quick and low-cost setup of network slice, leaving
We foresee the automation of establishment and the actual values of slice parameter-i to be selected
maintenance of network slices to be a critical factor in by operators will allow differentiation in the design
enabling scale and wide adoption. While an essential and value proposition for different operators globally.
part of defining a network slice is identification of Additionally, having an optional field to accommodate
requirements and ensuring network slices can be extra features of the network slice could offer greater
tailored to the requirements of the service, it is also degree of differentiation between operators and how
important that the slices can be setup quickly and they offer services to their vertical customers.
FIGURE 7.5.3
SLICE TEMPLATE TO BE USED FOR SETUP OF A SLICE AND CAN BE EXCHANGED FOR
NEGOTIATION BETWEEN TWO OPERATORS IN ESTABLISHMENT OF A CROSS-OPERATOR SLICE
Slice type Slice parameter-1 Slice parameter-2 Slice parameter-n Optional fields
…
(k-0 bits) (k-1 bits) (k-2 bits) (k-n bits) (extra features)
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To support the cross-operator instantiation of a 7.5.6.3 Negotiating visibility of the end consumer
network slice through automated process, the between operators and verticals
negotiation procedure should also be designed and While we see a high level of personalised and
have a standard form. For example, whether a three- customised network slices as an essential part of future
way handshake is sufficient for such negotiation or 5G networks, it should be noted that from an operator
further cycle of handshake is required. An additional perspective, creating an “end-to-end” network slice
consideration is whether telco operators will be willing that reaches all the way to the UE and providing control
to negotiate the establishment of a cross-operator slice of this network slice to an interested third party vertical
using the same slice parameters as they have used to can create a more direct connection between verticals
setup the initial slice. However, in a nutshell, we foresee and consumers. This potential removal of the current
the negotiation for cross-operator setup of network direct relationship between mobile operators and end
slices through exchanging the slice template as seen in consumers can have profound effects, which will need
Figure 7.5.3. further examination:
The automated instantiation of the network slices • End consumers will potentially be no longer tied to
also requires an additional step in the setup of a individual mobile operators, and this loss of lock-in
slice, which is verification. Verification will allow the may need to be factored into prices and operating
network operators to ensure what has been planned models.
and instantiated has in fact been setup and deliver the
• It may, in some cases, be technically more
expected performance. Such verification might also be
challenging to implement certain functionalities
needed during the maintenance of the network slice to
(such as roaming and handoff), without a full
reassure the performance of a given slice remains as
knowledge of the end consumer, and their identity
provisioned. There is a strong body of work in the field
and patterns of behaviour.
of verification that can be used in developing this stage
of the automated slice setup and maintenance process. • Given privacy laws in certain jurisdictions (e.g.,
GDPR in the EU), legal aspects of handling customer
7.5.6.2 Defining network slices with a view to the information of the tenant verticals without a direct
future relationship with the consumers themselves needs
We also foresee the granularity and number of network to be looked into carefully.
slices to be far beyond having three typical slice of • While the regulation, on how users’ data can
eMBB, mMTC and URLLC, with slice types defined with be used, have been very strict in some sectors,
three bits, as currently standardised by 3GPP [2]. In mining users’ data has been a significant source
fact, it is extremely important to define the format of of revenue in other sectors. This differentiation
the slicing template in a way that network slicing can between regulatory aspect will remain the same,
be scalable in the foreseeable future and does not but there will also be a possibility of a greater level
face limitations in either the number of different slices of differentiation.
that could be defined (this is k-0 in Figure 7.5.3; e.g. in
[2], k-0 is 3), or number of different parameters that In the converse case, where the network slice
define and differentiate a slice (this is n in Figure 7.5.3). does not reach all the way to the UE, or is shared
The community has similar experience with the IPv4 between multiple customers, verticals will need some
header that has later been addressed through more information about the consumer they are interacting
scalable definition of the IPv6 header, for example. with, and this information will be held by the operators.
As mentioned earlier, since slicing is one of the main Transferring this information across in a safe and legal
business drivers for 5G, such differentiation should also way to the verticals will need looking into.
be offered to the network users’, i.e. vertical customers.
Hence, the number of slices and the differentiation
between them will be of much higher diversity. For
example, an automotive manufacturer should be able to
request their own slice with the extra features of their
choice. Defining a flexible view of network slicing that
takes into account both the need for standardisation as
well as the need for differentiation will be important.
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7.5.7 Conclusion
Network slicing will be a key factor in realising the and clarification of the extent of a network slice
economic benefits promised by 5G. In this document, (“Where does the slice end”). We identified a vision
we identified several use cases and benefits, ranging for addressing these challenges, through automation
from improved security through better isolation, of network slice setup, creation of a flexible and well-
improved QoS through virtualised networks tailor- understood set of templates for different kinds of
made for particular application requirements, better network slices, and negotiating visibility to the end
support for industry verticals and autonomy in consumer. It is our view with this, the potential of
network management. However, we also identified network slicing will become a reality without a shadow
several challenges to realising these benefits, chief of doubt.
among which are interoperability of network slices
[1] NGMN Alliance, NGMN Network Slicing “Description [5] M. Jiang, M. Condoluci, T. Mahmoodi, “Network
of Network Slicing Concept”, slicing in 5G: an auction-based model”, IEEE ICC
Available: https://www.ngmn.org/uploads/ 2017, Paris, May 2017.
media/160113_Network_Slicing_v1_0.pdf(Jan 2017).
[6] Mission critical services globally using 5G, online
[2] 3GPP, “TS23.501, V15.3.0 (2018-09), Technical video: https://www.btplc.com/Innovation/
Specification Group Services and System Aspects; Innovationnews/Operatorscollaborate/index.htm
Study on Architecture for the 5G System; Stage 2”,
[7] P. Rost, C. Mannweiler, D. S. Michalopoulos, C.
Sep 2018. (A short introduction and commentary
Sartori, V. Sciancalepore, N. Sastry, O. Holland, S.
on the network slicing part of the standard can be
Tayade, B. Han, D. Bega, D. Aziz, H. Bakker, “Network
found in this article, which is based on a slightly
Slicing to Enable Scalability and Flexibility in 5G
older version of the standard: https://sdn.ieee.org/
Mobile Networks”. IEEE Communications Magazine,
newsletter/december-2017/network-slicing-and-
55(5), May 2017.
3gpp-service-and-systems-aspects-sa-standard)
[3] X. Foukas, G. Patounas, A. Elmokashfi, M. Marina.
“Network Slicing in 5G: Survey and Challenges”,
IEEE Communications Magazine, 55(5), May 2017.
[4] Network Slicing Architecture, IETF draft. Jan 2018.
https://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-geng-netslices-
architecture-02.html
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Juan Carlos Archila Hatem Dowidar Serpil Timuray Laxmi Akkaraju Alex Sinclair John Guisti
(América Móvil) (Etisalat) (Vodafone) Chief Strategy Officer, Chief Technology Officer, Chief Regulatory Officer,
Chair, Chair, Chair, GSMA GSMA GSMA
GSMA Strategy Group GSMA Technology Group GSMA Policy Group
Project Team
Emeka Obiodu Richard Reeves Yoon Chang Henry Calvert Michele Zarri Dongwook Kim
Editor and Project Lead, Strategy Strategy Technology Technology Technology
5G Task Force
Peter Jarich Jasdeep Badyal Mark Giles Sylwia Kechiche David George Radhika Gupta
GSMA Intelligence GSMA Intelligence GSMA Intelligence GSMA Intelligence GSMA Intelligence GSMA Intelligence
Contributors
Javier Albares Maximo Corral San Svetlana Grant Mona Mustapha David Pollington Brett Tarnutzer
Kalvin Bahia Martin Tim Hatt Dennisa Kelvin Qin Yiannis Theodorou
Elisa Balestra Genaro Cruz David Hutton Nichiforov-Chuang Vikram Raval External reviewer:
Ed Barker Calum Dewar Pablo Iacopino Kenechi Okeleke Mikael Ricknas Angel Dobardziev,
Molly Earles Ian Pannell WhiteBridge Insight
Laurent Bodusseau Amy Lemberger Arran Riddle
Pau Castells Jon France Mark Little Barbara Pareglio Manik Singhal
Oliver Chapman Karen Gibson Andrew Milne Andrew Parker Jan Stryjak
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