This annual report offers
a wealth of information on the broader global telecommunications sector and is
a valuable resource of insights, examples and trends. It provides important
insights into developments such as M2M; Big Data; Cloud Computing and the
Internet of Things. Supported by key statistics, analysis and cases studies;
this report provides a unique perspective on the key trends shaping our dynamic
telecoms industry.
Subjects covered include:
- The Top Global Trends for Telecoms and Digital Economy;
- Insights into the Impact of Over-The-Top (OTT) Services;
- Key Global Telecoms and Broadband statistics;
- Insights into the Key Global Trends of M2M, IoT and Big Data;
- Information and statistics on the Global Data Centre Market;
- Insights into Customer Experience and Tariffs;Cloud computing trends.
OTT, M2M, Big Data and the
Cloud drive the Global Telecoms Industry
The broader telecoms
environment continues to be very challenging in 2014 and looking towards 2015
there still are many technological, economic and regulatory changes that the
industry faces. The market is highly competitive and ruthless with those
operating in the telecoms, mobile, broadband, digital media and ICT industries
alike all scrambling to retain and build new revenue streams.
Every day hundreds of
thousands of new devices, as well as new people, are added to the
telecommunications networks that span the globe and there is no indication
whatsoever that the demand is going to slow down any time soon – we see it
continuing for decades to come. Yet, at the same time, many telcos and ISPs are
struggling to maintain their profitability.
This defies economic
logic. Market economics will tell you that when demand increases companies are
stimulated to build more in order to sell more; and if that doesn’t happen
other companies will happily step in to take up the slack and compete for that
extra demand. But this is not happening in the telecoms market. Operators are
dragging their feet in the building of new infrastructure – in particular new
fixed infrastructure such as FttP. In the mobile market also we see great
problems on the supply side, with network congestion and network breakdowns.
In these conditions; the
telecoms industry is again realising the importance of the customer as
increased competition and economic pressure forces the operators to attract and
retain customers. New tools and techniques are now being deployed to assist
this process, with real-time processing and data analytics being used to
improve the customer experience. Operators are also increasingly reviewing
service packages in order to entice the customer.
While data management is
becoming critical to business operations – very few companies have a good
understanding of where their data is at any given time. As well as this; the
enormous amount of data that is now being collected is placing a real strain on
infrastructure, software and services. There clearly must be more intelligent
ways to manage the data and both cloud deployments and Big Data analytics will
remain hot trends for the near future. Indeed by 2015, BuddeComm can see that
“the cloud” will be just another delivery model for a range of as-a-service
offerings.
The role of external data
centres are set to increase with organisations embracing this concept. The data
centre market includes tele-housing facilities, co-location facilities, cloud
and IT services, content hosting, connectivity and interconnection. They are
important for the emerging developments surrounding cloud computing and the
Internet of Things (M2M).
Mobile technology and
smart devices continue to lead the way and mobile broadband has in fact become
the fastest growth area for the overall telecoms sector. This in turn sees the
number of Internet users continues to increase as the penetration of both fixed
and mobile broadband becomes more accessible around the globe.
While the story for the
traditional players in the telecoms market is all about shrinkage, on the other
hand we see significant growth in many of the new subsectors of the broader ICT
market, which includes cloud computing, data centres and M2M. The big picture
reveals that many of the benefits and opportunities for telecommunications
stretch far beyond the network and apply to social and economic benefits,
healthcare, education, digital economy, businesses, new job creation and the
green economy. All of these are potential opportunities and benefits that can
be created on top of a robust global telecommunications infrastructure.
Examples of key insights:
- The telecoms sector is the largest industry in terms of employment in the world and therefore developments in this sector have far reaching impact.
- The role of external data centres is set to increase with organisations embracing this concept.
- It has become clear that Over-The-Top (OTT) is ‘the new normal’ for the telecoms industry - with the emerging all-IP networks; telecoms services are basically moving to an OTT model.
- Telecommunication infrastructure has become a commodity and it is about time we started treating it as that. The added value no longer resides in the commodity itself, but in what you can do with it; new revenues are not coming from the commodity but from the products and services that are built on top of it.
- A vertically-integrated telco models make it impossible to adequately react to market changes.
- It has now well and truly sunk in among most of the businesses experiencing challenging economic circumstances – adapt or perish. There won’t be many organisations that will not be affected by the rapid changes in technology. The key here is that by using these new technologies you can start taking costs out of your business model.Customer experience is increasingly important to service differentiation; retaining customers in this competitive and economic environment is challenging.
Spanning Over 120 pages, “Global Telecoms Industry - Key Trends - OTT, M2M, Big Data and the Cloud” report covering the Global Telecoms – A
Transforming and Challenging Sector, Global Telecoms – Big Picture Statistics,
Specific Key Trends and Developments.
See Table of contents & Purchase this
publication at: - http://mrr.cm/Znm
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