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To remain competitive in the new telecom environment,
all types of communication service providers are rapidly adopting Internet
protocol technologies. The older public switched telephone network (PSTN)
providers are incorporating IP into their networks to lower costs and
deliver improved services. Wireless carriers are moving towards
third-generation mobile system (3G) technologies to attract consumers with
new multimedia services. The pure voice over IP (VoIP) carriers are
competing against traditional carriers by providing low-cost long distance
voice carried over the public Internet along with sophisticated Web
applications. With increasing competition for voice in the wired world and
slower acquisitions of new customers in wireless, carriers must contend with
the problem of declining average revenue per user (ARPU) for their voice
services. This challenge faces carriers of all kinds—new entrants as well
as providers with deep roots in the PSTN.
While next-generation networks (NGNs) promise rich
applications that will eventually offset the decline in voice revenue,
today’s carriers must support IP as well as their legacy networking
technologies. Among service providers, business success is often tied to
how fast market strategies can be changed to meet competitive pressures and
take advantage of new opportunities. To capture markets and create critical
mass, rapid creation and execution of new services has become a necessity.
Given the way applications are currently deployed and the complexity of
their interaction in continuously evolving networks, new services
deployments are difficult, costly, and limit the service provider’s ability
to drive ARPU and reduce churn.
1.1.1 A New Approach: the ASC
Application Session Controllers (ASCs) are an important
new approach to providing efficient and cost-effective application
connectivity, application/session call control and the ability to mediate
application mash-ups in a mixed networking environment. Compared to the
current application connectivity options, ASCs promote cost savings and
introduce incremental revenue opportunities to a service provider’s
network. ASCs also preserve the investment in current revenue-producing IN
(Intelligent Network) applications by enabling inter-working with
next-generation network build-outs.
This white paper explores the cost benefits and revenue
enhancing opportunities of utilizing an ASC network element to provide the
call/session control and connectivity needed to manage application
interaction in the evolving network.
2.1 The Challenges of Today's Solutions
Service providers are paying the price for the lack of
cohesion between the application and network/control layer. It has limited
their ability to profit financially from
their data and voice network and to leverage an ecosystem of developers and
innovators.
To move beyond the traditional single application to
single network connectivity model, service providers are looking to the
Internet model of application deployment as the key to future successes.
With the Internet’s communities of developers using standardized Web
technologies to rapidly introduce new applications, the Internet is able to
give consumers a continuing stream of sticky applications. Among them are
social networking, on-demand video downloads, instant messaging, and
traditional voice-centric services. Unfortunately, the service provider
community faces a key limitation in creating new applications: it is the
inherent limits of application connectivity. This limitation has an impact
on applications and results in cost inefficiencies, time-to-market
challenges, and lost revenue opportunities. Today’s solutions are ad-hoc
and unorganized, and they result in slow deployments cycles, unnecessary
application stovepipes, and the inability to bundle and combine services to
empower their subscribers and generate new revenue. Ultimately, fewer new
applications mean lower revenue per subscriber.
The term application has sometimes been
misapplied and used to describe underlying core technology, such as session
initiation protocol (SIP), Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), eXtensible
markup language (XML), and service-oriented architecture (SOA). A better
approach is to categorize the telecom marketplace applications as:
·
network applications — including fraud detection,
roaming, number portability;
·
enhanced services applications — voice mail,
interactive voice response (IVR), toll free, conferencing;
·
data applications — service management system (SMS) and
multimedia messaging system (MMS); and
·
multimedia applications — such as streaming and audio.
Each of these types of applications depend on different
networks that use different, yet inefficient deployment models. For
example, the voice network’s enhanced services represent an earlier software
programming effort by the PSTN to increase ARPU. This extended services
software was developed in the late 1980s through the mid-1990s. It was
tightly tied to the underlying network elements (see Appendix), which
resulted in IVR applications that worked for one vendor’s network element
but could not be easily or cost-effectively moved to another network.
2.1.1 Approaches Presently Used for Adding New
Applications
To implement sophisticated revenue-generating
applications and combine them with traditional services or other voice and
data networks, service providers need a cohesive network element that
manages interactions between the applications and the evolving network. By
looking at how the application layer and the network is presently managed, Insight
Research identified four ....
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