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Article:
Time to Redefine Telecom
By Burak Fenercioglu
Telecommunication, according to Wikipedia, is the extension of
communication over a distance. In practice, it also recognizes that
something may be lost in the process; hence the term 'telecommunication'
covers all forms of distance and/or conversion of the original communications,
including radio, telegraphy, television, telephony, data communication
and computer networking.
While defining telecom gets more and more difficult, the profit
and ethics behind the business keep on diminishing. SBC spent $16B
to a company whose revenue stream is declining more than 10% year
over year. Verizon bought MCI, and in order to make deal lucrative,
they say they will layoff over 7,000 people.
The reason for scaling-down in telecom is that the technological
advancement has terribly been focused on communications. We all
owe a thank to nineties for that... Lots of technical people has
seen the future in Telecom and made huge amounts of mind investment
to the business. Today, we are forced to live in an overly competitive
industry where telecom is forced to be cheaper everyday. To make
matters worse, a company called Skype appeared. This global P2P
Telephony Company decided to make old fashioned definition of telecom
a commodity through its software, which allows you to make free
calls over the Internet. Other emerging companies like Net2Phone
and 8x8 also flocked customers to make cheaper (sometimes free)
calls.
Some traditional telecom companies have kept an awry eye on those
start-ups while adopting technologies like VoIP. They mostly thought
those new technologies are something to monitor and investigate.
In other words, they are disruptive. Some assumed the danger and
started firing QoS bullet, as those startups do not provide top-notch
service like incumbents do.
The fact of the matter is, none of those business plans will hold
true should they are based on making money on calls. Like Michael
Powell said, I knew it was over when I downloaded Skype...
So, can we say that telecom is a commodity?
My answer would be no, if network providers accept to change their
musty mindset. Three things are important if the full background
of this new notion is to be understood. First is, telecoms exist
to provide infrastructure. The rest needs to be handled by networking
and computing companies.
The need for voice, video and data are going hand in hand. There
is no value in them when there is no Internet. Thats why,
the second is, the new business plan should be based on the Internet
access. If telecoms want to survive, charging customers packet-based
with the guarantee of excellent QoS is the only way to go. MPLS
is their material to make this happen.
This way, optimization, the biggest concern of telecom industry,
can be solved as the packet usage can be approximated. Demoting
VoIP into an application to where it originally is can be doable
in packet-based model. This new model will also disallow fighting
against free-of-charge models and bring a fresh breath to network
providers to generate more revenue.
Third is, not only the ability of optimization but also the prioritization
and security of the traffic, if needed, will let network providers
to put extra cash to their pockets. The money behind the content
will not be their ball game.
Some may argue that there is no incremental cost of extra usage
of packets to a network so the value behind tracking the traffic
is nonsense. However, what is unseen is that it forces network providers
to upgrade their systems quicker. They can also build their cost
/profit structure easier.
Perils to the model would be the evolution span of MPLS and anti-spam
systems. MPLS, as an immature technology, is welcomed with high
expectations. Addressing all needs in such a short period of time
needs a lot of investment. The story is almost the same for anti-spam
solutions too. No customer would like to pay extra for spam as this
is adding to the traffic that a user is using. That would force
network providers to unify on an MPLS/ anti-spam model where they
and their customers can rely on.
Once this new role of incumbents is well assumed with solid technology,
then converting the so-called threat of telecom commoditization
into an opportunity is feasible.
Burak Fenercioglu is a freelance writer and working for a computer
network security company for over 4 years. His articles are about
new ideas, innovation and strategy all of which can be found at
http://burakfenerci.blogspot.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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