Network Management in the Service Provider World
CaaS / SaaS Featured Article
By Richard Grigonis, Executive Editor, IP Communications
Group
Read the full article at CaaS.TMCnet.com.
An excerpt is provided below.
IBBS (Integrated BroadBand Services) is a leading provider of
software and services to broadband network operators, particularly
MSOs (cable companies).
Dave Keil, CEO of IBBS, says that his company provides three
things to its 220 or so Tier-2 MSO customers, which are primarily
in North America, with a few in Latin America.
First, the company has a proprietary software solution called BBX,
which provides provisioning capabilities as well as some very
sophisticated diagnostics for cable operators. Second, Keil says,
couple that software with services that allow iBBS to outsource a
significant amount of its customers' operations, technology and
customer support infrastructure.
"Our services include a robust 24x7 NOC as well as very
significant technical support group. It also involves advanced
services and sophisticated engineers," he said. "So, those services
are a very important part of what we offer to complement our
software."
And third, the company also takes on some of its customers' other
applications, such as e-mail and some Web portals.
"I guess what's really important to emphasize is that we integrate
all of this together - the software, the services and the
applications - into one very tightly coupled package. Our
integration capabilities are especially important because we're
able to integrate not only what we provide but also the other
aspects of a customer's ecosystem, such as their billing
capabilities and their VoIP infrastructure, into what we deliver.
Therefore, our customers really rely on us to take on a significant
part of their operation and assist them in a very significant
way."
"From a market standpoint, we are focused on that Tier-2 space,"
says Keil. "There are over 1,000 cable operators in North America
that we would categorize as Tier-2, which service about 5 million
high-speed data subscribers. We've got about 700,000 of those, so
we've got about 14 or 15 percent of the U.S. market. We're moving
into Latin America, which is another significant market for us. We
have a few small customers there, but we recently signed on with an
important distributor there, Power and Tel, and we believe their
local presence will be very important in helping us improve our
distribution down in those countries.
"We're also taking the company into several areas. We're adding
additional products - last year we added a great deal of
capabilities onto our VoIP software products that complement our
base data products that historically have been our strength. This
year we're adding video capabilities to round out our triple play
offerings and we're also adding some significant capabilities
around bandwidth management this year. Finally, in the second half
of 2009, we intend to offer our customers some capabilities
relating to commercial services. And in October 2008 we completed
an important acquisition of our competitor Parasun Technologies, a
provider of broadband provisioning, management and support
solutions, which we obtained from Canada-based Uniserve
Communications."
"As for network management, if you think of the kind of service
and infrastructure that a large Tier-1 would offer, that's exactly
what our Tier-2 customers are attempting to recreate through an
outsource model, leveraging iBBS," says Keil.
Chris Anderson, Vice President of Product Development and
Management at iBBS, says, "A common theme that we come across is
the 'reduction of the swivel chair' through all of the different
applications that these companies provide. Part of what we're doing
is to build a much more open architecture based on an SOA [Service
Oriented Architecture]-level technology that will allow us to
integrate all of these technologies together, and it is in our
roadmap that before the end of 2009 we will be able to do the
flow-through provisioning from the key billing systems such as GLDS
[Great Lakes Data Systems, which provides Windows-based billing,
subscriber management, and provisioning solutions], and so forth,
that will enable MSOs to provision across the triple play to that
product, so the data will flow through to us and we will be able to
provide back to them either provisioning or provisioning and
diagnostics on all of the areas of their business. That's a key
element of what we're trying to achieve in the short-term."
Adds Anderson, "In the longer term, we have two major areas of
focus we are attempting to address. One is to complete our moving
to handle triple play. We won't do video provisioning, since
there's already a lot of that technology already available through
the billings companies, we do intend to add video diagnostics this
year so that we can complete all of that information through either
the MSOs' billing companies, or through ourselves. Our second major
area of interest is on bandwidth management. We're certainly very
keen. We've been watching the recent ruling from the FCC in terms
of Comcast, and we're certainly proponents of allowing acceptable
use policies, so the MSOs will be able to publish limits on the
data consumptions for the customers on what we will be able to do
is either to re-provision the customer's service to reduce that to
meet those levels, or else we will be able to allow that to
continue to flow and be able to integrate onward billing of
overages back to the billing companies."
"We hold a lot of network information," says Anderson, "because
obviously we're not just monitoring the individual devices in the
end subscribers homes, but we're also managing the MSO's
infrastructure itself. So, one of the things we can do - and hold
the interesting information for - is that we can look at some of
the network 'pinchpoints' and get a better appreciation of some of
the quality of the VoIP calls and things like that which are
traversing those customers' networks. We can see some of the
capacity and other constraints. It all allows us to provide much
more of a 'holistic' service to the MSOs, rather than just provide
a very narrow channel of information. Our intention is really to
provide a much more outsourced operational and strategic as well as
tactical view for the MSOs."
"Essentially we offer a centralized application, but we also have
numerous services which hang off that, such as our call center, and
our NOC, all of which run integrated applications that link into
the central suite of products that we build," says Anderson.
"That's key for us - our centralized suite of products which can
intercommunicate, so we can see things at a high detailed level,
but also at a holistic level, too."
The original article can be read online at TMCnet Internet
Telephony Magazine, along with parts one and two of the series.





