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The Smart Techie was renamed Siliconindia India Edition starting Feb 2012 to continue the nearly two decade track record of excellence of our US edition.

Back Office Systems Take Center Stage in Driving Consumer Experience

Neeraj Vyas
Sunday, August 1, 2010
Neeraj Vyas
It is a game where hundreds of billions of dollars are table stakes. The question is who owns customer loyalty and mindshare and thus is the driver of consumer adoption? Increasingly, in this game, the operators have been marginalized and are facing the real danger of being relegated to the sidelines and reduced to merely a data pipe while the consumer mindshare and loyalty gets split between the device and the content providers.

Over the last couple of years, operators have struggled to reinvent themselves and move up the value chain to ensure customer loyalty as well as drive additional revenue. To this effect, they have realized that one of the most important pieces of the ‘consumer experience’ puzzle is the Operations and Billing Support Systems (OSS and BSS). It is these systems that are literally being reinvented to offer customers entirely new kinds of services, from VPN and IPTV to VoIP, rich multimedia content, and more. Service providers need to, and actually are, making huge investments into upgrading to cutting edge OSS and BSS systems.

For the consumers; this translates into pure bliss with respect to new services being available while, at the same time, the quality of experience (QoE) for their existing services is taken to a whole new level. Especially with the 3G coming into play in well as managing consumer experience through innovative solutions.

In India there are numerous possibilities that can be realized for which OSS and BSS will be critical. For instance, it could be possible in the near future for the customer to start and stop VAS services at will and be accurately billed for them on a pro-rated basis. This is a far cry from a couple of years ago when activating a specific service meant that a consumer had to either wait for a new billing cycle to begin or pay for the entire month even if the service was used only for a few days. One of the more interesting services possible with the newer systems is seamlessly transferring content across screens so that if a user is watching a cricket match and needs to step out, the feed simply switches to displaying it on their phone as they move out of the house and then shows up on an in-car entertainment system as the user drives off. Another possibility could be seamlessly transferring calls from a mobile phone to a landline as the user walks into their home or office, thus negating any network reception issues.

As OSS and BSS systems become better integrated, customers can also expect better troubleshooting of their problems. Earlier it took a very long time to pull data across various systems while the customer waited without service (often on phone listening to endless ‘on-hold’ music). As these systems get integrated better, not only can service providers quickly trouble shoot reported problems but actively monitor the systems to anticipate and fix them before the customer even realizes that a problem exists. Solutions are evolving to monitor services from the phone and other handheld devices. QoS focuses on the service provider’s ability to provide service, but management of the actual experience offers a new level of identifying service problems, from issues related to coverage at a particular location to problems with a particular vendor phone to general or specific application or service issues for how a service is received by the user. These advances will greatly assist operators in immediate identification of QoE concerns and allow them to rapidly address the problems without the subscriber needing to complain.


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