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Wireless News Desk Telecommunications Providers Face New Availability Standards, Driven by Consumers
Providers must stay current or get left behind
By: Thomas Lesica
Jan. 11, 2009 07:00 AM
The concept of telecommunications has rapidly been redefined by the "tele-my-experience" multimedia convergence. Competitors from within and outside of the traditional telco world are marketing new, integrated service packages to an audience of subscribers, who are more receptive than ever to lower cost offerings and the attractiveness of a one-size-fits-all service provider - a "single-source of integration and service." As a result, telecommunications service providers have had to quickly adapt their legacy infrastructure to provide alternative offerings and new services in an always-available converged network in order to stay competitive. 24/7 availability is the norm for the global-mobile economy. Additionally, the "need it now" service level mandate across an endless number of style-based land and mobile devices has raised the bar for service level agreements to more stringent levels. While the challenges shouldn't be minimized, staying current is an absolute necessity in the rapidly changing, increasingly converged world of telco services. Stay current or get left behind! The New Norm The (telecommunications) world as we knew it has changed. According to a recent report from The CRTC [1], Canadian-based cable companies have emerged as major competitors providing local and cellular telephone and high-speed Internet services to residential consumers, capturing 17.9% of residential local lines, 40% of cell phone subscribers and 55% of high-speed Internet services in 2007. Amidst consolidation and convergence, the focus is rapidly shifting from technology to services, requiring new technologies and architecture considerations. Playing to Win In addition to rolling out new services and the convergence of existing products, providers are under additional pressure to keep their billing and provisioning systems up-to-date, requiring upgrades and therefore causing the downtime challenges of planned migrations - and how downtime might affect the subscriber base. And in today's increasingly competitive climate with attractive incentives to switch providers, there is no legitimate time for downtime. The customer doesn't care if downtime is due to system failure or routine maintenance; to them, downtime is downtime. The cost and risk of conversion is no longer what it used to be, and the benefits of an assumed renewable secure customer base is no longer a given. When acquiring a new customer can cost five times that of retaining an existing customer, it makes sense to implement technologies to ensure agility, responsiveness and continuous availability with the goal of a sustained positive user experience [2]. With these architectural requirements, providers must look at availability across all levels including hardware, network, application and database. As providers seek to build out their infrastructure to support round-the-clock availability for profile changes, program selections, usage and billing inquiries in a subscription self-service framework, all while keeping pace with the changing market, they must view data replication as a critical architectural component. Key questions providers should ask themselves:
It is increasingly important for today's provider to react to consumer demand in real time and shorten the go-to-market cycle in channels or retail stores. And because they require more complex and distributed server and application environments, next-generation service providers are turning to new solutions that can deliver the necessary levels of scalability and business agility to compete for today's subscribers. High Availability a High Priority Bi-directional data replication can also minimize the risk during system migrations, especially when migrating or consolidating onto new platforms to enable the provision of converged services. Keeping the new system in synch with the old system while it is still active permits application switchover and continuous availability while limiting downtime to literally seconds, even in complex and highly customized environments. This approach also gives providers the option for immediate failover to the old system after switchover if the new system is not quite ready to support users in production. Real-time heterogeneous data movement also helps to support scalability as the volume of new subscribers continues to grow. Some of the read-only activity such as reporting can be off-loaded to a secondary, lower-cost database that is continuously updated with data from the primary database. Some solutions can also offer bi-directional data replication and enable dual-active database implementations to support load balancing. Both of these implementations can free up the production system for transaction processing and allow greater horizontal scaling. Information Delivers a Competitive Edge The core asset within any infrastructure is the need to access, process and utilize information (data) to distinguish your brand from the competition, create a unique customer experience and drive a profitable business. Organizations need to value and utilize it as the "bloodline" of their IT infrastructure. Without the information - does the hardware, software and network really matter? [4]
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