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There's a lot of lip service given to Telco 2.0 strategies, but operators need to back up their talk with action, says analyst
October 14, 2009
LONDON -- OSS 2.0: Driving the Services Revolution -- Carriers are paying a lot of lip service to next-generation service development and delivery strategies, but under the hood there's a lack of commitment in terms of resources and implementable strategy, and that needs to change.
That was one of the key messages delivered by Heavy Reading analyst at large Caroline Chappell in her opening address to an audience of service provider executives here in London today.
"Lots of carriers are saying that their CEOs are visionaries" in terms of adapting to a Web services model that involves working more closely with third-party applications developers, "but when you drill down there's no investment and no strategy for the type of organizational change that's needed," Chappell said.
So telcos need to wake up and start, from the top down, forcing through change with strict change management and key performance indicator (KPI) metrics.
"Exploiting third-party services is the key to future telco success, and the telcos know this," Chappell said. But they need the right operational environment to take advantage of the potential, and that involves creating a back office that makes it simple for third-party partners to develop and test their applications and have access to the data and business intelligence housed within operators' systems. "Telcos have all the ingredients they need, but they're not all joined up – they need streamlined, efficient, flexible, joined-up, customer-centric processes and systems." (See OSS 2.0: Telcos Need to Expose Themselves.)
Getting to that end goal is going to be a nightmare, however. "The OSS/BSS revolution is going to be a very slow process," added Chappell, because of existing service provider silos and organizational paralysis.
That nightmare needs to be overcome, though. "The services revolution is already happening, and telcos need to partner to tap in to the innovation that's out there" because they can't do it all by themselves. "We need to see major changes in approach, architecture, organization, and procurement processes," while "success for OSS/BSS vendors depends on how far they can support these changes," added Chappell. (See Carriers: Be Brave, or Die.)
— Ray Le Maistre, International News Editor, Light Reading
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