LTE challenges operators to employ practices of Actionable Customer Intelligence

by Oded on 12-27-2011 01:55 PM - last edited on 12-27-2011 01:55 PM

LTE presents operators with major new opportunities – and major new challenges.    To tap into the opportunities, operators must re-think traditional notions about BSS, OSS and Subscriber Data Management.  They need to break down internal siloes, integrate functions in a new way so customer data can be monetized – and ultimately, deliver a new kind of customer experience … one that can re-claim customer loyalty.

While LTE is undoubtedly the cost effective answer to the unprecedented demand for mobile bandwidth that operators are experiencing, it doesn’t come without challenges. Customers will certainly use whatever bandwidth becomes available and once they have it, they will expect richer services and livelier experiences. Operators must support those expectations. In addition, because LTE, unlike its cellular network technology predecessors, provides pure IP connectivity all the way to the subscriber, it allows any vendor, over-the-top or otherwise, to access operator customers with services. Against that backdrop, users will still expect their operator to provide them with quality services and well-tailored packages for their needs and usage preferences.  Operators, on their side, will be forced to differentiate on quality and relevancy. So building intimacy with their customers to predict their differentiated needs and to monetize these is among their top priorities.

The arrival of LTE further complicates the operator landscape because, as all research predicts, subscribers will have multiple devices.. Operators need to enable the customer experience to be seamless across multiple devices and homogeneous regardless of the access network. Here, customer intelligence becomes pivotal, as operators need to manage their real-time interactions based on identification of the device connected to the network -- AND the customer’s profile and preferences, his specific bundle or package of services, and finally, his overall value to the operator.

The complexity will only intensify when voice over LTE or VoLTE comes to market.  VoLTE, as any VoIP technology, is concurrently pervasive and network quality sensitive.  Operators will have to perform quality management to sustain a positive service experience.

 

A single view of the customer

Operators therefore need to put systems and processes in place that go far beyond the traditional customer experience management regimes that many use today. Simply knowing there’s a device connected to the network isn’t enough.  Operators need to be able to understand their customers better and be able to react accordingly to that increased understanding. They need a single, integrated view across all the disparate systems involved.  Then, once that intelligence can be extracted, operators can act upon it in real-time.

HP’s Actionable Customer Intelligence helps operators provide a highly personalized experience for their customers – which can lead to better customer retention and new revenue generation.  With a more intimate relationship between operator and customer, the customer has a greater propensity to buy services from the operator because they see that the operator understands their needs and has trust that the operator can deliver a superior experience.  With that trust – and new, personalized services, the customer is more likely to engage with the operator -- and less likely to move to another operator.

Intelligence is what  enables operators to provide a better user experience to their subscribers. If operators build better relationships with their customers, they will reduce the number of complaints, improve retention, and generate greater revenue and profits through the delivery of new products and services.   Also, it enables operators to be relevant in a value chain that incorporates a multitude of over-the-top service providers.   

Operators need to act now in order to avoid becoming disintermediated from the digital value chain. Today, they are still very much in the game and have a real opportunity to become not only the provider of commoditised network access, but also the service broker for a range of third party service providers in addition to their own offerings. By accessing their own customer data, operators can add value in two directions.  First is in their own ecosystems: Operators can use this data to identify what services customers want, how they want to pay for them, and how those services can be made to be most relevant and  monetisable. The other direction is in the wider value chain:  Operators can use that data to inform and assist partners. That must be done carefully, protecting the privacy of the user but customer data, along with the networks themselves, may yet prove to be the operator’s greatest asset. 

HP coined the term Actionable Customer Intelligence to address this holistic, single view of the customer and the process of building it, analysing it and acting upon it. Operators hold a lot of information about the customer and the first step is to bring that together to build one single, sophisticated, highly personalised view of the subscriber. Next, real time analytics are applied to the digital information that operators uniquely hold regarding their customers. Finally, the operator needs to act upon that data and analysis to provide a personalised user experience. Those actions can take many forms and aren’t just confined to addressing customer problems but also to making relevant offers about price plans, bundles and special deals. HP’s Actionable Customer Intelligence proposition brings together the different technologies that traditionally come from different systems, disciplines and domains within an operator.

 

Gathering and analysing “Big Data”

Mastering customer data is critical to operators’ ability to maintain and strengthen the loyalty of their subscribers and the “over-the-top service providers” value chain.  Collecting and analysing “big data” as well as unstructured data is an essential element in that effort to recognize what customers really want, and what they expect.   Big data is, traditionally speaking, the vast amount of  data that can be stored in traditional data base structures.  But in the telecom sector, this structured data represents less than 15% of customer data available. The big majority of data goes through operator’s pipes and systems and carries extremely rich customer information -- this data that has no structure.    We say “big data” can be stored in traditional databases … do we mean “cannot”?

HP has acquired valuable technologies that will help operators tap into this wealth of big and unstructured data.   With Vertica and Autonomy, HP can now help operators leverage real-time big data and unstructured data to  generate valuable enterprise insights. This broad range of expertise and solutions is what sets HP apart from its competitors in the market place.

 

Build, Analyze, Act

HP Actionable Customer intelligence is designed to leverage three latent capabilities of  operators. The first is the many repositories of customer data.  All operators have such data, but it is broken apart in many different silo repositories.  They need to build a repository that integrates and/or federates data into a single view of the customer.    Second, there is the capability to analyze the data.  Again, most operators have a certain level of analytics capability, but often, it’s not in real-time, or it is limited to structured data that’s already in a database.  The third element is the ability to act upon the insights gained from an analysis of customer data.   Operators accomplish this via service control policies, service promotions, or packages with targeted characteristics. Operator approaches can be modular in the way they build, analyze and act. Different operators have different priorities and may choose to focus on the build part of the process, or they might emphasize the analysis of intelligence they already collect, or they might be at a point where they can readily apply policies to their operations.

Overall, LTE introduces several changes that can impact the very fundamentals of telecoms’ business management and operation.   These kinds of initiatives are best performed using proven change methods and measureable objectives. HP  experience, combined with its portfolio of technologies, solutions and services, enable operators to take what they want and grow into the holistic concept of Actionable Customer Intelligence in a modular way. HP understands the differences that operator customers have. Operators may have different systems, technologies and visions as to how they should adopt this level of customer intelligence. They might, for example, decide to deploy such solutions in-house, they might work with partners to deploy these capabilities or they might look to entrust this core capability to a managed service provider.

HP has recently worked with one European mobile operator to help launch its LTE network.  The HP solution is a good demonstration of the power of Actionable Customer Intelligence. HP has delivered solutions for subscriber data management (SDM), policy control and charging, all to enable the operator to better anticipate usage demand, improve quality control and personalize end user services.

The operator wanted to provide its customer with the best possible mobile experience and accordingly selected the HP Subscriber Data Management/ User Data Repository architecture. HP Home Subscriber Server (HSS) was also deployed to extend the HP SDM architecture, which included the HP Home Location Register (HLR) and HP Profile Manager. The outcome is a smooth, cost-effective co-existence of 3G and LTE that now positions the operator to reap the benefits of Actionable Customer Intelligence.


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About the Author
  • Alain Decartes has over three decades experience working in the Telecommunication and IT Sector. Here he has had roles in a variety of sectors including the Value Added Service, Cloud Services and Apps Store market worldwide. He has strong skills in international sales, marketing and business development. Alain is HP Software’s worldwide Industry Solution Marketing Lead for the Communications, Media and Entertainment (CME) industry and sub-segments. In the past, Alain has held senior roles with Unisys, Comverse and Prodata Belgium. He is a popular speaker, moderator or chair at worldwide industry conferences. Alain has been a Board member at the International Association for Enhanced Voice Services. He has also won a number of Industry accolades including The Messaging Industry Association Special Recognition Award. Alain received a Civil Engineer in Telecommunications degree from the Faculté Polytechnique de Mons in Belgium.
  • Sigge Andreasson is Worldwide Solutions Marketing Manager for OSS Transformation, CMS at HP. Sigge has more than 25 years of experience in the telecom and software industries, and has held a number of different positions during his career with HP, spanning telecom engineering, pre-sales and marketing. Sigge holds a Master of Science degree in Electrical Engineering from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden.
  • Marco has over 15 years’ experience working on strategy and innovation projects for major clients in the Telecom and Media Industries. He helps clients to improve their business performance through the adoption of strategically-driven technology solutions.
  • Marie-Sophie Masselot is bringing her thought leadership in business transformation in the telecom arena, thanks to her latest role as the marketing lead for the HP Solution Consulting Services practice worldwide. She is coming with a technical background as computer sciences engineer, having held different positions from software development through supply chain or sales support in telecom companies.
  • Marie-Paule Odini is a seasoned HP executive, bring over 25 years of telecom experience. She has deep expertise in both the networking and IT environments, bridging voice and data. Marie-Paule is the HP CTO for Europe, responsible for the Communication and Media Solution organization, focused on customer innovation and emerging trends. She leads the technology discussions for M2M, Analytics and Cloud. She seats on ETSI and other standard bodies. She is a frequent industry speaker and editor in professional magazines, blogs on HP Telecom IQ and tweets on CMS twitter account. Marie-Paule’s prior responsibilities include managing HP’s worldwide VoIP program, HP’s wireless LAN program, and HP’s Service Delivery program. Since joining HP in 1987, she has held positions in technical consulting, sales development and marketing in Europe and in the Americas. Those roles have focused on strategic and operational responsibility for Networking, IT and operations. Marie-Paule holds a master’s degree in Electrical Engineering from Utah State University and business education from INSEAD, Paris. Prior to joining HP, Marie-Paule spent five years with France-Telecom/Orange research and development labs, defining architecture and value-added services launch for corporate customers. She also worked with standard bodies and industry forums at that time. She enjoys skiing and outdoors in general.
  • Oded Ringer oversees HP's worldwide offering of Management Services for Telecom operators. Oded brings over 20 years of global experience in the Communications industry at companies like Alcatel-Lucent, TTI-Telecom, Ness-Technologies and Goldman-Sachs in various roles of business, management, strategy and technology
  • Richard Arthur has enjoyed the last two decades of the wild ride that has been the communications industry since deregulation. He is currently leading the Services and Solutions Marketing team in HP’s Communication and Media Solutions business unit. This role embraces transformative telecom solutions including telecom cloud services, outsourcing, solution lifecycle services, OSS/BSS and network platforms. Richard is also managing the CloudSystem Service Provider Program in HP.
  • Grace has initiated and implemented in last decade the first support contracts for large Telecom operators like France Telecom, Vodafone, BT...Today she is in charge of developping support services which are maturing with a shift from reactive break/fix models to more-proactive and enhanced offerings that add business value.