IDC Believes Cloud Providers Can Learn from Telecom Service Providers That Rating Does Pay
04 Jun 2009
FRAMINGHAM, Mass., June
4, 2009 – Monetizing cloud computing
services is not going to happen overnight, but cloud providers can gain
traction by leveraging the telecommunications industry's proven approach for
effectively charging for such services. According to new research from IDC,
worldwide telecom cloud billing investments will grow from $15 million in 2008
to $350 million in 2013.
While other industries – banking, IT, logistics, online
entertainment, retail and transportation – have sought to build comprehensive
and flexible billing platforms, cloud computing players are finding it critical
to evaluate these telecommunications billing solutions. Leveraging a system to
put a value on the transaction – "rate" in telecom language – will be
a critical first step for cloud computing infrastructure projects. Telecom
billing vendors like Amdocs, Comverse, Convergys, CSG, Intec, LHS, Oracle, and
others include rating as a core component of a holistic billing system, which
also includes capabilities such as customer care, partner billing, promotions,
and payments and collections. Other telecom billing vendors focus on specific
pieces such as rating, mediation, settlement, or revenue assurance. The
business and consumer experiences of complex bills for technology services is
often tightly associated with voice and, increasingly, data services, thereby
making the telecommunications example instructive. A new generation of business
and consumer customers mean that cloud providers need to take a critical look
at the options.
"The investment in
billing systems for cloud computing is drawing upon the rigor, scale, and
technology experience of the telecommunications industry," said Elisabeth
Rainge, director NGN Operations, IDC. "In examining the existing deals for
cloud billing, we identify telecommunications industry expertise as highly
relevant."
In addition to providing a
key business operations platform, companies aiming at the cloud infrastructure
opportunity are recognizing that the ability to develop and maintain a set of
pricing plans requires the rating expertise of the telecommunications industry.
For example, a fixed line subscriber calling a local number during weekend
hours would typically be rated at a lower tariff rate than a roaming mobile
user accessing email internationally during peak hours. The kind of
subscription — prepaid, postpaid, data, voice, business, or consumer — drives a
further level of complexity for which the telecommunications industry offers
mature and real examples of business processes and systems.
Additional findings from
this study include the following:
- Two metrics fuel the
cost of billing systems: the volume of subscribers and the number of
transactions.
- The emerging telecom
cloud billing platforms are increasingly smaller and lighter investments,
particularly in comparison with legacy telecommunications billing platforms.
- For telecom billing
platform vendors to offer compelling solutions to cloud players, they must
demonstrate business process agility.
The IDC study, Worldwide Telecom Cloud
Billing 2009–2013 Forecast (IDC#217313), presents the worldwide market
size and forecast for telecom cloud billing, which is a segment of the telecom
billing market. It assesses the suitability of telecom billing solutions for
nascent cloud requirements as well as customer and vendor interest in
addressing cloud billing requirements from the telecom billing context.
To purchase this study,
please contact IDC Sales at 508-988-7988 or mailto:sales@idc.com.
Contact
For more information, contact:
Elisabeth Rainge
erainge@idc.com
508-935-4636
Patrick Gorman
pgorman@idc.com
508-935-4669
Michael Shirer
press@idc.com
508-935-4200
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