Building broader functions
The increasing demand for platform-wide solution providers is pushing telcos to go beyond pure connectivity.
Some of these solutions are being developed and offered by the telcos while others are provided by outside, specialized service firms with the solutions integrated into the telcos’ platforms. This also requires a change in the OSS/BSS stack as the new systems need to be interoperable, agile and scalable. This shift is essential as the revenue growth through 5G will be directly related to the transformation of OSS/BSS systems.
Telcos are also aggressively transforming their internal digital structures; processes are getting digitized through apps or various other digital touch points. Some of the big organizations are transforming their entire IT system with layered architecture where all lifecycle processes are automated in the backend layer; the middle layer is driven by virtualization with limited human processing; and the front-end enables seamless provisioning of services.
Telcos expect 5G requirement to come from enterprises that increasingly require AR/VR for various functions, smart factory solutions, and private dedicated network solutions, among other things.
Apart from the jump in demand, the investment required to provide 5G services makes it imperative for telcos to broaden their enterprise client business. Where retail customers used to drive fortunes, future revenue growth and profits will increasingly come from enterprise solutions.
New tools of trade
To achieve sustained outperformance telcos should work towards creating an enterprise-agile operating model, digital first approach in building new businesses and customer experience and a lighter IT stack which is fully cloud native.
Telcos are not only moving internal functions and OSS/BSS stack on the cloud – the shift was initially tentative because of privacy and data protection functions – but are increasingly looking at digitalization and virtualization and even ERP on the cloud. Over the next few years, all new services are likely to be offered only via the cloud.
Analytics is becoming the lifeblood for telcos with some providers setting up entire departments to measure and offer analytic solutions to organizations that need to segment customers, understand customer preferences and behaviour, as well as drive internal efficiencies in employee and retail productivity and network and partner performances. Analytics tools also help make network capex more predictive than reactive and in generating revenue.
The future of the communications industry lies in embracing partnerships to create a marketplace that different entrepreneur and businesses can join, to gain the connectivity and resources that the CSPs can make available to them.
Security services are expected to be another major segment of business for telcos. With 5G, organizations will have more data to handle, and thus an increased need to strengthen privacy frameworks. As telcos invest heavily in their own security requirements like encryption, managing consumer data, and avoiding thefts, they are also beginning to offer these and other security services to clients.
Maintaining security has never been more challenging. Cyber threats have moved from attacks on individual institutions to attacks on the networks at large and the shift towards 5G is only accelerating the convergence of IT and operational technology (OT) thus introducing new vulnerabilities.
5G presents an exciting open-source environment that no longer depends solely on the leading original equipment manufacturer (OEM) and vendor giants of the technology industry. There is a beneficial influx of other smaller companies who are deploying new technology in order to enhance the operating environment. However, it can also be an incredibly complex environment to navigate wherein the risks related to supply chain, legacy technologies, customer data and business processes and skill shortage must be proactively addressed to ensure a secure deployment. Further the main usage of 5G will also extend to private campus networks outside telco environment, thus accentuating the need to further secure the extended networks.
5G also requires telcos to revamp their network functionality. While software-defined networking (SDN) will help manage features from a centralized location, network functions virtualization (NFV) and cloud native platforms (CNF) will replace network hardware with software that can be scaled to meet 5G demands. Use of network slicing technology will increase as it divides a single physical network into multiple virtual networks enabling operators to deliver services based on each customer’s needs.
With 5G, the telecom sector will witness a need to expand into new capabilities and functionalities, which will then further propel customer needs and technological revolution that will continue into the 6G era when it comes.
The next wave of change in the telecom sector will be shaped by today’s leaders who can recognize the magnitude of change, act fast and with conviction to become the catalysts of the future.
Co-authored by Kunal Bhatia, Partner Cybersecurity, EY India.
(The article first appeared on ETCIO on 25 August 2022.)