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Reader Forum: 3 ways telcos use big data to amplify customer experience

Datameer provides tips on how telecom operators can take advantage of big data to boost customer experience

Data is king. Companies like Google and Facebook operate on this basis and virtually every business decision stems from what data says about their customers and how they interact with their products and services.

Leveraging data to win against competitors and skyrocket revenues should not just be reserved for the Google’s of the world. Telecommunications companies generate enormous amounts of data each year – both structured and unstructured – on customer behaviors, preferences, payment histories, consumption levels, user patterns, customer experiences and more. And with analytics this data is a gold mine for those who know how to monetize it.

Telco’s data gold rush

Telecom service providers previously only had access to aggregated, metered data and even when data types exploded, they lacked the technology to harness it and find meaningful insights into valuable customer usage patterns. Today, data is generated from each customer touch point – calls, text messages, roaming, video downloads, mobile commerce, custom relationship management systems, service calls and so on. Analyzing, this data has the potential to differentiate services, boost customer experiences and, ultimately, increase revenue.

A recent McKinsey & Company study showed data-driven companies have a 50% chance of having sales well above competitors compared to customer analytics laggards. And according to McKinsey & Company benchmarking research, “high-margin telecommunication companies tend to outperform their peers when it comes to data mining and otherwise gaining insights from collected customer information.”

3 ways to mine big data for better customer experiences

Already we’re seeing telecom providers combine and analyze to better serve their customer base. In fact, big data analytics company, Guavus, released the findings of a global survey pointing to proactive customer care as the biggest single driver of big data analytics uptake among telcos.

Here are three examples of what can be achieved:

Improved customer retention
For every customer who complains, even more remain silent. As such, customer feedback is gold and with data analytics companies can make use of it and exploit it. Telcos can combine call center information, charging data records and CRM data to understand the biggest customer pain points. By analyzing customer complaints related to networks issues, such as dropped calls and slow connections, and correlating it with CRM data to see which customers have left, companies can better understand which network problems have the most impact on their customers. Armed with this information customer service teams can prioritize addressing hot issues and reduce churn.

Proactive customer care and reduced truck rolls
Analyzing big data can reduce unnecessary in-person appointments, service calls or truck rolls – which can cost several hundred dollars each – by resolving customer issues on the first call. To do this companies must be able to accurately predict which kinds of customer issues tend to result in the unnecessary truck rolls and develop a system for handling them more effectively through their call centers. With data analytics and visualizations, companies can generate custom reporting, interactive “what-if” scenarios and visualizations complete with clustering and a geographic heat map for network traffic. This allows providers to see where issues may arise and allocate resources accordingly.

Consistent service experiences with accurate demand forecasts
As mobile broadband usage, high-definition television consumption, over-the-top and other services consume more network bandwidth, it’s more important than ever to accurately plan for network capacity. To determine exactly where to lay the new infrastructure it is almost mandatory to take a data-driven approach by identifying concurrency in customer data regarding player sessions, peak usage times and dates, and then clustering this data to identify usage patterns. These patterns would help to forecast future growth and network demands. By analyzing terabytes of session data across a vast carrier network and generating a predictive trend analysis of customer video viewing behavior patterns, it is possible to have a new level of insight into customer behavior trends, which improves the ability to forecast for future demand and plan network investments.

Data analytics gives companies a whole new level of insight into customer behavior trends. More importantly, it opens up endless opportunities to improve customer experiences and keep customers happy.

Editor’s Note: In an attempt to broaden our interaction with our readers we have created this Reader Forum for those with something meaningful to say to the wireless industry. We want to keep this as open as possible, but we maintain some editorial control to keep it free of commercials or attacks. Please send along submissions for this section to our editors at: dmeyer@rcrwireless.com.

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