Telecom Costs
Telecom Costs
Chapter 1
Introduction to
Telecommunications
Cost Management
Nothing comes amiss, so money comes withal.
William Shakespeare, Taming of the Shrew
The general steps above are influenced by many trends in industry and
the workforce. Examples include:
Increasing importance of telecommunications in general. Reliance on communications for services continues to increase rapidly. From telecommuting
to Web-based procurement, the importance of electronic communications
continues to monotonically increase.
Continuing penetration of the Internet as a dominant force in the telecommunications industry.
Proliferation of dozens of new technologies, including wireless services.
Increasing levels of technical standardization counterbalanced by high
levels of complexity in the telecom architecture (at the provider and
customer level).
Change in the marketplace from supply-driven (build it and they will
come) to a more conservative market-driven environment (if you are
willing to buy it, we will build it).
Coexistence of old technologies (copper connecting the customer at the
last mile) with many new ones.
Old technologies that work will remain in the telecom infrastructure for
decades.
Continuing maturity of the outsourcing model.
Exhibit 1.
Client Issue/Need
Maverick spending on
telecom services/
equipment
No easy bill-back to
clients customers (e.g.,
consulting)
No centralized source for
telecom resources or
information
Inappropriate solutions/
services for given
consumption patterns
Products/Features
from Outsourcer
Expense/consumption
tracking at all levels;
centralized control over
orders
Cost tracking per client at
employee level
Resource library with
telecom contacts, news,
information
Web-based monitoring of
solutions; automatic RFQ
generation
Overstaffed telecom
management
departments
Most comprehensive,
online telecom
management tool
Customized billing
reports; easy-to-use
software interface
Value to Client
Exhibit 2.
Area of Concern
Primary Organization
CFO/CIO
CEO/Business units
CIO/Facility group (voice services)
CIO/Facility group
CIO
CIO
CIO/Business units
How can recurring circuit costs be reduced? What processes and tools will
sustain the reduction while maintaining adequate service levels? Specifically, how are the following best controlled?
Circuits billed for but not used
Circuits with disconnect ordered but still billed for
Circuits underutilized and billed for
Circuit consolidation/restructuring
Architectural changes
How can good (best) practices be best implemented?
How can the network be structured to best match current and future
business needs?
Emerging technologies:
Are there new technologies that improve service levels or reduce costs?
Is the technology scalable, and is it flexible enough to adapt to changes
in the business?
Are new technologies important?
Network convergence:
Is the network design optimized for changing business needs?
When will capacity be reached on the network? Will bottlenecks appear
suddenly, hampering business activities?
Are converged networks a consideration?
Customized networks:
Can the network be tailored to improve service to the users/customers?
What hardware/software is available to help?
Will business plans force a change in direction?
Should any of the following tools be considered?
Workflow processing for the provisioning processes
Automatic verification of network services inventory and pricing
A complete end-to-end process that ensures revenue and expense
stream matching and reconciliation
An organization focused on value-added analysis rather than scorekeeping
Electronic invoice feeds from suppliers for network services
A central repository for all network service disputes and payments
Integrated network inventory management, accounts payable, billing,
and planning systems
Visibility to all network costs within the organization
Carrier Challenges
Although the focus of the book is cost reduction for the telecommunications
consumer rather than revenue enhancement for the provider, it is important
to understand the risks and issues faced by the carriers. Some of the more
important issues include:
IP packet services deployment and operational support
Network convergence (voice, data, and video)
Competition and deregulation in the local loop (the last mile, e.g.,
wireless/cable)
Advent of the super or mega carrier
Infrastructure rebuilds to support new broadband access technologies (e.g.,
xDSL, satellite)
Carrier cost containment efforts
An antiquated revenue model, characterized by most of the cash coming
from voice (slow growth) while much of the buildout (cost to carrier) is
for data
have started to divest certain business units such as wireless, broadband, and
long-distance services.
Carriers must address at least four key drivers of change to enable a
successful transition to take place:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Also thrown into the mix are segmentation changes and market dynamics.
For example, now carriers are competing as niche players in areas such as:
Summary
Telecommunications costs can be reduced in virtually every organization.
Although changes in technology, markets, carrier issues, demand, and
employee requirements seem to escalate continually, there are standard solution sets that can help. By understanding the tools whether technical,
procedural, negotiations, or simply throwing it over the fence via
outsourcing the organization can make an informed, best-fit decision.