The Growing Importance of UCaaS as hybrid work becomes the norm

The Future of Work is Now.

With the rise of the hybrid workplace, UCaaS is becoming a must-have technology for every organization across any business. The business case for UCaaS isn’t new and buisnessess around the world are implementing this technology to encrypt communications, improve remote work, and streamline communications. Research shows that the global UCaaS market is growing and projected to reach USD 70 billion by 2028.

The new, hybrid workplace is all about flexibility. As VUCA continues to disrupt the world, organizations look toward building more operational resilience and ensuring nothing impacts business continuity.

UCaaS helps organizations to manage collaboration among employees, anywhere, anytime, over the cloud. It is a cost-effective solution for organizations across various industries and is well-suited to meet the latest demands of consumers.

UCaaS solutions are location-agnostic and help organizations deliver a consistent working experience, irrespective of whether employees are in the office, on the go, or the couch.

UCaaS is now a non-negotiable technology in the hybrid workplace and offers the following benefits:

Enable collaboration

Smooth collaboration is perhaps one of the clearest advantages delivered by UCaaS. UCaaS enables your workforce to receive the same seamless unified communication experience whether they are in the office or working remotely from a different location.

Unlike traditional premise-based communications, UCaaS allows employees to log in from anywhere on their preferred desktop or mobile device and get to work.

Since UCaaS is a centralized single platform, employees can access all communication and collaboration tools in one place. They do not need to switch through multiple applications to get work done. The solution saves time and improves productivity overall.

Enhance employee engagement

UCaaS is location-neutral and hosted on a cloud-based infrastructure, delivering greater uptime. UCaaS solutions provide employees access to real-time communications via iOS and Android devices, no matter where or how they work.

It simplifies the communication process and acts as a central hub for all interactions. It enables audio calls, video conferences, and file sharing.

Employees can easily navigate conversations with colleagues and customers irrespective of the location they are operating from. It enables real-time participation and allows those in remote locations to collaborate and contribute seamlessly with their colleagues.

UCaaS makes employee onboarding experiences more consistent, thus making it a valuable driver for employee engagement.

Employees get to participate in global projects, enjoy immersive work experiences, and feel included, despite working remotely.

Simplify IT management

Legacy communications create a massive load for IT departments. Keeping these systems up-to-date is effort-intensive, complex, and time-consuming. The complexity increases even more to accommodate the needs of the hybrid workforce. Executing upgrades in such systems become complicated and needs greater planning. There is also downtime to consider.

Legacy systems may also need a hardware upgrade to meet the rising demands of increased computing prowess. These upgrades can be expensive and managing disparate parts of multiple systems can become extremely complicated. IT teams also have to ensure that employees get access to new features and tools introduced in the ecosystem to grow fast.

UCaaS simplifies the systems updates for legacy infrastructures, making them seamless, automated, and fast. It frees up IT resources for high-value work and offers great scalability. Organizations can respond to market demands and add resources easily without pressuring IT teams.

Improve security

As the security perimeter of the enterprise blurs with the rise of hybrid work and the explosion of edge devices, organizations need to adopt new tools and strategies to maintain a robust security structure. UCaaS improves security posture, minimizes risks, and drives business continuity as solutions. It is hosted on off-site data centres and have built-in redundancies.

These solutions provide secure voice and data encryption and ensure that the data is secure when accessed from different locations. Improved access management and zero-trust security architecture are enabled with UCaaS to meet the security needs of the new hybrid workplaces.

However, not all UCaaS solutions are created equal. Reports show that between 50% and 75% of all help desk requests are related to a UC&C issue. Another survey revealed that 66% of respondents were moderately or extremely concerned that UC&C-related challenges could temporarily hinder productivity within their organization.

Organizations need to look for UCaaS vendors who furnish good quality-of-service (QoS) policies to drive real-time visibility to eliminate these challenges. Along with this, vendors need to deliver a comprehensive solution that allows organizations to reduce and consolidate the number of UCaaS platforms being used. UCaaS offers a unified view, greater visibility, and deep analytics to enhance decision-making capabilities and help drive better organizational outcomes. Additionally, they present quality communications services – from traditional UC&C and VoIP to video, business data applications, and more, on one platform.

We are happy to announce that we have recently bagged the Best Unified Communication Online Provider of the Year at the prestigious CC- Global Awards 2022. Let’s connect to see how we can be your partners for success by enabling your UCaaS journey. The carrier community believes in our solutions and you will know why when we connect!

 

The New Age of Consent-Based Marketing

In recent times, industry regulations like GDPR and CCPA have highlighted the importance of data privacy for individual customers. To this effect, even Google has moved its deadline for stopping third-party cookies to 2023. Since 2014, Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, has also emphasised the importance of consumer privacy.

As data privacy regulations transform the consumer market, digital advertisers are looking at innovative ways to engage with potential customers. Although it is not new, permission or consent-based marketing is becoming a more relevant tool today. Seth Godin, author of the book “Permission Marketing,” says this form of marketing “turns strangers into friends and friends into loyal customers.”

A consent-based marketing structure is a win-win arrangement for both consumers and marketers. For instance, marketers now have a clear understanding of what their consumers pay to buy (based on the data shared by them).

But what exactly is consent marketing, and why is it important? Let’s delve deeper into this.

What is Consent Marketing?

Consent-based marketing is defined as the practice of companies taking prior consent from the consumer before contacting them with business offers. The primary objective is that only “active” users who have expressed interest in the brand should be added to the sales funnel.

For consumers, this form of marketing means they are in control of their data. On the other end, marketers can shift from data quantity to data quality. Effectively, this drives their reliance on zero-party data and reduces dependence on third-party data.

Consent marketing works through a series of organized steps, namely:

  1. Capturing the customer’s consent by asking for their contact information.
  2. Documenting the consumer consent for legal compliance. For example, the “Telephone Consumer Protection Act” for Telecom companies.
  3. Qualifying the collected consumer data for sales leads or prospects.
  4. Filtering out the fraudulent and duplicate sales leads.
  5. Contacting qualified consumers through telephone or email marketing.

With the right technology platform, consent marketing is a valuable marketing tool to win more consumers. Next, let’s discuss why consent marketing is important to business enterprises.

Why Does Consent Marketing Matter?

Why is consent-based marketing important in the age of digital privacy? Here are a few reasons:

1. GDPR Violations

Consent marketing is essential to avoid any GDPR-related violations. Over the last few years, GDPR fines have risen astronomically as consumers are more sensitive about sharing their personal information. Apart from technology companies, telecom companies are more prone to data privacy violations.

In the year 2020, there were 69 privacy-related fines applied to the telecom sector. In a recent case, Vodafone was fined around $9.7 million in Spain, mostly for violating GDPR norms.

2. Customer Consent in Email and Telephone Marketing

Even without the GDPR restrictions, consent marketing is essential when businesses approach consumers through email marketing or on the telephone. Companies can benefit by knowing the specific users who have signed up for their business.

Customer consent is regarded as the user “subscribing” to receiving communications from the brand. What’s more, consumers always have the option to “unsubscribe” or “sign out” from receiving business calls and emails.

3. Customer Experience (CX)

In the age of consumer protection, customers do feel overwhelmed by the volume of business emails and calls they receive daily. Personalised messages or calls are the way forward to enhance their CX. Through consent marketing, businesses can personalise their marketing message based on the user’s shared data.

Also Read: Why it’s Time for Telecom Companies to Modernise their Tech Strategy

How can Consent Management Platforms help telecom companies to achieve compliance? Let’s discuss that next.

How Consent Management Platforms Can Help Telecom Companies

As Telecom companies continue to face GDPR-related penalties, they need an efficient mode of obtaining customer consent. But how should telecom companies implement consent management to streamline the process? Here are a few of the best practices:

  • Ensure that you include the consent-related details (exactly for what the user’s permission is being sought).
  • Be transparent with customers about how their collected data will be used and why it is needed.
  • Make it simpler for consenting customers to withdraw their consent anytime.
  • Enable consumers to use business services even without providing their consent.

With a Consent Management Platform (or CMP), companies can easily implement these best practices. The CMP is an efficient solution that enables business enterprises to collect and manage customer information in line with compliance requirements. How does a CMP benefit telecom companies?

  • Simplifies the process of obtaining customer consent with precise information.
  • Enables customers to withdraw their consent whenever they want to.
  • Helps the company keep track of their potential customers who have given consent (or not).
  • Helps distribute and manage customer consent across different marketing channels, including telephone and emails.
  • Provides transparency to the entire consent-related process, thus ensuring compliance with industry regulations.
Conclusion

To avoid penalties for GDPR-related violations, business enterprises (including telecom companies) must communicate with their customers and seek their consent or permission. A Consent Management Platform is the best automation tool available to enable consent-based marketing for customer-facing companies.

As the enterprise “arm” of Globe Teleservices, CERF provides enterprise-grade products that can enhance data privacy and customer experience. With our Consentica consent management platform, our customers can leverage a centralised platform to collect, manage and document the user’s consent following regulations like GDPR, TCCCPR, and CCPA.

With CERF solutions, telecom companies can deliver efficient telephone-based consent marketing to their frontline customers. If you need professional help with consent marketing, we can help. Get in touch with us.

 

5 Sectors in Africa Seeing a Telecom-Led Transformation

Africa is on the cusp of a significant telecom-led transformation. International telecom and technology companies are leveraging increased investments in the continent to be a part of the coming growth.

To build improved technology and telecommunication services in Sub-Saharan Africa, South Africa-based Solis Investments Group recently announced its strategic partnership with Globe Teleservices.

Backed by a $500 million investment from a US-based development finance corporation, Kenya-based Safaricom is building a new mobile network in Ethiopia.

From 2021, he African Telecom sector is recording significant revenues. Major players like Vodacom, MTN, and Safaricom have reported revenues of up to $6 billion. To facilitate digital payments and transactions, the Central Bank of Nigeria has recently launched its digital currency, eNaira.

Coming back to the technology sector, Liquid Telecom, Africa’s largest Internet and cloud computing company, recently closed a $620 million bond sale. This deal will provide cost-effective broadband fibre connection to over 2.7 million people in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Buoyed by the growth of telecom, let us look at the five most influential industry sectors in Africa.

5 Industry Sectors Influenced by Telecom-Led Transformation

Africa is economically the fastest-growing continent after Asia. The growth of the middle-class community has been a prime driver of economic growth in the region. Adding to that is the sheer dynamism of the emerging technology and startup ecosystem that is pushing the boundaries of innovation. The telecommunication sector stands at the centre of this blooming ecosystem by enabling better mobile phone connectivity across the region.

As compared to a global average of 3%, the mobile phone market in Sub-Saharan Africa is projected to grow by 4.6% by 2025.

Along those lines, here are five industry sectors in Africa that are influenced the most by the Telecom revolution:

1. Banking & Finance

The telecom revolution in Africa is enabling the digitalization of cash and payments and banking across the region’s largely unbanked (or underbanked) population. Mobile Money solutions are exploding and adoption is surging. So much so, that these players are being seen at the forefront of worldwide innovation in the space. Traditional financial services and banking are also changing.

ChiedzaMadzima of Fitch Solutions emphasizes that international investments into resources like bonds and loans in Africa will have a “positive impact” in the long-term future. The invested capital is being utilized towards physical infrastructure, thus improving the bankability of such projects.

U.S-based Africell has secured a $105 million loan facility from Gemcorp. The company will invest a significant part of the acquired capital into building a mobile network in Angola, which is looking to boost its fintech industry sector.

2. Education

Education is another industry sector that communication technology can impact by reducing overall illiteracy rates in Africa. A recent UNESCO report highlighted Sub-Saharan Africa as the region with the highest rate of education exclusion. Over one-fifth of the children between the ages of 6-11 are out of the formal school system.

As more schools closed worldwide (including in Africa) during the pandemic, technology boosted online learning for students in their homes.

Education ministries are now working with telecom operators to avoid charging any data tariffs for online learning websites. For example, South Africa had already implemented a “Zero rating” to provide free access to online learning material.

For inclusive education, the UNESCO report highlighted the following 3-step process:

  1. Identify technology innovations for educational systems with maximum potential.
  2. Test the best innovations with a specific context.
  3. Adapt and scale them for the best results.
3. Mobile Payments

Nearly 60% of online traffic in the African continent comes from mobile phones. Mobile phones are used more for data-based applications like online chats, video content, and online banking than for voice. As mobile usage continues to increase, Africa is witnessing a shift towards mobile-based payments.

A Citi Group research found that three African countries, namely Ghana, Tanzania, and Uganda, are among the ten countries to adopt mobile payments. Egypt and Nigeria, at that time, were two more countries developing their mobile money solutions.

The global pandemic has largely contributed to the emergence of mobile payments in this region. Leading mobile operators are also racing to launch their mobile payment platforms. For instance, Airtel Nigeria CEO Segun Ogunsanya talked about his company’s plans to venture into the mobile money market.

Read More: Why It’s Time for Telecom Companies to Modernize their Tech Strategy.

4. Technology Startups

Thanks to its young workforce, Africa is now the host to many startup companies in the technology space. Technology startup financing is expected to reach a value of $90 billion by 2030. The tech revolution is Africa’s response to mounting challenges like inequalities, climate change, food production, education, and healthcare.

However, tech entrepreneurs & investors continue to face structural reform barriers within Africa. This includes a fragmented market of over 54 countries, complex government regulations, and a lack of digital skills. But industry leaders need a simplified regulatory framework to ensure compliance, which can boost the startup environment. As a result, to boost its digital transformation, African governments must work together to connect their economies.

5. Cryptocurrencies

In addition to mobile payments and startups, Africa’s younger population is driving the growth of digital currencies or cryptocurrencies. As compared to other developing economies, cryptocurrency is still at a nascent stage in Africa. However, a Foresight Africa report states that Africa is the third-fastest growing market for cryptocurrencies.

Similarly, the  2021 Geography of Cryptocurrency report states that cryptocurrency asset volume grew by $105.6 billion in Africa between July 2020 to June 2021. That represents a percentage increase of 1200%.

Going ahead, cryptocurrencies can play a pivotal role in foreign remittances and banking services. Remittance inflows represent the “lifeline” for many poor African families. However, remittance fees are among the highest in Africa. Cryptocurrencies can potentially benefit Africans by eliminating any intermediaries.

Conclusion

According to a UN prediction, over 50% of the global population growth by 2050 will happen in Africa. As a result, the development of the telecom sector will assuredly boost foreign investments and enable the continent to achieve digital transformation.

With its global presence, Globe Teleservices provides hassle-free and cost-efficient solutions for its Telecom customers. We help in developing a range of mobility solutions and cloud services.

Moreover, we can help you pursue your digital transformation journey. Get in touch with us today.

 

How the Evolving Threat Scenario Has Made MFA Necessary

The focus on security is rising as businesses digitally transform, the world of work globally evolves, and collaboration across borders proliferates to drive innovation.

Business employees today are no longer operating on their networks when accessing data or applications. Therefore, there’s a growing concern about data breaches and ransomware — mandating data and privacy compliance regulations to standardize robust security policies.

To that end, enabling Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) has become non-negotiable to increase protection against cyber-attacks, phishing, data breaches, etc.

The ABC of MFA

The digital landscape encourages consumers to use the web and mobile applications to access various services. Businesses, as such, are at a greater liability to store data securely and ensure that cybercriminals don’t exploit user login to gain entry into critical systems.

Regrettably, password or username-based authentication is now unreliable and unwieldy. Such authentication systems make it difficult for users to remember and manage passwords across multiple accounts — precisely why they start repeating them.

Passwords lacking complexity further weaken security and make it easy for malicious elements to acquire data and information using malware, hacking, and phishing. Mobile number frauds, for example, can have devastating effects. Scammers can access bank accounts, social media, emails, and more, causing havoc. As more enterprise users employ mobile and personal devices, the data across enterprise networks needs to be secured.

Therefore, MFA authentication becomes essential as a part of a security strategy since it employs multiple methods to affirm identity and authority. For businesses offering telecom services, including virtual networks of any size, implementing MFA assures data and information security.

Phone-based authentication has become predominant since the rise of smartphones, and as such, global lawmakers are treating MFA more like a necessity. Australia, for example, is looking at making MFA mandatory for telcos. In Australia, number porting now needs mobile companies to verify users and subscribers in several different ways to identify fraud and discourage fraudsters who scam mobile phone users.

Two-factor authentication is one of the most common forms of MFA. While 2-FA is better than simple passwords, telcos now also need to enable hardware and software authentication tokens generated with a mobile app. For this, telecom operators have to ensure that they are employing a platform that allows them to enable MFA easily while giving them proactive insights into any anomaly that could signal a potential breach.

Employing an MFA platform that helps users and future-proofs businesses is emerging as a strategic priority — this explains its soaring market value (at over 10% CAGR).

However, this platform must deliver comprehensive services that enable end-to-end multi-factor authentication. This includes token generation, token delivery, and token authentication.

Deliver a Multi-Layered Protection Framework

The MFA platform has to deliver a multi-layered protection framework that verifies the user and identifies the transaction identities of the user.

It must also employ a zero-trust framework since the security perimeters have now blurred with rising smartphone proliferation. A zero-trust framework enables agility, visibility, and greater control and makes it easier to improve the security stand by helping businesses stay ahead of the threats curve.

Enable Token-Based Authentication

MFA platforms must allow businesses to enable token-based authentication and simplify the authentication process. Token-based authentication sends a request to the server employing a username and a password. The server validates this input based on the values registered in the credential database. Once confirmed, the server responds with a token.

An MFA platform must allow businesses to generate time-based tokens to prevent misuse. Besides, it is essential for the token length and expiry time to be configurable according to the needs of the business.

Allow Multi-Channel Token Delivery

Token delivery has to be reliable, scalable, and secure. The MFA platform thus has to employ a robust token delivery system that uses multiple channels such as SMS, Flash Calls, data Voice, email, Push Notification, and operator verification.

Enabling concurrent delivery of OTPs on two or more channels further increases security and impedes malicious efforts.

Identify Anomalies and Offer Intelligent Insights

MFA platforms have to employ new-age technologies like AI and ML to proactively identify anomalous behavior on the network. These technologies can also be used to identify changes or drifts in customer behavior to make security more proactive.

The platform should also offer clear and detailed, data-backed insights. Identifying the preferred and most cost-effective channel for OTP messages and gaining insights into a delivery percentage, average cost saved, and top 5 error codes of failure on SMS, Voice, Flash Call, and Email become essential to improve security and cost efficiencies.

Moreover, such platforms must ensure that they enhance user experience over the authentication journey. This includes having mechanisms that allow Mobile Out of Coverage messages and information on failed past transactions over the selected channel.

In case of an undelivered OTP or if an OTP input doesn’t happen in time over a specific channel, the platform should have a CTA that tries out other OTP channels, such as Flash Call or Voice dial-in.

In a Nutshell

As an enterprise’s financial and social transactions move online, telcos and many other industries must look at their authentication systems and evaluate if they can navigate the evolving threat landscape.

Operating systems, service providers, and account-based platforms need MFA. As such, experience in navigating the requirements and exceptions becomes essential.

We can help with that. Reach out to us today to explore more.

 

Building Relationships with Customers Across Channels

Most companies understand that customer satisfaction is key to long-term sustainability and growth. But delighting customers in today’s digital era requires you to constantly seek their feedback and learn how you can further enhance the experiences they have across channels and touchpoints. Read on as we discuss how you can build customer relationships across channels.

The Growth of Omnichannel Communication

Offering a compelling omnichannel experience was once a competitive differentiator for brands. Today, it has become a mandate for survival. The main driver for this has been the sudden and widespread growth of the e-commerce industry, with the global market expected to total $5.55 trillion in 2022.

As more and more customers across the world use a variety of channels, such as websites and mobile apps (even brick-and-mortar stores and shops), they expect brands to offer seamless communication experiences across each of these channels.

Successful omnichannel communication requires organizations to map individual customer journeys by determining the channels they use, the touchpoints they engage with and the experiences they encounter. And then, they need to create a seamless experience that allows customers to flow from one channel to another seamlessly. But this entails redefining the way brands communicate with their customers.

The Challenges of Building Sustained and Consistent Customer Relationships

Although omnichannel communication is a critical component of business success, the challenges of building sustained and consistent customer relationships are many:

  • Getting a single view of customers: As businesses get increasingly global, customers are spread across different regions and territories. This causes a big challenge for organizations as they cannot get a single view of customers across different locations and channels – mainly because different teams use different systems and approaches for customer communication.
  • Quickly responding to customer requests: Today’s customers expect organizations to respond to their requests/demands in real-time and resolve their issues within a few hours. But with customers using different devices and channels, ensuring each customer is attended to via a channel and in a language they’re most comfortable with isn’t easy.
  • Integrating interaction data from different sources: Combining different interaction channels and converting them to one holistic customer journey requires combining data from diverse sources. More often than not, the data formats are as varied as the number of channels and stored in siloed systems that poorly integrate with other systems.
  • Delivering seamless journeys: Offering an omnichannel customer experience that seamlessly weaves through different interaction channels is another hurdle that organizations have to cross to boost customer response rates. Brands must be available across different devices and platforms to ensure the different touchpoints are connected, so customers can advance through the entire customer journey without interruptions, dropping off or picking up from anywhere, at any time, and on any device.
How an Intelligent Omnichannel Solution Can Change That

An intelligent omnichannel solution can help organizations understand customer needs and take steps to improve customer experience. Investing in such a solution can allow companies to reduce the cost-to-service, limit churn, and increase customer value.

Using comprehensive analytics, a modern platform can collect insights that matter the most in the customer journey and empower organizations to act on these insights and improve the products, services, and experiences they offer customers. Here’s how:

  • Reach customers across channels: An intelligent omnichannel solution can measure customer experience across channels, including website, POS, email, mobile app, and more. It can pick up conversations from one channel and continue them across others, delivering a seamless omnichannel experience to customers across various touchpoints.
  • Get in-depth actionable insights: Using an advanced solution, enterprises can unearth actionable insights and capture real-time customer emotions. Modern and intuitive dashboards can provide necessary insights into customer concerns and needs while presenting ideas and suggestions to improve customer experience.
  • Respond in real-time: A modern solution can enable enterprises to respond to customers in real-time. The minute a customer interacts at a touchpoint, they can converse with them in their preferred language to boost satisfaction and response rate. Since a modern solution uses an interactive conversational UI, companies can reduce drop-offs and maintain their CSAT scores.
  • Measure customer feedback:Via Net Promoter Score (NPS), Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT), and Customer Effort Score (CES), an intelligent omnichannel solution can aid in measuring customer satisfaction, evaluating the likelihood of customers recommending the brand, determining the level of customer service quality, and more.
  • Resolve customer queries quickly:A unified communication solution can help categorize, assign and track issues and take them to closure. Via an integrated action module, enterprises can respond to customer queries instantly and resolve them with the expected speed and quality.
Conclusion

Organizations need to provide seamless and consistent experiences across all communication channels to convert customers into die-hard brand advocates. So, it’s only natural to invest in an intelligent omnichannel solution to reach customers across channels, get in-depth, actionable insights, respond to them in real time, and measure customer feedback to improve their overall experience. Let us show you how telecom brands around the world have enabled new opportunities by tapping the omnichannel needs of their customers and users.

 

Business Messaging – Trends, Threats, and Opportunities

The world of business messaging has come a long way. With positive customer experiences known to increase customer spending by up to 140%, organizations are looking to put customers at the centre of their communications strategy and build longer and stronger relationships. But to successfully do this, they need to move away from standard content and deliver push messages and targeted campaigns that are more aligned with customer expectations.

At the recently concluded MEF Summit “Future of Mobile”, experts from around the world provided several insights into the future of messaging. Read on to learn all about the latest trends, threats, and opportunities in the world of business messaging.

Trends

The future of business messaging isn’t about adopting a one-size-fits-all strategy to communicate and interact with customers. It is about contacting the right ones at the right time with messages that address their specific needs.

By reaching out and engaging with customers over their preferred messaging channels for marketing, sales, and customer support, enterprises can enable easy and convenient conversations and pave the way for great customer experiences.

Let’s look at the top three trends that are going to shape the realm of business messaging in 2022 and beyond:

  • Metaverse communication: The many discussions (and excitement) around the Metaverse surge have proven time and again that business messaging is set to shape its ongoing evolution. As users begin to shift to a digital and 3D version of themselves, consistent and convenient business messaging will play a critical role in the end-user experience. Right from speech-to-text conversions to communication via virtual keyboards: the opportunities for companies to enable messaging in the virtual world will be aplenty.
  • Omnichannel messaging: Companies looking to capitalize on the wave of transformation will have to move from plain-Jane SMS strategies to omnichannel messaging. Right from voice and video to other types of rich mobile content; brands will have to engage in conversational messaging – and not just one-way communication to drive meaningful engagement. For example, for customers who have just placed an online order, it would pay to build customer trust by providing real-time updates on the delivery status and wait times while also allowing them to connect with a live agent on demand.
  • Rich and personalized experiences: Good customer experiences are key to influencing brand loyalty; according to a study, 73% of customers agree that customer experience helps to drive their buying decision. Therefore, to make a difference, companies will have to move away from boring text to rich media, transform how they connect with customers and provide experiences that deliver value. Instead of just sending random messages and campaign content on a bunch of channels, companies will need to talk to customers on channels they are most comfortable with and on which they want to be spoken to. They will need to leverage context history to deliver content, recommendations, and campaigns that are tailored to make every engagement more meaningful.

Threats

Owning, sustaining, and managing a complex relationship with customers is not without its set of challenges. Let’s look at the top challenges companies have to contend with while making the most of all the innovations in the realm of business messaging:

  • Authentication: As organizations move towards personalized and rich forms of business messaging, authentication will remain one of the biggest challenges to overcome. With cases of money laundering, network infiltration, trolling, IPR theft, and sharing of misinformation surging, companies will have to look beyond SMS authentication and invest in advanced authentication and authorization tools that ensure only authorized people have access to business or customer data.
  • Identity: With business communication getting increasingly digitized, organizations face a tough time in identifying genuine people and managing relationships with them. Verifying digital identities on the web and validating 3D avatars in the Metaverse requires organizations to invest in modern identity verification technologies to tie each digital identity to a physical human being while meeting a sundry list of emerging privacy requirements.
  • Security: Security is yet another challenge facing the realm of business messaging. In the digital world, the probability and ease of stolen identities are immense, organizations need to establish strict security strategies and put effective controls in place that protect not only the physical identities of people but also their digital ones.
Opportunities

Allowing customers to reach out to businesses through their preferred channels, giving them the freedom to respond at their own pace, and being available 24×7 are just some of the steps businesses can take to increase customer satisfaction and loyalty. If you want to move away from one-way, static SMS communication toward omnichannel rich messaging, here are opportunities you need to capitalize on:

  • Leverage practical tools across the mobile value chain to deliver a seamless and secure messaging experience
  • Raise awareness of issues around trust in mobile products and services within the ecosystem for stakeholders to take necessary steps
  • Establish industry best practices across your enterprises across omnichannel messaging, personalization, security, and authentication
  • Create a more transparent, innovative, and fraud-free market to boost business revenue while improving the trust customers have in your business

The doors rich business messaging opens for organizations big and small are many. Unfortunately, many haven’t tapped into this massive enterprise messaging opportunity. With customer-focused companies known to increase their revenue 1.4x faster than non-customer-focused companies and with businesses that prioritize customer experiences enjoying a revenue increase of 4-8% higher than their competitors, to bring conversations to wherever the customer is, you need to evolve toward a more sophisticated and tech-oriented way of sending messages to customers and create connections that count.

Reach out to us to know how you can successfully embrace the latest trends, thwart evolving threats, and capitalize on the many opportunities.

 

Why it’s Time for Telecom Companies to Modernize their Tech Strategy

Telecom companies have come a long way from the days when they provided basic telephony services. This sector is now a ~$1.5 trillion market that makes all communication possible. This sector is now providing internet services, mobile enablement, and network services and fulfilling the soaring demand for digital services. As customer demands evolve, this sector has to evolve and embrace new technologies too. It must modernize its tech strategy to leverage the multiple opportunities in the market and improve profitability while innovating to deliver greater value to consumers and businesses.

Telecom companies have identified the need for digital transformation to drive competitiveness in today’s complex business environment. However, legacy technology is severely impeding their capacity to pursue a digital-centric future with 70% of telcos struggling to integrate digital channels while others express concern over data security, short-term profit loss, and poor customer experience.

Updating legacy technology makes sense because telcos now must:

Leverage new, cutting-edge technologies to drive competitive differentiation

Giving legacy technology an overhaul is essential to drive competitive differentiation in a cut-throat business environment. Technologies such as AI, M2M, and big data have the potential to disrupt the telecom landscape and enable those operating in this space to improve their business opportunities, increase their customer base, and improve brand recognition opportunities in the face of rising competition from OTT platforms.

While a complete overhaul of the legacy systems might seem improbable at first, building a strategy that enables the gradual adoption of these technologies through applications and processes is a good starting point.

Identify new revenue streams

Increasing competitiveness demands telecom providers proactively identify and capitalize on new revenue streams. At the same time, it is equally important to identify and plug revenue leaks. Legacy technologies and systems are usually siloed and fail to provide a comprehensive 365-degree view of all revenue interactions.

Modern-day technology applications come to the rescue here and provide comprehensive, data-backed insights into performance, areas of improvement, and new revenue streams. This becomes essential since MVNOs are facing stiff competition not only amongst themselves but also from the rising proliferation of OTT providers.

Elevate customer experience

Driving elevated customer experience is another frontier to conquer for telecom operators be it by improving service and driving personalization or making the right product or service offerings.

Modern-day technologies, for example, can help telecom operators upsurge their revenues on SMPP Bulk Messaging, reduce operational costs, and enhance the customer experience. Using the right technology infrastructure, telcos can also elevate enterprise customer experiences by ensuring that the business connects with the customer more seamlessly.

Offering capabilities such as 5G, robust A2P messaging, or enabling RICH messaging also needs a technology upgrade as legacy technologies are not capable of handling the demands of these services.

Drive security and compliance

Given the increasingly complex regulatory and compliance landscape, telecom providers need to drive greater data security. That apart, telecom companies must also work towards improving their security posture to address grey routes and making the network safe as enterprises move towards hybrid work and mobile payments adoption accelerates.

Legacy networks and tech stacks are now unsuited to meet the needs of an expanding threat landscape. Network security attacks, for example, have been a point of concern and remain so in the face of rising cybersecurity threats. Network virtualization is in fact, imperative to thrive in today’s threat landscape to allow operators network slicing to separate network resources and guarantee greater security.

Proactive route testing, home routing, and re-routing capabilities are also essential to improve the security posture. It helps operators analyze the information exchange between two parties and identify discrepancies that reveal suspect routes and direct proactive attention to the same.

Address enterprise needs proactively

Enterprise needs are changing as the world of work continues to experience constant disruption. Digital transformation for telecom operators thus becomes non-negotiable if they want to improve their topline and fulfil the demands of the new normal.

Telecom companies now need to address enterprise unified communication needs along with the usual suspects of connectivity and messaging and develop their capabilities to provide greater customization across services.

Whether it is enabling e-KYC, improving security, providing customized billing, etc.- they need new technologies such as AI and ensure that their IT systems can adapt to the changing needs. Legacy technologies and systems, given their monolithic nature, make it harder to drive agility in today’s fast-paced business environment.

Telecom companies need to identify how they will integrate with legacy technologies to leverage the advantages that new technologies and digital transformation offer. Telecom companies have experienced the greatest challenge in a generation where they have to keep businesses and individuals connected while meeting unprecedented demand for connectivity. Moving along the path of digital transformation and updating the legacy stack is the only way forward.

 

A Look Back at the Movers and Shakers at MWC 2022

The MWC Barcelona 2022 welcomed 61,000 physical attendees this year and we are happy to report that we contributed to this number. It was a phenomenal experience being a part of all the buzz and excitement and witnessing it as we used to in the past.

The conference saw thousands of companies from across the globe represent the different facets of the industry. We received the opportunity to sponsor an event organized by Mobile Ecosystem Forum and are happy to report that our event saw great participation.

One of the largest and most influential events for the connectivity industry, this year’s edition saw over 1000 speakers, 1500+ exhibitors, 37 country pavilions. Here is a look at what the key highlights of the event were:

The Metaverse is all around

The tech world has latched on to the Meta concept ever since Facebook rebranded itself as Meta. The conversation around the metaverse has only increased since and it is now being positioned as the next big thing with platforms and services rendered in 3D virtual environments. MWC 2022 saw a rising crescendo with many companies announcing different kinds of Metaverse collaborations. FC Barcelona’s club president Joan Laporta, for example, announced that the sports club would “build its metaverse as part of a strategy to attract new supporters” and leverage the technology to support growth. For telecom companies, this means new opportunities as innovative and immersive solutions emerge and demand robust, quick, and highly-available bandwidth as the enabling infrastructure.

5G connections to witness record growth

The GSMA reported that 5G connections would surpass 1 billion in 2022. This number is expected to reach 2 billion by 2025. By the end of 2025, 5G is expected to represent one in five of the total number of mobile connections.

5G accounts for a larger share of global mobile connections than 3G or 4G has at the same point in their lifecycles. Innovative plans, an increasing number of 5G handset sales, video streaming, and network coverage expansions are some of the key contributors to this growth.

We can now expect to see a greater focus by telecom companies on network capability initiatives to support consumer and enterprise use cases across 5G including 5GmmWave, 5G Advanced, Private networks, etc.

AR, VR, and XR gain momentum

The MWC 2022 also pointed out the rising interest in Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality applications. Supercharged by meta, AR and VR are seeing increasing interest in the consumer space. Advances in computing power and consumer-friendly devices and applications have contributed to the rise of these technologies. These technologies are also finding applications in improving worker safety in industries such as manufacturing, oil, and gas, automobiles, etc where workers need unobtrusive, and hands-free devices to work.

The conference also revealed that Extended Reality (XR) will also come into the AR/VR mix and will roughly generate around generate $1.5 trillion in GDP by 2030, especially as the focus on user experience increases. This is a massive opening for telcos looking to layer business applications on top of their services for greater value add.

Service provider trend updates

The results of the study commissioned by Cavell Group revealed the lasting impact of the pandemic on service providers. The report revealed that one-third of the enterprises would be looking at changing service providers in 2022 as enterprises look at improving ‘band-aid’ responses and move towards enabling a hybrid work environment. Some of the major trends the report identifies are:

  • Service providers are under increased pressure to create new revenue sources and buttress margins and drive differentiation and retention with unified communication assuming strategic priority across enterprises.
  • Distributed video, Unified Communication as a Service (UCaaS), Contact Centre as a Service, and CPaaS (Communications Platform as a Service) services will see increased demand as the need to recreate in-person experiences continues
  • Service providers will have to increase service offerings in data, voice data, and other analytics
The hyperscale and OTT market is expected to become even more competitive in 2022

Enterprises will be looking at tightening up across infrastructures including communication infrastructures to navigate the compliance, security, governance landscape. Ransomware and risk-mitigation solutions will also grow in prominence. These developments will need service providers to become more agile and develop capabilities to deliver new and differentiated service offerings.

The global service provider industry will have to grow and adapt to the changes brought on by the distribution of workforces over the last two years and as threats and opportunities demand a rethinking of the traditional role of the service provider.

In Conclusion

We showcased some new-age solutions in areas like messaging, security, and even AI-led solutions that simplify onboarding for a new age of mobile service provider.

Powerful conversations around edge computing were also a highlight of the event as edge cloud enables architectural innovation to effectively build and evolve the 5G network cost-effectively.

Along with this, there were some major announcements such as Cisco’s Private 5G as-a-Service offer to enterprises to fuel productivity with mass-scale IoT adoption. The MWC also saw a number of product launches and a few big press conferences. Mobile was also at the centre of policy debates as political, regulatory, and telecom leaders debates issues challenging the telecom world and had pertinent conversations regarding economic recovery and creating a more digitally inclusive world.

The MWC 2022 saw some powerful discussions and keynotes and some phenomenal innovations. There was, however, a resonating theme across conversations amongst industry leaders – that mobile technology has been driving transformation. The MWC provides those operating the mobile and communication space a fabulous platform to collaborate, share insights and deliver innovations to drive positive business environments and societal change.

 

The Coming Roller Coaster Ride for Private Networks

The chorus of industry voices is now drawing our attention to the rise of private networks. As the world becomes increasingly smaller owing to rising connectivity, private networks offer the opportunity to further shrink the world of business while ensuring elevated interactions and seamless communication.

Today, high-speed, ultra-reliable, low-latency, high-density, power-efficient, wireless connectivity has become essential for enterprises. As such it hardly comes as a surprise to see enterprises looking for solutions that help them manage their sprawling wireless LAN ecosystems.

Data has also become an essential commodity in the wake of a growing appetite for 5G and WAN connections. Safeguarding data also now emerges as a top priority.

Private networks are becoming uniquely positioned to offer a solution to these challenges. They promise enterprises the capability to keep their data protected while providing the capacity and superior connectivity needed to realize the advantages of technology applications such as M2M and IoT.

What are private networks?

A private network is a telecommunication network that is built and operated by a telecommunication provider and is built specifically for an individual enterprise. These networks are usually deployed on a single site and extended across the length and breadth of the enterprise. Private LTE/5G networks can also help address wide-area network requirements, such as a utility’s need to monitor a transmission network.

While a private network needs similar elements as a public network, these networks are different from public mobile networks in some specific ways. That said, they can capably manage and provide support to the wide-area network requirements of the enterprise while supporting tools acquired from the consumer smartphone market.

The private networks, however, need spectrum. The spectrum can be leased from a carrier or another spectrum owner. These networks also need a virtualized core, be it as proprietary equipment from a vendor or disaggregated hardware and software from one or more different vendors. The core can also be commodity hardware that runs open-source software.

Apart from containing the database of subscribers and SIM management, the core ensures complete control over how and which users connect and their usage parameters. The other functions of the core include traffic shaping, billing and data plan rules, quality of service rules, and network monitoring-related parameters.

Private networks improve speed, latency, privacy, and security for enterprise network operations. This is so because the network traffic stays bounded “on-premise” and does not need to be sent back and forth to a core network in a distant location.

With the world moving towards becoming even more connected than it is today, the growing value of data and increasing data needs of technologies such as IoT, leveraging private networks seems like an attractive next step for enterprises. For telecom providers, this spells tremendous opportunity. They stand to gain as enterprises lean towards high-performing and reliable wireless networking solutions to drive business outcomes.

New factors contributing to the continuing rise of private networks

The role of private networks in enterprise operations is well understood. As we have seen, the use-cases are many and the benefits clear. The interesting thing now is the many new application scenarios, use-cases, and prospective user segments that are emerging to further drive up the buzz around private networks.

The conversation around digital transformation has become increasingly louder. This has changed how data is viewed, stored, collected, and analysed. This is compelling regulators to contemplate and help create an environment that enables responsible usage of data and other public resources in enterprise digital transformation paradigms. Given this, regulators across the globe have to look at models to drive spectrum licensing by taking inspiration from the existing licensing models across Germany, the UK, or the US (shared licensing) model.

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic also cannot be ignored in contributing to the rising demand in private networks. Schools, districts, municipalities, and other segments that do not fall under the addressable market associated with private networks need digital capabilities. As such they are now looking at deploying private LTE networks to add and leverage digital capabilities that will increase their reach and improve accessibility.

For telecom providers, the focus, so far, has been towards enabling enterprise mobility and WAN networks. However, with telecommunications becoming the lifeblood of the modern enterprise, telecom providers now have ample opportunity to increase their service portfolio and help enterprises embrace digital transformation and keep pace with technological transformations.

However, before we realize the true potential of private networks, telecom providers will have to address the existing network slicing challenges. Network slicing is one of the most compelling capabilities promised by 5G. Telcos will have to identify how to apply different slices to different enterprises connecting to their core network while ensuring that the same is not implemented among different application types and device groups within the same enterprise. As such telcos will now have to understand enterprise IT needs better and build compelling programs to address the enterprises’ communication needs.

Enabling technology adoption, driving digital transformation, and cloud-enabled/driven everything is table stakes now for enterprises. For telecom providers, this spells tremendous opportunity. Talk to us to understand more about the possibilities and challenges of adopting such next-gen technologies.

 

A Look At Network Virtualization And The Impact On The Telecom Sector

There is intense competition in the telecom sector. Customer expectations have increased.

That’s why telecom operators can no longer afford to use legacy network infrastructure. They are not built for the current type of services. Network infrastructure modernization has become so important in this context. The modern network infrastructure is more resilient and scalable than the legacy infrastructure. It helps prepare telecom operators to thrive in a hyper-competitive space. One way to modernize the network infrastructure is through network virtualization.

Unlike the traditional networks dependent on physical hardware, the virtualized ones deliver the network resources through software. So, operators are able to respond to market changes quickly and with more agility.

In fact, Network Function Virtualization (a kind of network virtualization that allows operators to virtualize specific network resources) is growing so significantly that a study predicts its market size to grow at a CAGR of 22.9% by 2024.

Let’s delve further to understand the impact it could have on the telecom sector.

Impact Of Network Virtualization On The Telecom Sector
  1. Prepares for 5G

There will be 3 billion active 5G subscriptions in Asia and North America by 2024. 5G is expected to be a boon for the connected world we live in right now as it lowers the latency, reduces costs, accelerates the data speed, and reduces battery consumption. Considering that 5G will become a mainstay in the future, operators need to be prepared for it. However, 5G requires flexible and scalable infrastructure, which the monolithic architecture of the legacy network cannot promise. Operators need to virtualize their network architecture to support 5G capabilities. 5G works on the foundational idea of delivering all types of telecom service from anywhere, so it cannot work well with proprietary infrastructure. It works well with a service-based architecture in which multiple software networks are supported. Network virtualization can offer that flexibility. Network slicing is another 5G feature that virtualization could support, i.e., the physical network could be sliced into different virtualized networks to exchange resources efficiently.

  1. Reduces costs

Network virtualization could reduce operation costs by 60%. Legacy network architecture required heavy investments in physical hardware. Operators had to also provision for more hardware investments in the future. Network virtualization is software-based and could potentially solve some of these issues. Operators can save costs on different network resources such as switching, routing, firewalling, etc. They are pooled and delivered through software and only require an IP packet forwarding from the physical network. Operators don’t have to worry about future scalability. The network resources can be scaled up if the demand grows and the capacity to scale up is available.

  1. Provides more agility

Telecom operators can no longer rest on their past innovations for years to generate revenue. They have to innovate to stay agile and meet customer demands. Unfortunately, legacy network architecture cannot support such quick changes. Network virtualization provides that agility. The scalable and elastic nature of network virtualization allows operators to virtualize their hardware resource pool, improve their workflows, and support a range of applications. It helps the operators to launch services quickly and respond to the market changes by reducing the time-to-market.

  1. Improves network security

Network virtualization enables telecom operators to support complex network security needs. As connected devices and data exchanges increase, the need for network security has increased. Legacy networks lack the capability to secure the increasing workload. Network virtualization enables operators to improve network security to safeguard data centres across the world and thus secure the data. Also, considering that technologies such as 5G require network slicing, there’s more network security guarantee. Network slicing separates the network resources. Each of these slices has its own authentication process. So, it’s easier to detect changes in behaviour patterns and traffic and mitigate the security risks accordingly.

  1. Enhances operational efficiency

Network virtualization has become a necessity for operators to enhance their operational efficiency. First, the operators can save time on deploying hardware and other support systems. They also don’t have to follow the legacy processes that, by design, function in silos or rely on the IT team to configure each hardware system manually. Virtualization enables operators to automate the processes, so the teams can quickly deploy solutions to the increasing customer demands and achieve operational efficiency.

Conclusion

Network virtualization is changing the way operators consider business. It has opened more opportunities for operators to keep pace with emerging technologies like 5G and IoT and open a new revenue stream. However, mobile operators need to rethink the network architecture. They need to move away from using monolithic architecture and plan how to deploy it in their organization. A partial or complex overhaul of the network architecture could get complicated. That’s why operators need to work with experts who understand the virtualization model thoroughly and can help them with the transition and leverage the full potential of network virtualization.

 

 

Top