By: John Hayduk,
President, Product Management and Service Development, Tata Communications
President, Product Management and Service Development, Tata Communications
Deloitte predicts that global
revenues from 4G are likely to reach £60 billion by 2014, with more than
200 operators running networks in 75 countries. In the UK, O2 is to
launch its 4G offering, finally bringing competition
to EE. And, China Mobile is planning to spend $30.1 billion on its
network this year with about a quarter of that amount earmarked for
TD-LTE technology. Deloitte predicts that 4G subscriber numbers will
triple as compared to 2012, reaching around 200 million
globally, as customers take advantage of improved email services,
mobile video, sharper images & richer content (in light of the
latest advances in Ultra HD and 4K) as well as faster browsing. With so
much demand and a heightened level of competition, how
can mobile operators be sure to keep competitive while making 4G pay?
What does this mean to network capacity, capability and for operators?
Despite the increases in speed
and reach that these technologies bring, mobile bandwidth demand will
continue to run ahead of supply especially in areas such as video
consumption, two way video communications, and tasks
moving from a desktop/PC oriented environment to the mobile world. So
mobile operators must not only try and keep up with this demand, but
also make sure they use that bandwidth in the most profitable way. To
help address those challenges, we have been working
on deploying a Hosted Policy Exchange for mobile operators. The
exchange will be a cloud-based software solution for mobile service
providers aimed at allowing them to have more granular controls down to
the subscriber level for bandwidth consumption, application
usage, and network priority usage. By providing these capabilities to a
mobile service provider (MSP), they will have additional tools to
create new offers at the subscriber level. These tools will even allow
the MSPs to explore alternative charging models.
For example, having the content provider pay for the network usage when
that subscriber is consuming that content provider’s content, versus
having the subscriber pay for the data usage.
4G is going to go a long way at
providing a needed boost in mobile access speeds. Demand however will
continue to outpace supply, and MSPs must have more capabilities to
manage their networks when these situations arise
to guard against drops in connectivity and quality. These more dynamic
usage and pricing models will also help them to better monetise their
networks on the back of the investments levels required to roll out 4G.
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