Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
Doug Suriano
Senior VP and general manager
Oracle Communications
www.globaltelecomsbusiness.com
INTRODUCTION
TEN OPERATORS
FROM ASIA
Mukesh Ambani
Managing director
Reliance Jio
n July 2015,
Ambani, Indias
richest man,
announced that the
much delayed
Reliance Jio will
begin full
commercial operations by
December. Ambanis Reliance
Industries has already spent $11
billion on setting up infrastructure
for 4G services, as well as a fibre
optic cable network spanning
25,000 kilometres, making it one
of Indias most costly investment.
Reliance group has suffered several
setbacks over the year and Jios
impending launch may be whats
needed to revive the business.
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Ernest Cu
CEO
Globe Telecom
Li Ka-shing
Chairman
Hutchison Whampoa
ong Kongs richest man kicked off the year with a bid
to buy Telefnicas O2 UK for 10.3 billion in March,
following a restructuring of its empire which saw the
creation of two Hong Kong listed companies CKH Holdings
and CK Property. When merged with Three, Li will create
UKs largest mobile operator with 33 million customers as
well as the countrys most extensive 4G service.
20 of the 20
Top Telcos
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nder Cus
leadership,
Globe Telecom has
held its own against
stiffening
competition in the
telecoms market in
the Philippines. Setting itself apart
from its rivals, the operator has
focussed on growing its revenue
from the markets postpaid
subscriptions while providing
consumers with value-added
services such as music streaming
service Spotify and video
streaming service Hooq in a bid to
boost its revenues.
oracle.com/communications
or call 1.800.ORACLE.1
he year has
seen Bharti
Airtels steady
expansion of its 4G
services across
India, following its
$4.6 billion
investment in the countrys
spectrum auction in March 2015.
Bharti raised over $1.3 billion
from the sale of its mobile towers
in five African markets and is in
exclusive talks to sell additional
towers in the regions six other
markets in the coming months.
Mittals Bharti Enterprises is also
an investor of satellite firm
OneWeb.
Andy Penn
CEO
Telstra
Masayoshi Son
CEO
SoftBank
Hiroo Unoura
CEO
NTT
TTs Hiroo
Unoura has
brought about
significant change
to NTT since he
was announced as
CEO in 2012. A
year after his appointment Unoura
told the companys top executives
that we should not leave any
homework for future generations.
He has since driven the companys
aggressive push in cloud
computing and strengthened its
cloud offerings with acquisitions
such as Virtela and RagingWire
Data Centres.
Xi Guohua
Chairman
China Mobile
i Guohua has
steered the
worlds largest
mobile operator (by
subscribers) to
produce solid
results for the first
half of the year ended June 2015,
after suffering a slump from a subpar first three months. The
operators total revenue in the first
half of 2015 increased 4.9% to
around $53 billion, compared to
the same period last year. He is
expected to drive China Mobiles
4G adoption across the country in
the coming year.
oftBanks
founder and
chairman is known
for his bold and
unconventional
moves. In June
2015, Masayoshi
Son installed former Google
executive Nikesh Arora as
president and chief operating of
the company. In August 2015, Son
spent an estimated $87 million on
46 Global Telecoms Business September/October 2015
TEN OPERATORS
FROM NORTH
AMERICA
Dan Caruso
founder of the
company in
2007, Dan Caruso
transformed Zayo
from a humble startup to its IPO last
year. In 2015,
Carusos entrepreneurial mind-set
has led to further expansions,
launches, upgrades and
acquisitions. In February 2015 Zayo
acquired cloud services company
Latisys; in April it launched a live
video service; in June it extended
its fibre footprint to Washington DC
and Caruso will continue to drive
Zayos fibre-to-the-tower roll-out
across North America into 2016.
George Cope
eorge Cope,
president and
CEO at BCE and
Bell Canada, is a
seasoned
communications
executive in Canada
with more than 25 years
experience under his bell. An
innovative strategist, Cope is
driving Bells LTE and LTE-A rollouts across the country. In
February, Bell extended its 4G
network to more than 120
communities across Canada, and
in June the company kicked off its
LTE-Advanced network roll-out.
Marcelo Claure
CEO
Sprint
arcelo Claures
appointment as
CEO at Sprint in
August 2014 was
the first in a string
of senior
management
reshuffles at the firm. Backed by a
new CMO, CFO and COO, Claure has
steered Sprint through a period of
Darren Entwistle
CEO
Telus
Guy Laurence
resident and
CEO at Canadas
Rogers
Communications
since 2013, Guy
Laurence holds 30
years experience in
telecoms, media and pay TV. June
2015 saw Rogers cement itself as
Canadas largest operator with the
acquisition of Mobilicity for $355
million. Laurence also oversaw the
launch of VoLTE services in the
country in April, with Rogers
thought to be the first in the
country to do so.
John Legere
President and CEO
T-Mobile US
aptivating and
charismatic,
T-Mobile US CEO
John Legere has
made a name for
himself across the
industry and his
leadership this year saw the
company increase its Q2 revenue
by 14%. It has also raised its
subscriber forecast for the second
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Lowell McAdam
Chairman and CEO
Verizon
owell McAdam, a
mobile pioneer
having built mobile
businesses on
three continents
since 1980, joined
Verizon in 2000.
McAdam was appointed CEO in
2011 and this year, McAdams
expertise in mobile saw Verizon
post a 5.3% growth in its mobile
business unit. The company has
also agreed to acquire AOL in a
$4.4 billion deal, in a bid to
advance its ambitions in mobile
video advertising.
Glen Post
ne of the
industrys
longest standing
chief executives,
Glen Post has
served as CEO at
Centurylink for
more than 20 years. A
consummate dealmaker who gets
involved in every aspect of a
merger, Post accelerate
CenturyLinks acquisition of
database service provider
Orchestrate in April 2015. The
telco is also making steps with
NFV having signed a deal with
Cyan for its Blue Planet NFV
Orchestrator in March 2015.
Randall Stephenson
Chairman and CEO
AT&T
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Jeff Storey
Colm Delves
CEO
Digicel Group
Amos Genish
CEO and president
Telefnica Brasil
ongstanding
Digicel CEO Colm
Delves has been in
charge of the
Caribbean operator
since 2005. Since
then, the operator
has grown its mobile subscribers
to 13.6 million across 31 markets
in the region. The company has
aimed to expand its broadband
and cable TV footprint with its
acquisitions of Bermuda Telephone
Company and Jamaicas Telstar, as
well as its purchase of submarine
cable assets. These will be needed
in testing times, after it reported a
loss of $157.6 million in the
12-month to the end of March
2015, compared with a profit of
$43.5 million in the previous year.
mos Genish
heads the
largest and most
profitable telecoms
operator in Brazil,
Telefnica Brasil.
He previously
served as CEO for Brazilian highspeed internet provider GVT, which
was sold by French operator
Vivendi to Telefnica for nearly $9
billion earlier this year. To help
fund the acquisition, Telefnica
Brasil announced in April 2015
that it will sell shares. The
acquisition is expected to further
strengthen the operators position
in the Brazilian market.
FIVE OPERATORS
FROM LATIN
AMERICA AND
THE CARIBBEAN
Phil Bentley
CEO
C&W Communications
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Carlos Slim
he richest
person in the
world needs no
introductions.
Knocking Bill Gates
from his perch in
2013, Carlos Slim
has a net worth of at least $35.4
billion and has built one of the
largest telecoms empires in the
world. Yet Amrica Mvil is fighting
mounting pressure in its domestic
Mexican market, where the
regulator has introduced
measures designed to reduce the
operators market share to under
50%. As a result, Slim has
increasingly turned his investment
outside of the region, most
notably in Europe.
John Stankey
ohn Stankey is
spearheading the
US carriers fierce
expansion into the
neighbouring
Mexican market.
The company is set
to invest around $3 billion in a highspeed mobile network in Mexico as
it looks to challenge Amrica
Mvils dominant position in the
market, amid sweeping reforms by
the Mexican government. Stankey
oversees AT&Ts mobile consumer
offerings which includes its suite of
U-verse television and high-speed
internet services. This includes its
DirecTV satellite television product
which was acquired for $50 billion
in July 2015.
TEN OPERATORS
FROM EUROPE
Cesar Alierta
CEO
Telefnica
xecutive
chairman and
CEO of Telefnica
since July 2000,
Cesar Alierta has
proven himself to
be an expert at
international strategy. The Spanish
operator has built up a
considerable stronghold across
Latin America, which it
strengthened in 2015 through the
$9 billion acquisition of Brazilian
broadband provider GVT. Alierta
has also set about stabilising
revenues in its European markets,
agreeing last May to acquire the
remaining 56% of Digital+ from
the media group Prisa for 750
million. As a result Telefnica
revealed that its net profit had
doubled to 3.7 billion in the first
quarter of 2015, including a
12.5% increase in revenue.
Sigve Brekke
President and CEO
Telenor
ppointed Telenor
CEO in August,
Sigve Brekke has
been with the
carrier since 1999,
previously heading
up its operations in
Asia. One of his key objectives will
be to continue the steady growth
experienced under former CEO Jon
Fredrik Baksaas. In the second
quarter of 2015, the group saw
organic revenue grow by 6% after
impressively growing its 4G
coverage. Its operations in
Myanmar are also performing well,
having attracted over 10 million
subscribers to date. One pressing
issue for Brekke, however, will be
Telenors Danish operations, where
it was forced to withdraw a
proposed merger with TeliaSonera
due to pressure from the
European Commission.
Vittorio Colao
CEO
Vodafone Group
ittorio Colao is
the famous
Italian businessman
heading up
Vodafone Group
since July 2008.
One of the largest
mobile brands in the world,
Vodafone had seen its growth
curtailed by the constraints on
consumer spending in some of its
biggest European markets, as well
as seeing price cuts imposed by
regulators. However, this year it
posted a rise in quarterly sales for
the first time in nearly three years,
and forecasts 2016 core earnings
growth on an organic basis
following seven straight years of
declines. Its return to growth is
widely viewed as the biggest sign
yet that the European market is
set to stabilise in the coming
years.
Johan Dennelind
CEO
TeliaSonera
ppointed CEO in
June 2013,
Johan Dennelind
joined the company
in testing
circumstances after
the company was
investigated by Swedish
authorities into wrongdoings over
its purchase of a 3G licence in
Uzbekistan in 2007. TeliaSoneras
CFO and other senior executives
resigned, and Dennelind vowed to
improve the companys business
practices. In September of this
year, he confirmed the operators
exit from the Eurasia region,
instead focussing its efforts on
growing business in Sweden and
Europe. The operator said that the
decision came after considering
what was best for its
shareholders, operations,
employees and customers.
Carl Grivner
CEO
Colt (from January 2016)
arl Grivner is
set to take over
as CEO of Colt
Technology Services
effective of January
1 2016. Replacing
Rakesh Bhasin,
Grivner brings over 25 years of
international leadership
experience including 12 years
at CEO level in the telecoms
industry. Grivner has a proven
track record of being a first mover
with next-generation technologies.
During his reign as CEO at Pacnet,
he oversaw the operators early
move to SDN, launching a
landmark SDN platform as far
back as February 2014. Pacnet
was later sold to Telstra in May for
$697 million.
Timotheus Httges
CEO
Deutsche Telekom
eutsche
Telekom head
since January
2014, Timotheus
Httges has been
quick to position
the carrier as a
supporter of digitisation. Under
his guidance, the operator has set
about interconnecting its IP
networks across several countries
and has significantly strengthened
its network security offering. The
brand today is said to be worth
over 30 billion and Httges is
aiming to grow revenues by an
average of up to 1% to 2% each
year up to 2018.
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Gavin Patterson
CEO
BT
015 could be a
break or make
year for BTs CEO
Gavin Patterson.
The British operator
has dominated
headlines with its
proposed 12.5 billion acquisition
of EE. It is yet, however, to receive
approval for the deal from the
UKs Competition and Markets
Authority and is attracting fierce
criticism from rivals such as
Vodafone, TalkTalk and Sky, which
have called for the operator to be
separated from Openreach. The
move for EE would give it a
stronghold on the quad-play
market in the UK, but at what
cost?
Alejandro Plater
CEO
Telekom Austria Group
lejandro Plater
took the helm at
Telekom Austria
Group after Hannes
Ametsreiter
unexpectedly
resigned in June to
become CEO of Vodafone
Germany. Platers appointment
was backed by the groups two
majority shareholders, Amrica
Mvil and sterreichische Bundesund Industriebeteiligungen (BIB).
It has been viewed by some
market watchers as evidence of
Amrica Mvils growing influence
at the company, which has been
one of its more successful
acquisitions in the European
market to date.
Stphane Richard
CEO
Orange
erving as chief
executive of
Orange since
September 2009,
Stphane Richard
became the centre
of political
controversy recently after
suggesting the company would
cease conducting business in
Israel during a trip to Egypt. His
comments attracted death threats
and he subsequently travelled to
Israel to apologise in person to
the nations prime minister.
Despite this, he will be satisfied
with Oranges performance in the
first half of 2015, which saw the
rapid growth of high-speed fixed
and mobile services in Europe and
the sustained growth of mobile
services in Africa and the Middle
East.
ince replacing
Jo Lunder as
group CEO in April
2015, Jean-Yves
Charlier has laid
out his vision for
VimpelCom by
promising to transform it into a
digital operator, rather let it
become a dumb pipe. Previously
the CEO of French mobile operator
SFR, he resigned following the
companys acquisition from
Vivendi by Altice. He was also
previously CEO at Promethean, a
specialist in interactive learning
technologies, as well as Colt in
the UK.
Andrei Dubovskov
CEO
MTS
ndrei Dubovskov
has remained
bullish as MTS
continues to face
macroeconomic
volatility in its
markets of
operations. In spite of that, the
company has maintained steady
profitability with a group adjusted
OIBDA margin at 41.2%.
Dubovskov maintains the company
has benefitted from growing
smartphone penetration as well
as increased data usage in all
customer segments.
Kaan Terzioglu
CEO
Turkcell Group
aan Terioglu
took the reins
as Turkcell Groups
new CEO in April
and since then has
set about redefining
the operator as an
integrated communications and
technology services provider. His
first move was to integrate
Turkcells mobile and fixed
businesses, as well as place a
stronger focus on products such
as its TV platform, Turkcell TV+.
The operators has also
ambitiously moved to be a
regional pioneer in 5G, signing
three MoUs with Ericsson, Huawei
and Aselsan. At the end of
Terioglus first three months in
office, Turkcell Turkey registered
9.2% growth while Turkcell Group
revenues grew by 5.8%.
20 of the 20
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Sergey Kalugin
President
Rostelecom
ostelecom
named cable
entrepreneur Sergey
Kalugin to lead the
company in March
2013, replacing
Alexander
Provotorov as president. The
companys board of directors
extended his term in March this
year as Kalugin seeks to improve
its competitive positions to
support top line growth as well as
improve the efficiency of its
business processes. Kalugin was
previously co-founder and head of
National Cable Networks.
Allison Kirkby
CEO
Tele2
Ivan Tavrin
CEO
MegaFon
espite a
challenging
2014, Ivan Tavrin
reported
consolidated
revenues of $5.136
billion for the year
ended December 2014. Tavrin
said the operator will continue its
FIVE OPERATORS
FROM AFRICA
Bob Collymore
CEO
Safaricom
Sifiso Dabengwa
CEO
MTN Group
ifiso Dabengwa
has been chief
executive and
president of MTN
Group since March
2011 and has led
the company
through an investment drive in
2015. Under his leadership, MTN
Group announced that it would be
spending $2.5 billion on growing
its infrastructure in the 23
countries where it operates. It
also partnered with ZTE for the
launch of an IoT platform in July.
Christian de Faria
MD and CEO
Airtel Africa
hristian de Faria
took full charge
of Airtel Africa in
January 2014,
having joined the
firm in September
2013 as regional
CEO, Anglophone. De Faria took a
lead role in Airtels latest deal with
IHS in 2015 which saw the
companys Zambian unit sell and
leaseback 949 towers to IHS
Holding under terms of a renewable
contract signed last year.
Nic Rudnick
CEO
Liquid Telecom
iquid Telecom
CEO Nic Rudnick
has continued to
lead the company
with a focus on
bettering the lives
of the African
community. Under his leadership
this year Liquid launched the first
FTTH service in Kenya, Rwanda,
Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe,
delivering 100 megabit access to
home and businesses. In August,
the operator signed a deal with
MTN to jointly offer customers
what they claim will be the largest
fixed and mobile footprint on the
continent.
Mohamed Shameel
CEO
Vodacom
Vodacom
veteran since
1994 and former
CEO of Vodafone
Spain Mohamed
Shameel joined the
companys
executive board in 2012 and in
2015 has been pushing
Vodacoms 7 billion rand
acquisition of internet provider
Neotel. Enhanced internet
services have been of key
importance for the operator this
year, and in January, Vodacom
partnered with Alcatel-Lucent for
the upgrade of its network to
include ultra-broadband services.
FIVE OPERATORS
FROM THE
MIDDLE EAST
Muna Al Hashemi
CEO
Batelco
atelcos new
CEO Muna Al
Hashemi officially
took her new role in
August having
served as acting
CEO for the prior seven months.
She joins the operator during an
exciting period, having just unveiled
Bahrains first VoLTE service. Al
Hashemi will be hoping to continue
the operators deployment of nextgeneration technologies. In the last
few months, it has launched a
cloud service platform targeting
SMEs in Bahrain as well as signed
a partnership with Gulf Air,
Bahrains national carrier.
Khaled Biyari
CEO
STC
ppointed CEO in
April, Khaled
Biyari previously
served as the
operators SVP for
technology and
operations. His
focus on technology became
immediately apparent when the
operator signed a purchase
agreement with Oracle to acquire
a variety of systems, software,
and cloud and support services. It
also announced a partnership with
Telecom Italia Sparkle to provision
what they claim is the first 2x100
gigabits a second of IP transit
connectivity in the Middle East.
Scott Gegenheimer
Group CEO
Zain
erving as Group
CEO since
December 2012,
Scott Gegenheimer
has spearheaded
Zains international
expansion into eight
countries across the Middle East
and Africa. The company has
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Ahmad Abdulkarim
Mohd Julfar
CEO
Etisalat
Nasser Marafih
CEO
Ooredoo Group
nder Marafihs
leadership,
Ooredoo has
transformed from a
national carrier into
an increasingly
global organisation
with operations in 14 countries. His
fierce focus on the global market
paid off in 2014 when the group
recorded revenues of over $9 billion.
Network investment has also been
on the top of Marafihs agenda, with
the operator launching Qatars first
4G+ network as well as successful
4G launches in Qatar, Algeria,
Tunisia, Kuwait and the Maldives. He
also oversaw Ooredoos entrance
into the highly lucrative Myanmar
market. Ooredoos customer base
has recently passed the 100 million
milestone.
www.globaltelecomsbusiness.com
Bjarni Thorvardarson
FIVE OPERATORS Vinod Kumar
Managing director and CEO
CEO
FROM THE
Tata Communications
Hibernia Networks
ata
jarni
SUBSEA CABLE
T
Communications
B
Thorvardarson
owns one of the
has spearheaded
INDUSTRY
Abdulla Al-Rwaili
bdulla Al-Rwaili
took on the
responsibilities of
former CEO Ahmed
Mekky in March this
year, and has
steered GBI through
a notable period of expansion.
Al-Rwaili holds 15 years
experience in the sector and in
2015 he facilitated the signing of
two European agreements with
Interoute for increased capacity in
the region. The Middle Eastern
firm also partnered with Ciena for
its optical networking solutions
and joined the Etisalat SmartHub.
largest subsea
cable networks in
the world, and
Vinod Kumar has
been at the forefront of the
companys transformation. Kumar
joined Tata Communications in
2004 and stepped up to the
position of managing director and
group CEO at the company in
2011. With 20 years telecoms
experience under his belt, Kumar
has overseen intense growth at
the company in 2015, including
the acquisition of capacity on
Seaborn Networks US-Brazil, due
to go live in Q4 2016.
what is arguably
one of the most
exciting
developments in
the subsea telecoms industry this
year, the Hibernia Express.
Thorvardarson joined Hibernia
Networks as CEO in 2005 from its
parent company CVC, and has
driven the Hibernia Express
project from day one. The cable is
the first transatlantic route in 12
years, and Thorvardarson
navigated the company through a
tricky period where they swapped
vendors to get it up and running
by September 2015.
Bill Barney
CEO
Global Cloud Xchange
EO of Global
Cloud Xchange
formerly
Reliance Globalcom
since January
2014, Bill Barney is
an industry expert
having also headed up Pacnet for
10 years, as well as served in
roles at Verizon and Orange
worldwide. GCX has had a busy
2015 with the launch of a Dubai
PoP as well as a global
interconnect agreement with
Equinix. Barney is now working on
the India Cloud Xchange subsea
route between India and
Singapore.
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Chris Wood
CEO
WIOCC
hris Woods
vision of making
an enduring
contribution to
African
communications
has continued well
into 2015. As CEO at the company
since 2008, Wood drove the
company through its start-up
phase into full scale operation.
This year, Wood has overseen the
launch of four PoPs in Zambia, as
well as the rapid increase in
capacity to and from the EASSy
cable in Somalia.
FIVE OPERATORS
FROM THE
SATELLITE
INDUSTRY
Steve Collar
CEO
O3b
3b now has 12
satellites in
orbit just 8,000km
above the earth, to
provide low-latency
broadband coverage
to many of the
other three billion people the
company aims to serve.
Commercial service started in
September 2014. A former
executive with O3b shareholder
SES, Steve Collar was involved in
the early planning and has been
CEO since March 2011. He has
worked in the satellite industry
since the early 1990s.
Michel de Rosen
Chairman and CEO
Eutelsat
utelsats fleet of
38 satellites
covers Europe,
Africa, the Middle
East and large parts
of the Asia and the
Americas. Michael
de Rosen joined Eutelsat in July
2009, was appointed CEO in
Rupert Pearce
CEO
Inmarsat
EO since
January 2015,
lawyer and venture
capitalist Rupert
Pearce is leading
Inmarsat as it
begins the
deployment of its Global Xpress
high-speed mobile broadband
network. The third satellite in the
network went into orbit in August
2015 and global coverage is
expected to begin by the end of the
year, with broadband services
expected to be as fast as 50
megabits a second. Inmarsat is
pushing hard to deliver mobile data
and voice to commercial aircraft.
Stephen Spengler
CEO
Intelsat
ntelsat is the
daddy of all the
satellite companies,
having been formed
as an
intergovernmental
organisation in
1964, with the first satellite going
into orbit a year later. Stephen
Spengler, CEO since April 2015,
has been in the industry for three
of those five decades. He runs a
company with over 50 satellites
and a terrestrial infrastructure,
including a growing number of
teleports, and it is investing in
new ventures such as OneWeb.
Greg Wyler
CEO and founder
OneWeb
neWeb, with
backers
including Airbus,
Bharti, Intelsat,
Qualcomm and
Virgin, aims to build
a fleet of 700 microsatellites, each weighing 150
EIGHT CONTENT
AND OVER-THETOP PROVIDERS
Jeff Bezos
CEO
Amazon
he American
entrepreneur and
investor Jeff Bezos
is estimated to
have a net worth of
$43.2 billion after
Amazon announced
profits in its quarterly results,
boosting its stock considerably.
Bezos still owns the equivalent of
18% of shares in the company
and is likely to continue his focus
on new technologies, which
includes the future delivery of
packages to customers via
drones. As well as the companys
successful cloud business, Bezos
will be hoping to take the fight to
Netflix through its video streaming
service Instant Video. Amazon has
invested heavily on both video
infrastructure and creating its
original video content, which
Bezos will be hoping helps
attracts new viewers in the coming
12 months.
Daniel Ek
CEO
Spotify
he Swedish
entrepreneur
behind Spotify faces
a big challenge
going forward in to
2016. The music
streaming business
has grown hugely in recent years,
but it has proven difficult for
companies to monetise. Ek will be
hoping ad revenues will be the
answer, as the online music
streaming platform saw a 53%
increase in ad revenue in the first
Reed Hastings
CEO
Netflix
he co-founder
and CEO of
Netflix Reed
Hastings has
enjoyed a
remarkable career
to date which has
seen the company develop from a
mail-order DVD rental company to a
truly international streaming
business. Hastings has continued
the companys rapid international
expansion this year by making its
debut in Asia. Launching services
in Japan in August, the videostreaming company will begin
offering services in Hong Kong,
Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore
in early 2016. Hasting has
predicted that in the next 10 to 20
years, all TV will be on the internet.
If hes correct, Netflix would appear
to be one of the main beneficiaries.
Robin Li
obin-Li is the
co-founder,
chairman and chief
executive at Chinas
answer to Google,
Baidu. Baidu made
phenomenal growth
in 2014 with revenues in excess of
50 billion Chinese yuan ($7.9
billion), and this year Li has this year
been pushing to move the company
into e-commerce businesses. Li is
also investing $3.1 billion over the
next three years in Numoi.com, a
Groupon-style website.
Sundhar Pichai
CEO
Google
undhar Pichai
took on the role
of Google CEO from
Larry Page in August
2015, when it was
revealed that Page
would be moving to
head up Alphabet, Googles new
www.globaltelecomsbusiness.com
Neil Stevens
Susan Wojcicki
CEO
YouTube
usan Wojciccki
moved from SVP
of advertising and
commerce at
Google to CEO of
YouTube in February
2014, having
championed the companys $1.65
billion acquisition of the video
site. The site has continued to go
from strength-to-strength,
attracting a billion unique visitors
a month while recording revenues
of $4 billion in 2014.
Mark Zuckerberg
Founder and CEO
Facebook
erhaps one of
the most famous
names not just in
the industry but
across the globe is
Mark Zuckerberg,
founder and CEO of
social networking site Facebook.
www.globaltelecomsbusiness.com
FIVE FROM
INTERNATIONAL
ORGANISATIONS
AND
REGULATORS
Nan Chen
Director
MEF
an Chen is a
prominent figure
head throughout the
carrier ethernet
revolution as well
as a pioneer of the
carrier ethernet
exchange. As founder of MEF, he
has established carrier ethernet
as the predominant technology for
businesses and mobile
infrastructure, defining industry
standards and creating
certification programmes. As
co-founder of CENX, the first
carrier ethernet exchange in the
market, he played a significant role
in establishing carrier ethernet
exchanges worldwide.
ince his
appointment as
ETSI director
general in 2011,
Romero has led the
steady charge on
the much-needed
development of technology
specifications across the industry.
These include this year the first
specifications for the oneM2M
global standards initiative for
machine-to-machine
communications. The association
has also been the driving force
behind the industrys
specifications for network
functions virtualisation.
Margrethe Vestager
Competition commissioner
European Commission
aving served as
economy
minister and deputy
minister from her
native Denmark,
Margrethe Vestager
cuts an imposing
and fearless figure in Brussels.
Since her appointment last year,
the European competition
commissioner has made swift and
ambitious changes, taking
formidable titans such as Google
to task in an antitrust
investigation. She has also
adopted a tougher stance on
mergers, stating her intention to
curtail consolidation in Europes
telecoms market.
20 of the 20
Top Telcos
Get Better Results
Mats Granryd
Director-general
GSMA
oracle.com/communications
or call 1.800.ORACLE.1
Tom Wheeler
Chairman
Federal Communications
Commission
FIVE INVESTORS
Marc Andreessen
Founder
Andreessen Horowitz
s a venture
capitalist, Marc
Andreessen has
backed a wide
range of companies
such as Twitter,
Skype, Groupon,
Instagram and Airbnb. His latest
investments in 2015 include a
$20 million and $58 million
injection into UK start-ups
Improbable and Transferwise
respectively. Andreesen is one of
the key players in making the
internet accessible with his
creation of web browser Netscape
Navigator. He sits on the board of
Hewlett-Packard and Facebook.
Martin Bouygues
Chairman
Bouygues Telecom
y rebuffing offers
of takeovers
from fellow
billionaires Xavier
Niel and Patrik Drahi,
the French tycoon
Martin Bouygues
must believe Bouygues Telecom has
what it takes to stand on its own
and challenge its rivals. Last year
Martin Bouygues rejected Iliads 5
billion offer and turned down Altices
9 billion deal earlier this year a
price estimated at around 20%
above its market value. The
company has increased capital
expenditure by 12% year on year in
the first half of 2015 and aims to
exceed its goal of cutting 300
million by the end of the year.
Patrick Drahi
Mikhail Fridman
Chairman
LetterOne
ussian
billionaire
Mikhail Fridman is
on the hunt for US
and European
technology and
telecoms
companies and assets that are
either financially distressed or
struggling. Its a task that only a
John Malone
Chairman
Liberty Global
ll eyes are on
Malone as he
continues to
maintain
momentum over an
exchange or
combination of
assets with Vodafone. Anticipation
of a potential deal has been
mounting in recent months since
the operator revealed they have
been in talks to swap assets with
Liberty Global. Liberty Global and
Vodafone have combined annual
revenues of over $80 million and
a combined market value of $130
billion.
FOURTEEN
FROM THE
EQUIPMENT
AND HANDSET
INDUSTRY
Tim Cook
CEO
Apple
fficially named
CEO of Apple in
August 2011, Cook
had the daunting
task of filling
predecessor Steve
Jobs shoes. Apple
is now on the sixth incarnation of
its iPhone and iPad, which
continue to show strong sells
globally and attracted major media
hype. In the content space it faces
stiffer competition and challenges.
Having launched its music
streaming service Apple Music
Nobuhiro Endo
President
NEC
obuhiro Endo
has been with
NEC since 1981
and president since
2010, after heading
strategy, which saw
the company move
into OSS with NetCracker to
which it then added Convergyss
billing unit. The company has
become a major supplier to
Telefnica in the operators
pioneering strategy to move
towards cloud services, software
defined networks and virtual
network operation.
Ulf Ewaldsson
Group CTO
Ericsson
lf Ewaldsson
has been CTO
of Ericsson since
February 2012 after
five years as head
of radio at the
companys networks
business unit, where he was
instrumental in helping to create
products, such as HSPA and LTE
in the radio-access network.
Ewaldsson chairs Ericssons
research board and as such is a
senior figure in the cross-industry
collaboration which is expected to
lead to 5G trials from 2020.
Tom Fallon
CEO
Infinera
ptical
networking
specialist Infinera
competes in its
increasingly
important niche
with the major
equipment companies and has
won contracts from many
advanced operators. Former Cisco
executive Thomas Fallon moved to
www.globaltelecomsbusiness.com
Terry Matthews
Chairman
Wesley Clover; Mitel
Chuck Robbins
CEO
Cisco
erial
entrepreneur
Terry Matthews is
chairman of Mitel,
now providing
unified
communications
equipment, which is owned
through his investment firm
Wesley Clover. He set up Mitel in
the 1970s and bought it back in
2000, just as he sold Newbridge
Networks to Alcatel. Mitel, a public
company since 2010, has been
acquisitive: it bought Aastra
Technologies in 2013 and Mavenir
Systems in March 2015.
huck Robbins
took over in July
2015 from John
Chambers, who had
led since 1995,
and immediately
set about a
management reshuffle. Out went a
number of well known names,
including former CTO Padmasree
Warrior. Robbins, with Cisco since
1997, has the personal support of
Chambers, who said: Chuck is
unique in his ability to translate
vision and strategy into worldclass execution, bringing together
teams and ecosystems to drive
results.
Rami Rahim
Simon Segars
CEO
Juniper Networks
Ren Zhengfei
Shi Lirong
hi Lirong has
focussed ZTE
on its key strengths
and delivered
renewed
profitability. At the
start of 2015 the
company announced revenue
growth of 8% but profit growth of
94.2% to $424 million. These
achievements follow from Shis
reorganisation of the business to
focus on its three key markets
operators, enterprise and mobile
devices with the aim of
sharpening its focus and
continuing to deliver revenue and
profit growth.
Jong-Kyun Shin
CEO and president
Samsung Electronics
ong-Kyun Shin
has been
president of
Samsung
Electronics since
2012 and CEO
since 2013, but he
has also been head of IT and
mobile communications since
2009, leading the companys
spectacular race with Apple in the
handset and tablet business. That
unit was combined with IT in
2011, putting Shin into a powerful
position in Samsungs business
covering the whole telecoms
industry. He was previously head
of R&D for the mobile unit.
CEO
ARM Holdings
lectronics
engineer Simon
Segars joined ARM
as the sixteenth
employee of the
chip maker in
1991, and he
succeeded Warren East as CEO in
2013, after holding senior
positions in the companys
processor and physical IP
divisons. He earlier led the
development of early products
that powered the first digital
mobile phones, and holds patents
in the field of embedded CPU
architectures. He is driven by a
vision of technology that
empowers people and businesses
to improve social, economic,
education and health outcomes.
20 of the 20
Top Telcos
Get Better Results
en Zhengfei set
up Huawei in
1987, selling
telephone exchange
kit imported from
Hong Kong. Since
then the company
has grown to compete directly with
Ericsson as one of the worlds two
biggest equipment vendors. Like
www.globaltelecomsbusiness.com
oracle.com/communications
or call 1.800.ORACLE.1
Gary Smith
Rajeev Suri
he coming year
will see Rajeev
Suri, CEO of Nokia
Siemens Networks
since 2009 and
then all of Nokia
from May 2014,
realise his dream and complete
the acquisition of Alcatel-Lucent.
Once it happens, the expanded
Nokia will have products in
markets that Suri has been taking
NSN/Nokia out of for six years.
The deal will give him significant
market share in the US mobile
industry, where Nokia was never
strong.
Hans Vestberg
President and CEO
Ericsson
ans Vestberg
has now been
CEO of Ericsson for
more than five
years, having
previously been
CFO. He is a
leading advocate for the potential
of mobility and broadband to
tackle some of the worlds most
compelling issues such as poverty,
health, education and climate
change. He is a member of the
Broadband Commission for Digital
Development and of the
leadership council of the United
Nations Sustainable Development
Solutions Network.
EIGHT
SOFTWARE
AND SERVICE
VENDORS
Eli Gelman
CEO
Amdocs
Stephen Gray
President and CEO
Syniverse
tephen became
Syniverses
president and CEO in
August 2014 three
years after joining
the companys board
following Syniverses
acquisition by the Carlyle Group
where he was operating executive
with the private equity companys
telecommunications, media and
technology group. Now he oversees
the development of Syniverses
global business, including IPX, which
has enabled the first commercial
VoLTE roaming service.
TK Kurien
CEO
Wipro
K Kurien has
been a
transformational
leader of Wipro and
has been
instrumental in
turning around the
various businesses that he has
spearheaded within the group,
including the business process
Satya Nadella
CEO
Microsoft
atya Nadella
took over as
CEO of Microsoft in
February 2014 and
a year later wrote off
the companys $7.6
billion purchase of
Nokias handset business. Former
Nokia CEO Stephen Elop left at
about the same time. The whole
Nokia disaster has almost
overshadowed Microsofts earlier
$8.5 billion purchase of Skype
technology that is now incorporated
into Microsofts business software.
But Microsoft is still the third
largest maker of phones.
Ginni Rometty
Doug Suriano
General manager
Oracle Communications
oug Suriano
took over
Oracles
communications
business after
Bhaskar Gorti
moved to AlcatelLucent at the start of 2015. With
David Walsh
CEO
Genband
Meg Whitman
www.globaltelecomsbusiness.com