Each node supports a three-state action button for expanding or collapsing: In a directed graph, Expand/Collapse applies only to the subtree directly connected to the selected node. ![]() To indicate collapsed structures, we use a visual indication to represent collapsed structures following the node and collapsed structures within a group. In more complex structures, many structures may be hidden within the graph. To access the other 23 pages of this 26 page Telco 2.Network Graph .Ĭlicking a node displays a menu, which provides the users with the option to collapse the following chart structure, display the details popover, or display the links popover.Ĭlicking a connector or the area surrounding it calls up the connector’s details popover.įor group interactions, clicking the display details icon button nested in the group heading calls up the group’s details popover (it also contains the list of the nodes included in the group). The above is the opening of the report’s introduction, which goes on to outline our views on the cloud market and reprise telcos’ opportunity and progress in it. Source: STL Partners, Cloud 2.0 Strategy ReportĪT&T’s strategy of using the transition to cloud to take control of its own technology, move forward on the SDN/NFV tech transition, and re-organise its product line around its customers’ needs, has helped to set its revenue from strategic business services powering ahead of its key competitor, Verizon, as Figure 2 shows.įigure 2: Getting the cloud right pays off at AT&T Strategic Business Services The ones that chose to own their technology, building the skills base internally by contributing to the key open-source projects, like AT&T (with its commitment to the OpenStack solution), or who became a preferred regional partner for the major cloud providers (like Telstra), have done much better.įigure 1: Telco strategies in the cloud, 2012 – most providers go with VMWare-based solutions Looking back from 2016, we observe that the operators who went down this route – Verizon is a prime example – have not succeeded in the cloud. ![]() We also observed in that report that nearly all the operators we evaluated who were making any effort to compete in Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) or Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS), had opted to resell VMWare technology. Relying heavily on third-party proprietary technology solutions for cloud would give telcos a structural disadvantage relative to the major non-telco cloud players, who either develop their own, or contribute to fast-evolving open-source projects. We show the distinction in Figure 1 (see the Technology section of the heatmap). The report argued that the more telcos bought into pre-packaged technology solutions from vendors like VMWare, the less control over the future development path of their software they would have, and the more difficult it would be for them to differentiate effectively. ![]() In our earlier 2012 Strategy Report Cloud 2.0: Telco Strategies in the Cloud, we pointed to differentiation as the biggest single challenge for telco cloud services. Although telcos are meant to be infrastructure businesses, their showing on this has largely been rather poor. Further, the success of the software and Internet services cloud providers in building hyperscale infrastructure has highlighted a skills gap between telcos and these competitors in the data centre. Smaller altnets and challenger mobile operators – and even smaller incumbents – have struggled to find enough scale, while even huge operators like Telefonica or Verizon have largely failed to differentiate themselves from the competition. To understand how disruptive Iliad’s approach to cloud services is, it is useful to consider it within the wider context of operator cloud services and technology strategies.Īlthough telecoms operators have often talked a good game when it comes to offering enterprise cloud services, most have found it challenging to compete with the major dedicated and Internet-focused cloud providers like Rackspace, Google, Microsoft, and most of all, Amazon Web Services. Our latest report shows how, and highlights lessons for all operators with ambitions to be more than a ‘pipe’. ![]() Its parent company Iliad has now developed an ingenious strategy for cloud. Free has won market share and customer plaudits alike with its disruptive and original strategy in the French telecoms market.
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