Thursday, May 3, 2012

Greater Reliance on Wholesale in Telecom Future?

It seems likely that most tier-one service providers, especially in the mobile end of the business, will be relying on more "wholesale" services in the future. To some extent, this already is the case, as when a facilities-based service provider leases capacity and features to a mobile virtual network operator. 


Likewise, enterprise customers have for many decades created their own voice services using their own phone systems, while buying bulk access from service providers only to carry and terminate those derived services. 


Telecom service providers likewise have sold bulk capacity and features to third parties that create enterprise services for retail sale. 


But there now is much talk of ways service providers can increase the volume of services and access sold to third party business partners. Content delivery networks provide one example. Cloud computing services provide other examples. 


But sale of network features and "big data" features likely will be more important as well. The general notion is that application providers could be encouraged to purchase network functions or features in a bulk or wholesale capacity, to enhance or create new application experiences. Advertising or content firms are said to be likely buyers. 


There might be quite a lot more of that sort of activity in the future, representing a shift to more business-to-business sales than traditional business-to-end-user sales. 


Wholesale strategies could become more radical. A few service providers might opt to become wholesale-only capacity providers, though that is likely to remain a fairly unusual strategy for any tier-one service provider. 


But some believe the agency agreements between Verizon and Comcast, Time Warner Telecom and Cox Communications, allowing the cable companies to sell Verizon products, and Verizon to sell cable products, could lead the cable operators to become wholesale providers to Verizon, while Verizon becomes a wholesale supplier to the cable firms. 

No comments:

Governments Likely Won't be Very Good at AI Regulation

Artificial intelligence regulations are at an early stage, and some typical areas of enforcement, such as copyright or antitrust, will take...