Showing posts with label Subscriber Data Management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Subscriber Data Management. Show all posts

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Tektronix Adds Virtual Probe to Access Subscriber Usage Data in Real-Time

Tektronix Communications announced the ",,addition of two new solutions, GeoSoft ™ and GeoBlade ™, to its GeoProbe® family:
    • GeoSoft is a revolutionary software-only or ‘virtual’ probe that has been developed in response to a number of carrier needs, including the move towards virtualized network environments. It supports both physical and virtual networks providing real-time and historic end-to-end session trace data, network-wide KPI visibility and enables the delivery of more innovative services, thereby improving customer experience as new services are launched.  
    • GeoBlade™ combines elastic software and modular hardware, to cope with the demands of today’s massive data traffic growth, whilst providing the opportunity to scale at speed whenever needed. GeoBlade has the ability to support data transfer speeds from 10 Gbps to 100’s of Gbps, collecting and correlating massive amounts of data in real-time.  
      The GeoBlade platform enables the operators to optimize OPEX due to the ingrained capability of handling network topology, configuration and capacity management in a programmatic and automatic fashion, and improves data integrity with a built in innovative load balancing architecture. This capability to interact in real-time with service operators’ orchestration management layer also makes the GeoBlade platform a perfect choice to operate in a NFV environment where there is a need for a high density probing infrastructure".
    See "Tektronix Communications Expands GeoProbe® Family" - here.

    Monday, April 6, 2015

    [Guest post] Virtualizing Subscriber Intelligence through Data Federation

    By Indranil Chaterjee*, VP Product Management, Marketing & Strategy,  Openwave Mobility


    Of course Subscriber Data Management is not new, but what is new is the fact that the Internet of Things is changing the very definition of what we call “a subscriber”. As we approach 2020 and the 50 billion connected devices that Ericsson and Cisco forecast, the range and sheer volume of subscriber data” is soaring and will overwhelm those operators who are unprepared. Just as we saw and are still witnessing a tsunami of video data, so too we are beginning a wave of subscriber data which can either overwhelm operators, or provide for new types of monetization as cars, CCTVs, and multiple office, retail and home devices take on the role of “subscriber” and begin uploading their subscriber data.

    Today in almost every mobile operator this diverse data is stored in multiple stand-alone silos in a fragmented state. Fragmenting data related to subscriber profiles, billing, and device details across logical and physical architectures and locations increases power consumption and network footprint while compounding network complexity and inefficiencies. This makes management, operation, and maintenance of the infrastructure much more challenging than it should be. Subscriber Data Federation (SDF), a form of Data Virtualization, eases this complexity by helping operators create a robust connection between the data and the repositories that they sit in within having to physically merge all the data into a single, central repository.

    By providing a unified view of subscriber data as well as dynamic and transactional information, mobile operators have the agility to rapidly introduce new services and establish new revenue streams by leveraging data regardless of its format or which database servers they happen to be stored on. Data federation allows applications and tools to access data from multiple repositories and storage structures, access languages and APIs. Through virtualized data architectures, mobile operators can reap the benefits of federated data while allowing all other applications to use the various data repositories directly. This way, operators can focus on what matters – improving the customer experience and increasing profitability by monetizing this subscriber information.

    Mobile operators that lack data federation are limited to building applications from specific repositories – such as those within an optimal geographic range to minimize latency – and have to work within the protocols of various data structures and storage types. Typical repositories tend to have varying capabilities. For example, certain silos are allocated more resources for ultra-fast access to information for real-time applications while others are created for non-time-sensitive access and can afford some latency. If changes are made to a certain application, operators are required to make the changes in all repositories across the board that is associated with the particular application. This can clearly become a complex and resource-intensive task that not only risks the integrity of network information but also increase time-to-market for new monetization opportunities. In the ever-evolving mobile ecosystem, time is money after all, and lacking a federated approach to data integrity cuts into the bottom line.

    While the network utopia of having a truly unified architecture is an eventual goal for most operators, not all organizations are ready to make the jump. Indeed disparate teams within an operator organization may have vested interested in managing their own repositories. They may not want to risk the integrity of the silo which they have grown to know and understand and which benefits them most by integrating it with another. From a technological standpoint, these separate teams may not want the full responsibilities of managing a unified data architecture because of the associated complexities. Fortunately, data federation provides a flexible interface between data silos that reads and writes data to existing systems, allowing for a consolidated view of all subscriber data, and allows mobile operators to transform their repositories to a unified architecture over time. Data federation is thus essentially a stepping stone to a single shared repository. By scaling the virtualization process of their repositories and engaging in a hybrid approach to federating data, operators can continue to support the dual strategy of consolidation (such as the case of Subscriber Data Management or SDM) and federation. By deploying data federation, those applications that need data federation get the benefits of federation, while other applications can continue to use their data repositories directly as required.

    The ultimate benefit of virtualizing a data ecosystem is having a flexible interface among silos to both read and write data to existing and new systems. An integrated, holistic view and methodology for storing and accessing data without having to physically unite all silos will help mobile operators to seat their existing assets and efficiently leverage all their subscriber data effectively. This empowers them to minimize the Total Cost of Ownership for their networks while maximizing profitability without disrupting existing silos and the systems that depend on them.




    _________

    *Indranil Chatterjee has over 15 years of experience in product management, marketing, strategy and software development in the mobile communications and IT industries. Prior to joining Openwave Systems, Indranil was director of product management at Syniverse Technologies, responsible for new product development for wireless applications and mobile analytics. Before joining Syniverse, he served as Director of Wireless Solutions for Alcatel-Lucent. Indranil is a member of the Board of Governors of 4G Americas.

    He holds an MBA from Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business and a bachelors degree in Mechanical Engineering from Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) – BHU, India.

    Friday, April 3, 2015

    Monday's Guest Post: What Monetization Strategies should Operators Adopt to Make the Best Use of Subscriber Data?


    A new guest post will be published on Monday - "Virtualizing Subscriber Intelligence through Data Federation" by my 36th guest, Indranil Chaterjee.

    "The Internet of Things is changing the very definition of what we call “a subscriber”.  By 2020 some pundits estimate that there could be as much as 50 billion connected devices. The range and sheer volume of subscriber data will soar and it may even overwhelm some operators who are unprepared. As everything from cars, offices, retail and home take on the role of “subscriber” and begin uploading their data – what monetization strategies should operators adopt to make the best use of subscriber data? Says Indranil.

    Stay tuned!

    Wednesday, March 4, 2015

    Openwave Mobility: Federated SDM; Encrypted Traffic Optimization

        
    Openwave Mobility recent announcements: 

    • "launched the industry’s first carrier grade subscriber data federation solution. Smart Data Federator (SDF) is a flexible interface between data silos that reads and writes data to existing systems, allowing for a consolidated view of all subscriber data. SDF uses proven technology installed in the largest deployment of a UDR in the world, with over 130 million subs and over 5 nines availability. 
      Operators can use SDF to make the connection between the data and the repository, regardless of structure and storage type. SDF is placed centrally to other data repositories, giving operators the flexibility they need to build applications across silos. SDF also creates a secure link between the applications and the data. This means that operators can secure and manage all their data repositories through SDF. By deploying SDF the applications that need data federation get the benefits of federation, while other applications can continue to use their data repositories directly as required
      ".

      See "Openwave Mobility Unveils Subscriber Data Federation Solution" - here
    • "a new solution, Secure Traffic Manager, leveraging its NFV-enabled Integra, that optimizes encrypted mobile video and audio streaming traffic. Network operators will now benefit from a comprehensive solution that optimizes not just the TCP/IP transport layer, but also the video and audio application layer for encrypted traffic to maximize network utilization. Operators can now achieve 50% data savings on encrypted HD video, delivering an improved user experience for congested networks without compromising subscriber privacy.
       
      Matt Halligan 
      [pictured], CTO, Openwave Mobility said: “Secure Traffic Manager uses patent pending heuristics to detect and manage streaming content. We enable smarter policy-aware traffic management for the carrier while retaining the highest levels of security protocols for robust encryption”.

      See "Openwave Mobility First to Optimize Encrypted Video Streaming" - here.

    Sunday, November 20, 2011

    Oracle - Advantages of Integrated Policy, Charging and Subscriber Data Management

    The slides below are taken from a presentation made by Anders Lundqvist (pictured), Master Principal Architect, Oracle (here). Oracle announced recently its PCRF product - Oracle's Policy Controller (covered here), part of its Communications Service Delivery.

    A similar concept was introduced by Openet a year ago (see "S.O.S Call from Openet" - here). "The SOS category unifies four interrelated markets that have previously been served separately, despite their interdependence on one another: Mediation, Subscriber Data Management (SDM), Policy Management and Real-Time Charging".



    Friday, July 15, 2011

    NSN Helps Reducing Irrelevant Blackberry Signaling

     
    Nice story by Vijay Sankaran (picture) from NSN about the infamous "keep alive"/signaling problem and how NSN's Service Assurance solution and configuring the SGSN while using the Subscriber Data Management solution solved it.

    Some background - "NSN: Android and Blackberry Phones Overload Networks with Signaling" - here.

    "The operator was puzzled when they started seeing a huge increase in signalling traffic, at a much faster growth rate than had been observed previously.  The growth was so rapid that it very quickly threatened network stability, so something had to be done fast ..  It turns out that, unlike other handsets, BlackBerries are pre-programmed to connect to the network and to look for email updates automatically, whether they have an active data plan provisioned for them or not.  And this makes tons of sense for those people who buy BlackBerries to stay up to date with their mobile email.  But this operator’s “BlackBerry with no data plan” offering had attracted a lot of SMS users who wanted a keyboard but weren’t planning on connecting to the internet."

    "How did the operator fix it?  Two steps:  first of all, by creating an attractive, targeted data plan for these recent BlackBerry acquirers and marketing it to these customers directly (we used our Campaign Management solution to do this).  Second, by identifying which users had BlackBerry models and configuring the SGSN (Signalling Gateway) to ignore signalling coming from those handsets if they had no associated data plan (this was done with our Subscriber Data Management solution)."

    See post - "Always sell BlackBerry with a data plan!" - here.

    Sunday, October 31, 2010

    Infonetics Research: SDM Market Size - $400M in 2010, $1.5B in 2014

     
    In a new report from Infronetics ResearchShira Levine, directing analyst for next gen OSS and policy at Infonetics Research, says that "The worldwide subscriber data management (SDM) market, including SDM software and services for both wireline and wireless networks, is forecast to grow rapidly over the next few years, hitting $1.5B in 2014"

    Based on the chart below, the market size in 2010 is expected to be around $400M.

    See "Subscriber data management market to hit $1.5 billion by 2014" - here. This repeats a previous forecast see - "Infonetics Research: SDM will integrate with Policy Servers; Reaching $1.5B Revenue by 2014" - here. "The report tracks SDM software and/or services offered by Accenture, Alcatel-Lucent, Blueslice, Bridgewater, Ericsson, Huawei, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Nokia Siemens, Oracle, Redknee, Tata, TechMahindra, and Xeround"


    Sunday, May 16, 2010

    Infonetics Research: SDM will integrate with Policy Servers; Reaching $1.5B Revenue by 2014

     
    Shira Levin of Infonetics Research published another report related to the Broadband Traffic Management space - this time on Subscriber Data Management (SDM) - software and services.

    It follows previous reports from Infonetics - on Policy Servers (see "Policy Server Market" - here) and DPI (see "The DPI Story – Introduction" - here) - all by Ms. Levin.


    Managing subscriber information goes well with DPI and policy servers, as advanced service offerings by fixed and mobile operators, such as tiered service, quota limitations and forwarding subscriber traffic to value-added services require the cooperation of all 3 elements. "As subscriber mobile data usage and quality expectations grow, the capabilities that SDM technology offers, combined with advanced policy controls and subscriber data analysis, will be essential for operators to proactively meet customer needs, manage network resources, and maintain high-quality service,” [said] Levine" 

    Full press release - here.

    In addition of the need for subscriber information consolidation (see quote below), the research also indicates that "Policy servers will be more tightly integrated into subscriber data management solutions offered by major equipment vendors and IT integrators, as evidenced by Tekelec’s recent acquisition of both Camiant and Blueslice" (see - "Camiant Information Exposed" - here). A good example of integrated SDM and policy server may be found also in Bridgewater Systems offering (here).

    While the advanced services space is now associated more with mobile services, the research shows that the market will split ~1/3 - 2/3 between fixed and mobile segments.
    "The cost of managing and maintaining multiple subscriber databases has become too much of a pain point for operators to avoid any longer, which is why the subscriber data management market is doing so well despite the economic downturn. The marketing and customer care arms of telecom operators everywhere are frustrated by the lack of a consolidated view of the subscriber, because it limits their ability to cross-sell, up-sell, create value-added services, and offer single sign-on to their customers,” notes Shira Levine"