enhancing proctivity in telecom sector
TRANSCRIPT
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OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
ON
ENHANCING PRODUCTIVITY IN TELECOM
SERVICES THROUGH OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
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Contents
1. PRODUCTIVITY: ............................................................................................................ 3
2. PRODUCTIVITY MEASUREMENT:.............................................................................. 4
3. COMPETITIVENESS VERSUS PRODUCTIVITY: ........................................................ 5
4. BRIEF HISTORY OF INDIAN TELECOM SECTOR:..................................................... 5
5. ANALYZING TELECOM SECTOR IN INDIA: .............................................................. 6
6. KEY TERMS: .................................................................................................................. 7
7. ANALYSIS OF INDIAN TELECOM MARKET: ............................................................ 9
8. CATEGORY WISE EVALUATION OF TELECOM SERVICES: ................................. 10
9. SIGNIFICANCE OF ARPU : ......................................................................................... 13
10. ENHANCING PRODUCTIVITY: .................................................................................. 13
Outsourcing........................................................................................................................... 15
Infrastructure Sharing Partnership among Competitors ....................................................... 16
Value-added service likely to develop into a significant revenue stream: ................................ 17
Mobile Number Portability (MNP) An opportunity in disguise? .......................................... 18
Safeguarding Income Streams to Enhance Efficiency............................................................. 19
Mergers and Acquisitions Acquiring Competition............................................................... 19
Services-Importance: ............................................................................................................. 19
11. CONCLUSION: ............................................................................................................. 21
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OBJECTIVES: -
To study and understand the productivity of Telecom Services in Indiathrough Operations Management.
To identify the future challenges facing this sector. To provide solutions to enhance productivity in view of modern
challenges.
1. PRODUCTIVITY:
Productivity in economics is the ratio of what is produced to what is required to produce.
Productivity is the measure on production efficiency. While productivity is the amount of output
produced relative to the amount of resources (time and money) that go into the production,
efficiency is the value of output relative to the cost of inputs used . Productivity improves when
the quantity of output increases relative to the quantity of input. Efficiency improves, when the
cost of inputs used is reduced relative the value of output . A change in the price of inputs might
lead a firm to change the mix of inputs used, in order to reduce the cost of inputs used, and
improve efficiency, without actually increasing the quantity of output relative the quantity of
inputs.
A change in technology, however, might allow a firm to increase output with a given quantity of
inputs, such an increase in productivity would be more technically efficient, but might not reflectany change in efficiency. Companies can increase productivity in a variety of ways. The most
obvious methods involve automation and computerization which minimize the tasks that must be
performed by employees.
Labour productivity is generally speaking held to be the same as the average product of labour
(average output per worker or per worker-hour, an output which could be measured in physical
terms or in price terms).
However, some aspects of labour productivity may be very difficult to measure exactly, or in an
unbiased way, such as:
The intensity of labour-effort, and the quality of labour effort generally;
The creative activity involved in producing technical innovations; The relative efficiency gains resulting from different systems of management, organization, co-
ordination or engineering;
The productive effects of some forms of labour on other forms of labour.
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One important reason is that these aspects of productivity refer mainly to its qualitative, rather
than quantitative and dimensions.
2. PRODUCTIVITY MEASUREMENT:
Productivity is the relationship between output of goods and services and the inputs of
resources used in the production process, with the relationship usually expressed in ratio form .
Productivity measures are sub-divided into partial and total factor or multi-factor productivity
measures. The former are defined as the relationship between output and one input, such as
labour or capital, while the latter represents the relationship between output and an index of two
or more inputs.
Productivity is determined by a number of factors, including the quality and availability ofnatural resources, industrial structure and inter-sectors shifts, capital accumulation, the rate of
technological progress, quality of human resources, the macroeconomic environment, and the
microeconomic environment. The production function depicts production performance and
productivity is the measure of it.By help of the production function, it is possible to describe
simply the mechanism of economic growth. Economic growth is a production increase achieved
by an economic community. It is usually expressed as an annual growth percentage depicting
(real) growth of the national product. Economic growth is created by two factors: increase in
production input and an increase in productivity. Accordingly, an increase in productivity is
characterized by a shift of the production function and a consequent change to the output/input
relation.
The formula of total productivity is
Productivity = Output Q/ Input Q
Q = quantity
According to this formula, changes in input and output have to be measured inclusive of both
quantitative and qualitative changes. In practice, quantitative and qualitative changes take placewhen relative quantities and relative prices of different input and output factors alter. In order to
accentuate qualitative changes in output and input, the formula of total productivity shall be
written as follows
Productivity = Output Q and Quality/ Input Q and quality
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3. COMPETITIVENESS VERSUS PRODUCTIVITY:
The concept of productivity is increasingly being recognized as more pertinent than
competitiveness. Indeed, some economists argue that the whole notion of a "competitive nation"should be abandoned as a term having much meaning for economic prosperity. The ability to do
so depends not on the amorphous notion of "competitiveness" but on the productivity with which
a nation's resources (labor and capital) are employed. Thus the only meaningful concept of
competitiveness at the national level is national productivity.
From the point of view of management functions there should be productivity of decision,
planning, organizing, coordinating and controlling.
Also, from the management roles concept there should be productivity in ten roles for managers
and entrepreneurs which should be adapted to small and medium enterprises.
From the point of view of executive function of the small and medium enterprises, productivityshould be focusing mainly on production and commercial functions, because other functions may
be at minimum level or externalized (such as personnel, financial and accountability, research
and development).
Productivity Prevision/ Planning
Productivity Control& Pursuit Organizing for Productivity
Productivity Evaluation& Decision
Productivity Coordination
Managerial functions connections for productivity
4. BRIEF HISTORY OF INDIAN TELECOM SECTOR:
The Indian telecom industry has come a long way in achieving its dream of providing
affordable and effective communication services to its customers. In the last decade, India has
become a major base for the telecom industry worldwide enabling Indian telecom companies to
become truly global players. The Indian telecom sector has gone through many phases of growth
and diversification. Starting from telegraphic and telephonic systems in the 19th
century, the field
of telephonic communication has now expanded to make use of advanced technologies like
GSM, CDMA, and WLL to the great 3G Technology in mobile phones.
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India, supported by its strong economic growth, represents one of the fastest growing
consumer markets in the world. The fundamental forces of long term economic growth such as
demographics, urbanization, and rising education levels are affecting growth in Indian incomes
resulting in increasing spending power, which translates into growing household consumption.
The Indian consumer market is set to scale new heights. According to a study by McKinsey
Global Institute on the rise of Indias Consumer Market in May 2007, India will climb from its
position as the twelfth-largest consumer market today to become the world's fifth-largest
consumer market by 2025. Aligning with the growing potential of consumer market in India, the
Indian telecom sector has experienced a tremendous growth in the last few years
According to a recent study by Gartner, the tot al cellular services revenue in India is
projected to grow at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of18 percent from 2008-2012
to exceed USD 37 billion, with more than 737 million mobile connections by 2012, growing at a
CAGR of 21 percent in the same period. India along with otherBRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and
China) countries is likely to become home for over1.
7 billion mobile users by 201
2.
As per arecent study by Gartner , in the next 4 years, cellular market penetration in India would increase
4 to 60.7 percent from 19.8 percent last year.
5. ANALYZING TELECOM SECTOR IN INDIA:
Mobile subscribers: 391 million
Land lines: 40 million
April 2009 added subscribers: 15.64 million
Annual net ads (mobile):113.26 million
Monthly average mobile subscribers: 15.41 million
Penetration: 37%
Projected cellular penetration: 500 million by 2010 (40%)
Broad band connections: 6.22 million
Indias current main operators fit in to four main categories:
State owns operators:BSNL, which covers 20 circles and MTNL which offers mobile servicesand in the remaining two circles of Mumbai and Delhi it offers GSM services.
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The original private service providers with a National presence:Bharati Airtel and VodafoneEssar
Those who took fourth round licenses to create a National presence : Reliance
Communications, Tata Teleservices, Idea Cellular, Aircel Limited
Green field operators issued new licenses in January 2008: Datacomm solutions, Looptelecom, S tel , unitech, swan telecom.
6. KEY TERMS:
ARPU (Average Revenue Per User)-
A measure of the revenue generated per user or unit. Average revenue per unit allows for the
analysis of a company's revenue generation and growth at the per-unit level, which can helpinvestors to identify which products are high or low revenue-generators.
This measure is most often used in the telecommunications sector to survey the amount of
revenue generated per cell-phone user, for example. The values of the measures obtained can be
used as a comparison between companies. Companies may also use this information to determine
which product lines are lagging.
AMPU (Average Margin Per User) -
It is a widely used metric for gauging the success of businesses in the telecommunications
industry. Average margin per user (AMPU) measures the margin made by the firm from each
customer, typically measured as the revenue minus the costs and divided by the number of users.
Although most telecommunications-industry analysts and firms use average revenue per user
(ARPU) as a profitability indicator, AMPU is arguably a more reliable metric of a firm's
profitability.By breaking down customer sales by margin rather than by revenue, companies that
have lower sales volumes but create larger margins can be considered more efficient and
arguably more profitable than their high-volume competitors.
RPU (Revenue per User)
A ratio used to express the profitability of a company on a per-user basis. RPUs are calculated by
taking overall revenue and dividing by total number of users:
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This ratio is mainly used by service providers, such as telephone providers . This measure helps
companies to uncover deficiencies and plan strategies for growth. RPU also helps the companydetermine which product or service lines produce the most revenue per customer and, therefore,
which customer relationships are the most important.
MOU (minutes of usage)-
MOU is the total time, measured in minutes that a customer uses his or her mobile phone during
a day, month, or year.
GSM
Global System for Mobile communications is the most popular standard for mobile phones in the
world. Its promoter, the GSM Association, estimates that 80% of the global mobile market uses
the standard.[1]
GSM is used by over 3 billion people across more than 212 countries and
territories.[2][3]
Its ubiquity makes international roaming very common between mobile phone
operators, enabling subscribers to use their phones in many parts of the world.
3G-
International Mobile Telecommunications-2000 (IMT-2000), better known as 3G or 3rd
Generation, is a family of standards for mobile telecommunications defined by the International
Telecommunication Union,[1]
which includes GSM EDGE, UMTS, and CDMA2000 as well
as DECT and WiFi. Services include wide-area wireless voice telephone, video calls, and
wireless data, all in a mobile environment. Compared to 2G and 2.5G services, 3G allows
simultaneous use of speech and data services and higher data rates (up to 14.0 Mbit/s on the
downlink and 5.8 Mbit/s on the uplink with HSPA+). Thus, 3G networks enable network
operators to offer users a wider range of more advanced services while achieving greater network
capacity through improved spectral efficiency.
VAS (value added services)
A value-added service (VAS) is popular as a telecommunications industry term for non-
core services or, in short, all services beyond standard voice calls and fax transmissions. On a
conceptual level, value-added services add value to the standard service offering, spurring the
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subscriber to use their phone more and allowing the operator to drive up their ARPU . For mobile
phones, while technologies like SMS, MMS and GPRS are usually considered value-added
services, a distinction may also be made between standard (peer-to-peer) content and premium-
charged content.
7. ANALYSIS OF INDIAN TELECOM MARKET:
The telecom industry in India boasted of the highest mobile usage in the world, nearing around
500 minutes per subscriber per month, with some of the lowest mobile t ariffs and ARPUs in theworld, resulting in reducing the profit margins. The telecom operators are continuously striving
to manage the reducing margins. It can be seen from the trends, why telecom companies aretypically focusing on the following aspects to manage their operating margins:
Increasing tele-density
Optimizing operating costs Increasing customer focus and managing the churn rate
Infrastructure sharing Diversification of telecom services.
In their continuous endeavor to manage the reducing margins, telecom companies have
been taking steps to reduce their operating costs and increase their revenues.Business ProcessOutsourcing, Infrastructure Sharing, IT Outsourcing and Revenue Assurance are some of the
significant steps which telecom companies have taken to reduce their operating costs along withdiversification of telecom services, increasing the network coverage area, focusing on customer
satisfaction to increase the subscriber base, and hence revenues.The Indian telecom market can be characterized by reducing Average Revenue Per Use
(ARPU), low tele-density, falling tariff rates and increasing Minutes of Use (MoU) . With a
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subscriber base of over 260 million, the industry operates at an ARPU as low as 264 (INR / Sub /Month) for GSM subscribers and 159 for CDMA subscribers. Also, the MOU for the telecom
subscribers has increased from 471 in March 2007 to 493 in March 2008 reporting a percentagegrowth of 4.67.
8. CATEGORY WISE EVALUATION OF TELECOM SERVICES:
The Indian telecom regulatory body TRAI has released a quarterly report on the statistics and
performance of service providers in the telecommunications and internet markets. The report forApril-May-June i
PCOs Vanishing?
The humble STD booth is disappearing from the face of India. The total number of Public Call
Offices (PCOs) in the country as on 30th June 2009 was 61,13,423, showing a reduction of88,018 PCOs from the previous quarter. In the March quarter, the number of PCOs had actually
risen from 5.98 million to 6.2 million. Private operators own 66.7% of the market while BSNLsshare is 29.9% and MTNLs 3.4%.
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Village Public Telephones
3,798 VPTs were added in the June quarter, increasing the total to 5,64,337.
Rural Versus Urban
Bharti Airtel has the maximum rural subscribers with 33.78 million, followed by Vodafone with
BSNLs 29.64 million and Reliance with 16.36 million. Rural teledensity reached 16.61% andurban teledensity was 95.05% at the end of June-09. BSNL/MTNL, the PSU operators own
86.2% of the market share. Rural wireless subscribers rose to 125.95 Million in June 2009.
Landlines
After plateauing for two consecutive quarters at 3.27%, teledensity of landlines in the country isdown to 3.22% from 3.38% in June 2008. Surprisingly, rural wireline subscription has been
declining at a faster rate than urban. Landline additions have been seen only in Delhi, Mumbai,Chennai & UP(W). The two PSUs BSNL/MTNL, which together own the majority market share,
lost a total of0.57 million subscribers in the quarter.
Performance has deteriorated in the June quarter as compared to the previous quarter in terms offaults incidences, metering & billing credibility, response time/ percentage of calls answered by
the operator, the report notes. In fault incidences per100 subscribers per month - BSNL, MTNL,Bharti and HFCL did not meet benchmarks while Tata Indicom and Reliance Communications
fell behind in metering and billing.
Metrics of Wireless Industry
GSMy Average Revenue Per User (ARPU) declined by 10% to Rs.185 in June, primarily due to
the prepaid segment, where ARPU fell from Rs. 181 in March to Rs. 162 in June.Postpaid ARPU dropped negligibly to Rs. 539 in June.
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y Minutes of Use (MOU) per subscriber continued to show a declining trend, falling by6.19% to 454 minutes in June. Outgoing MOUs declined by 5.30% and incoming by
7.04%.y Postpaid MOU fell by 1.53% and pre-paid by 5.68%. Outgoing SMS per subscriber
decreased from 30 in Mar-09 to 28 in Jun-09. All India blended average outgo per minute
was Rs.0.74 in June-09.y GSM is growing at 2.53 times the CDMA telecom industry and as of June, GSM
subscribers constituted 77% of the wireless market.
CDMAy All India blended ARPU for postpaid increased to Rs. 396 while that of prepaid fell to
Rs. 69 in June-09. The total MOU per subscriber is now 342 minutes.y Outgoing MOU dropped by 2.7% to 160 minutes; incoming MOU by 5.2% to 182
minutes. SMS usage increased to 11 in June-09.y All India blended average outgo per minute for CDMA slid to Rs.0.56 in June-09.y
Revenues from Telcos Fell
There was a 3.3% reduction in gross revenues reported by telcos to Rs 39,108.33 crores in the
June quarter; adjusted gross revenue rose marginally.
More Calls Dropped, Poorer Response Times To Consumers & Resolution
The performance of the wireless service providers has improved in some portions, just met thebenchmarks in others. Compared to the previous quarter, it has degraded when it comes to:
y Call set-up success rate (within operators own network) - Bharti is having trouble inKarnataka, Bihar and North East
y Call drop rate -Vodafone in Madhya Pradeshy Response time to the customer for assistance, especially the calls answered (voice to
voice) by the operator - almost all of them: BSNL, MTNL,Tata Teleservices (Indicom),Idea Cellular, RTL, RCOM, Bharti, Vodafone, Spice (Idea), Aircel and Sistema Shyam
(MTS) are not up to the bar.y Complaints per100 bills issued - Aircel and Idea Cellular receive many complaints
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y Percentage of complaints resolved within 4 weeks - Aircel is unable to resolvecomplaints within the given timeframe in Andhra Pradesh
9. SIGNIFICANCE OF ARPU :
Decline in ARPU likely to accelerate in coming quarters as competition intensifies and
subscriber additions happen mostly in semi-urban and rural areas
The Indian mobile services market is highly competitive with six to eight playersoperating in each of the 23 telecom circles. The competitive intensity has intensified further over
the last few months following the launch of GSM services by RCom and Tata DoCoMo, CDMAservices by Sistema Shyam; and the continuing pan-Indian rollout by Aircel, Idea and Vodafone .
These players have introduced attractive schemes like per second billing (moving away from theindustry norm of per minute billing) and aggressive tariff plans for local and STD calls to capture
market share. The incumbents, facing a decline in subscriber additions, have also had to followsuit and reduce tariffs, which in turn has led to a decline in ARPU . This apart, the profitability of
mobile service providers has also been impacted by the increasing share of low ARPUsubscribers (from semi-urban and rural areas) in their total mobile subscriber base.
10.ENHANCING PRODUCTIVITY:
Telecom being a technology driven Industry, it is essential for telcos to mature and enhance their
Information Technology function from being just an enabler to a full blown IT service
organisation that is instrumental in providing the required advantage to a telco in meeting the
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margin enhancement goals. This calls for telcos to design and implement frameworks that
address aspects like strategy, design, transition, operations and improvement of IT services.
For ensuring the effectiveness of the initiatives that telecom companies are taking to manage
their reducing margins, it is important to ensure the effectiveness of the IT Services supporting
these initiatives. Telecom companies need to scale up the capability and maturity level of their IT
Services from a business support function to a strategic function enabling the business to move
up the telecom value chain..
An effective IT Service Management is seen as the need of the hour to manage the reducing
margins which is one of the primary concerns that telecom companies are dealing with across the
globe. While the increased competition in the Indian telecom industry will drive telecom
operators to focus on various ways and means to seize the reducing margins, customers and
partners will be closing watching how telecom companies improve their business process
efficiencies
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Figure- Service Management Reducing Operating Cost
An effective IT Service Management revolves around the core practices of Service Lifecycle
Management which include:
Service Strategy focuses on the identification of market opportunities for which services
could be developed in order to meet a requirement on the part of internal or external customers
Service Design focuses on the activities that take place in order to develop the strategy into a
design document which addresses all aspects of the proposed service, as well as the processes
intended to support it
Service Transition focuses on the implementation of the output of the ser vice design
activities and the creation of a production service or modification of an existing service
Service Operations focuses on the activities required to operate the ser vices and maintain
their functionality as defined in the Service Level Agreements with the customers and
Continuous Service Improvement focuses on the ability to deliver continual improvement to
the quality of the services that the IT organisation delivers to the business
Outsourcing
Outsourcing provides significant leverage to companies that are burdened with activities
that may or may not be their core business. Potential benefits from strategic outsourcing are
reduction and control of operating and hardware costs, reduced time to market, acceleration of
benefits from re-engineering, access to human capital and skill sets that may not be available
locally, access to good practices, a knowledge base and sharing of risk.
In order to deal with the increasing competition, telecom operators are leaving the
technology-related aspects of their business to external consult ants and are focusing upon
providing new services to their customers. The potential of IT outsourcing in telecom was
highlighted when Bharti Tele-Ventures signed a 10- year deal with IBM worth approximately
USD 750 million. While outsourcing activities are catching on across many sectors in the
country, the telecom segment, perhaps, comes across as the most lucrative of the lot . Some of the
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well-known outsourced service arrangement models in the telecom industry have been discussed
here.
Infrastructure Sharing Partnership among Competitors
Infrastructure Sharing is facilitating rapid rollouts of services, wider coverage and
increasing affordability leading to market expansion. This is also facilitating operators for fastercoverage of rural area and roll-out of services in a faster and we should incentivise infrastructure.
Some of the direct potential benefits of infrastructure sharing are:
Improvement in the quality of service through better coverage
Improvement in the aesthetics of the landscape
Reduction of the costs involved in infrastructure creation
Faster roll-out of service and
Affordable tariffs for subscribers
But at the same time, some of the typical challenges associated with the management of shared
infrastructure are:
Capacity Management
Relationship Management between tenants
Sharing of operating costs
Managing service levels
Managing regulatory and legal obligations
Capacity planning of the infrastructure and
Infrastructure development to support proposed Value Added Services
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Value-added service likely to develop into a significant revenue stream:
Mobile Value-Added Ser vices (VAS) are those services that are not part of the basic voice offer
and are availed of separately by the end user. They are used as a tool for differentiation and
allow the mobile operators to develop another stream of revenue. Mobile VAS currentlyaccounts for just 9 percent of the telecom companies revenue in India and has tremendous
potential for growth with the mobile subscriber base growing at a scorching pace. Operators are
facing cutthroat competition and with the call rates in India being one of the cheapest in the
world, the margins are very low. Therefore they are looking at VAS as the next wave for growth
As ARPUs decline and voice services get commoditised, the challenge for mobile service
providers would be to retain customers, develop alternative revenue streams, and create a basis
for brand/service differentiation. In the light of the changing dynamics of the Indian mobile
services market (mainly because of increasing competition), value-added service (VAS) presents
an opportunity to mobile service providers to augment their revenues and margins, as iscorroborated by the experience of telecom players in the developed markets. Currently, the
contribution of VAS to the total mobile revenues of Indian telecom operators is just 9-10%,
which is significantly lower than the same of operators in the developed markets . The potential
for VAS revenues appears all the more significant at the present juncture, given that India is set
to introduce 3G, a standard that allows operators to offer users a wider range of more advances
services.
Various aspects of efficiency have been considered in this context. They include,
y Technical efficiency: involves getting the maximum (sustainable) productivity from thetechnology in use. Empirical evidence suggests that the productivity of any technology
improves through good management policies and through exposure of the operator to a
competitive stimulus, particularly the downward pressure on prices that prevails under
competition.
y Allocative efficiency: requires the use of inputs in such a combination that costs areminimized for producing any specific level of output. Allocative efficiency is of
particular importance for products such as telecom services, which are used as final
consumption goods as well as intermediate inputs for other products.
y Dynamic efficiency: involves the telecom operator being responsive to growth andchange in demand, installation of appropriate capacity, enhancing productivity over time,
focusing on innovation through the introduction of new services and network
modernization. A price mechanism consistent with dynamic efficiency would also
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promote technological progress and would ensure that investment is directed towards the
most efficient activities or to those activities which are considered "most valuable".
A notable aspect of dynamic efficiency relates to bypass. This arises when the customer choosesan alternative supplier of the service (i.e. bypasses the initial supplier). This occurs in a
competitive situation when the price charged by any supplier is higher than the cost of providing
the service plus a reasonable commercial return.
Mobile Number Portability (MNP) An opportunity in disguise?
With a recent TRAI mandate on the implementation of MNP, Indian mobile users may
soon have the option to switch their ser vice providers without changing their mobile numbers .
The introduction of MNP is likely to catalyze the existing competition in telecom sector in Indiaand hence would compel the service providers to further improve their quality of service in order
to retain existing customers and att ain new subscribers.
Thus, MNP would trigger a new and ferocious battle for customers in the wireless world that
may be fought not only through retail outlets, call centers, and customer service, but also through
back-office operations and technology. A strong strategic and demand management is required to
develop and maintain the existing infrastructure to meet the growing demand of service quality
and diversity.
Telecom companies are apprehensive about how better service can be delivered and arewondering about the size of investment required to put systems in place to cut down the resulting
churn in their subscriber bases, due to the introduction of MNP. Some have argued that the
costs involved in introducing MNP could lead to a significant increase in call tariffs. The
rationale for mandating the implementation of MNP is to promote competition among wireless
carriers, as well as to provide customers with greater choice and freedom in selecting carriers
while maintaining their current wireless identity the telephone number. Critically, it also helps
conserve the shrinking pool of telephone numbers available to wireless carriers. The implications
of number portability are serious. The Indian wireless industry is already facing severe
competition and that the introduction of MNP would divert resources from essential core
business activities such as improving network quality and reach, improving customer service,
and initiating new products and services. To manage competition telecom companies need to
have a strong operational and strategic balance to cope with the situation
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Safeguarding Income Streams to Enhance Efficiency
Achieving operational efficiency is one of the other fronts where telecom companies observe
tremendous potential to manage their reducing margins. Margin enhancement, revenue assurance
and cost management are becoming more important than ever before.
Mergers and Acquisitions Acquiring Competition
The Indian telecom market is one of the fastest growing telecom markets in the world . With the
stagnation of telecom market in the west, the Indian telecom market has magnetized foreign
investors in the last one decade leading to a multitude of Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) in the
Indian telecom Industry. M&As have been a regular feature of Indian telecom Sector. The spurt
in the M&A activity is also on account of convergence of telecom with other media andentertainment industries. The M&A are being seen in the market as part of a much needed
consolidation in the fragmented industry, which would continue to see smaller regional mobile
operators swallowed up by the big players in a push to cut cost and boost their market share .
There are large number of technological and integration issues arising out of these mergers and
acquisitions posing another operational challenge for the telecom operators. These include the
identification of quality of the infrastructure assets, support, maintenance and upgrade of
infrastructure, integration of billing systems, customer care systems and grievance systems
Services-Importance:
In the context of service, relationship marketing has been defined as attracting, maintaining and
in multi-service organisations enhancing customer relationships . Here attracting customers isconsidered to be an intermediary step in the relationship building process with the ultimate
objective of increasing loyalty of profitable customers. This is because of the applicability of the80-20 rule. According to Market Line Associates, the top 20% of typical bank customers produce
as much as 150% of overall profit, while the bottom 20% of customers drain about 50% from thebank's bottom line and the revenues from the rest just meeting their expenses. The following five
strategies for practicing relationship marketing -
i. Developing a core service around which to build a customer relationship,
ii. Customizing the relationship to the individual customer,
iii Augmenting the core service with extra benefits,
iv. Pricing services to encourage customer loyalty,
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v. Marketing to employees so that they will perform well for customers.
Developments in information technology, data warehousing and data mining have made itpossible for firms to maintain a 1to1 relationship with their customers. Firms can now manage
every single contact with the customer from account management personnel, call centers,
interactive voice response systems, on-line dial-up applications, and websites to build lastingrelationships. These interactions can be used to glean information and insights about customerneeds and their buying behavior to design and develop services, which help create value for the
customers as well as the firms.
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11.CONCLUSION:
To develop effective strategies and enhance productivity for businesses. It is essential for
organizations to determine what combinations of factors are important to customers where,
competitors are always ready to take over the loyal customers of one particular company . It isessential that goals and strategies must be aligned with organizations businesses where, an
organization should access its strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. Business
organizations want higher productivity because they yield lower costs and help them to become
more competitive and coming to that of the telecom sector the looming human capital crisis and
tight budgets are driving the need for greater efficiency. Markets have become highly
competitive due to the globalization and the consumers always expect a high level of service
from government and private sectors. Finally, information technology is going to play a vital role
in the coming future where information sharing and collaboration are key aspects for improving
the efficiency and no one should ignore these even to a partial extent . The goal was to satisfy the
customer expectations for service, quality and delivery
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Bibliography:
y TRAI report on performance of telecom sector, 2008-2009 - Page 10,11,12.y Report ofTRAI onTelecom Sector in India: Vision 2020y Investopedia Page 7,8y Quarterly reports of companies :TRAI Page 13y Report on Productivity enhancement in telecom sector: BCG report, KPMG Report