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Reader Forum: Giving your network a voice – the power of analytics

Editor’s Note: Welcome to our weekly Reader Forum section. In an attempt to broaden our interaction with our readers we have created this 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: [email protected].

In today’s mobile world, the occasional dropped call or slow-loading app are bound to happen, but users are growing less tolerant of such “hiccups” and are more demanding of consistent mobile performance. In order to retain customers, mobile operators are expected to provide a great customer experience, even though many device- and app-related issues are beyond their control.

In addition to daily service assurance and operational challenges, mobile operators are faced with other problems. For starters, the pace of technical change, coupled with an unprecedented demand for bandwidth, wreaks havoc on infrastructure planning activities. To further complicate matters, competition is no longer limited to other carriers. Over-the-top apps are draining revenues. And many consumers are choosing providers based on devices or other factors that have nothing to do network quality.

Fortunately, a mobile operator’s best asset – their network – is the key to many of these issues. Embedded in the traffic it carries is crucial intelligence that companies can leverage to make informed decisions across the organization. Included in these network data streams is information pertaining to:

–Devices: Different devices require differing amounts of bandwidth when they connect and maintain communications with the network. All of that device and signaling information is captured in each mobile session.

–Applications: Not only do networks know which apps customers are using, they also track how well they perform and how much bandwidth they consume.

–Geography/mobility management: Customers utilize many network types, elements, service delivery methods and connections as they move between locations and/or use different applications.

–Quality of service: Networks house a tremendous amount of information on requested, negotiated and delivered service quality for every mobile session.

Mobile networks generate tons of data – but what would they tell operators if they had a voice?

1. How specific devices, apps and customer behaviors Impact customer experience: Each element in a mobile communication can affect the individual experience. Customer behavior, applications, services, physical location and specific devices all produce valuable data. But all devices are not created equal. For example, iPhone 4S users, with new features such as iCloud and the intelligent personal assistant Siri, consume about twice as much data as those with an iPhone 4. An in-depth understanding of the many ways these factors combine and consume resources allows operators to optimize investment and enrich customer experience in both the short and long term.

2. Where the next failure will occur: Deteriorating conditions indicate a potential problem before it fully manifests itself. Alerting the right people and providing them with intelligence in real-time on where the problem is occurring enables operators to preempt issues before they can impact the customer experience.

3. How quality fluctuates: Network operators are accountable to their customers for the QoS they provide – whether they serve consumers, businesses or other providers. Understanding quality across today’s complex mobile environment is extremely important for more stringent control over profits, partner contracts and customer relationships. It also enables companies to leverage LTE’s guaranteed QoS capabilities to implement tiered pricing plans or set service levels based on a variety of parameters.

4. Which infrastructure investment will have the greatest impact on customer experience: Given the complexity of today’s mobile networks, the old practice of overprovisioning and waiting for demand to reach capacity is obsolete. Operators need a complete understanding of chokepoints – whether they are due to heavy demand for video, under-subscribed HSS servers or tower access – to pinpoint investments and effectively enrich the mobile experience.

5. The impact of OTT usage on traditional business models: Quantifying consumer OTT app usage, including how much bandwidth these apps drain, allows operators to understand the scale – and the ramifications – of evolving customer behaviors. This type of intelligence can help operators design new apps, business models and strategies for thriving in today’s complex, evolving market.

Transforming endless streams of data into actionable information for solving complex issues can seem daunting. To get started, operators need to collect – and intelligently correlate – data on each mobile transaction from end-to-end. This requires a solution capable of tracking events as they traverse the complex mobile environment, regardless of network protocol or service delivery method. It also must collect information from the network and application layers and properly correlate the user and control plane data streams.

This information will arm mobile operators with a solid foundation for network analytics. With it, they can trend, enrich and manipulate multiple data points and KPIs to reveal the intelligence they need to meet today’s difficult challenges. As network analytics become an integral part of operators’ decision-making processes, they will reveal business-changing answers to questions they didn’t even know they had.

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