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The telecoms industry in Europe and the US is at risk of becoming a low profit business. Margins are under pressure and could
drop from the current figure of 35 - 40% to as low as 15% within 5 years. Cost management has to become an inherent core
competence for wireless and wireline operators. Significant cost reductions are only possible with substantial changes in the
business/operating model. New pressures will mean a change in mindset and the ability to ‘think outside the box’. Arthur D.
Little has successfully managed this process with many operators.
Introduction – Operators embarked on a low-profit spiral trigger the type of substantial product innovations that the
customer is willing to pay for, the need for cost cutting will
Pressure on prices and margins is a situation faced by almost all
continue. This is demonstrated when looking at the illustrative
operators. The telecom scenario shows a world going “flat” with
projection of an operator with a -3% revenue CAGR and +2%
abundant voice and data volumes while the cost of promotional
inflation based OPEX CAGR (see Figure 2). In this scenario EBITDA
discounts to attract new customers increases. As a result
will drop from 35% to 15% within five years. A low EBITDA level
revenues and EBITDA margins are under strong pressure, a trend
in an infrastructure business like the telecommunications industry
which can be clearly seen in the recent financial results of the
puts investor returns at risk. To prevent this scenario, operators
top players in the telecoms market. Only Deutsche Telekom and
need to find new innovative ways to reduce costs.
Verizon have escaped this trend (see Figure 1).
Operators have to protect margins when ARPUs are under Cost reduction – Unknown costs cannot be efficiently
pressure and simultaneously new technologies trigger new managed
CAPEX. Should the forthcoming FTTx & LTE spending fail to
In order to excel in OPEX and CAPEX management, full cost
transparency must be established in order to identify, prioritize and
Figure 1. Relative development of telecom revenues
and EBITDA optimize additional saving measures. Usually the obvious areas
Revenue (% change) will already have been targeted in the first cycle of cost cutting.
25 Therefore the challenge is to find the hidden potential by enabling
20 a broader audience to act cost sensitive. For this reason the first
15 Vodafone phase of the cost reduction project needs to focus on establishing
Verizon
10 a stringent OPEX/CAPEX analysis.
Deutsche Telekom
5 NTT
Telenor
0 AT&T Telefonica Organizations do not always have the data available to act in a cost
France Telecom
-5 KPN conscious manner. Many issues can inhibit an organization’s cost
Telecom Italia
-10 management ranging from system or process based barriers to
-15
political or emotionally driven behavior. The staff responsible for
-20
British Telecom
defining strategies, rollout plans and architectures need to know
-25
-60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 the current cost drivers and the potential alternatives.
H1 2009 vs. 2008 H2 2008 vs. 2007 EBITDA (% change)
Source: Arthur D. Little
Telecom & Media Viewpoint
Figure 3. Exemplary clustering of saving measures Figure 4. ADL case study example of an aligned network
(ADL case example) including generic need to rollout process for wireline and wireless
develop specific cost management skills
Requirements
Plan Build Run
high Quick wins Strategic saving Wireline
measures Residential
Project Site Sub- Co- Closing Correc-
Billing/CRM IT 4G network Strategic design & identifi- mission ordination Tive &
consolidation cooperation planning planning cation, of con- preven-
(network acquisition struction tive
Server Opera-
Digitalization SME architec- & per- & in- main-
Optimizing virtualization tional
last mile inventory ture missions stallation tenance
rental OPEX planning
& design, Oper-
(annual
Company rollout ations
rollout Wireless
license mgmt. Ceasing TDM maintenance Key principles,
Benefit network
portfolio
Accounts mgmt) Project Site Sub- Co- Closing Correc-
Operational saving Dropped measures 5 year design & identifi- mission ordination Tive &
measures road- planning cation, of con- preven-
map) acquisition struction tive
Joint wireline & External1) & per- & in- main-
wireless purchasing missions stallation tenance
Optimizing printing Ceasing 2G
& postage HW maintenance Procurement Supplier management
Reducing voice/BB
Need to develop
platform maintenance specific cost Controlling Financial & operational controlling
Internalization Integrating fix & management
mobile signaling Management Management functions & program management
low of freelancers skills
low Effort/Risk high 1) e.g. government, municipalities, site sharing partners, architects
Source: Arthur D. Little
Source: Arthur D. Little
Cross-unit alignment service centers) or network (e. g. civil works consolidation, rollout
optimization,…see Figure 4). However there are also certain
To optimize OPEX and CAPEX a dialogue between the strategic
barriers to overcome (see separate case study).
and operation representatives (e. g. network and IT) needs to be
ensured, in order to prioritize and balance cost increasing and cost
Another rejuvenated trend is in the area of wireless network
cutting activities. Multiple technology ecosystems increasingly
sharing and outsourcing. Even though network sharing is a well
compete against each other (e. g. IPTV vs. DTH, ADSL vs. HSPA,
known cost cutting approach it has been given more prominence
VDSL/FTTx vs. LTE, macro rollout vs. femto deployment…) and
following the recent industry announcements of the joint venture
the need for alignment is vital.
between T-Mobile and Orange in the UK which targets EUR 270
mio. p.a. savings and between PCCW and Hutchison in Hong
Alignment of long-term vs. short term objectives
Kong (see Figure 5).
Often project tasks are in competition to long term strategic
measures or even long term saving initiatives (e. g. a business The need for these partnerships is driven by the continuing cost
requirement implemented as a workaround into a legacy software pressure of a highly competitive market environment. The pending
application). This perspective changes, when project budgets are investments for upcoming 4G rollouts (e. g. LTE) provides an
forced from the beginning to include the costs required to reverse additional argument to strike a new path. Cost optimization has
the workaround at a later stage. to consider future OPEX and CAPEX of planned projects and
investments. The possibility of co-operation needs to be evaluated
now, before the option space is limited as potential partners
Strategic saving measures – Larger savings require bold
commit to competing operators.
strategic measures
As most operators have already gone through multiple cost Conclusion
reduction cycles it is a big challenge to identify significant additional
All players in the telecoms market will be forced to reduce their
saving levers. Larger saving benefits require in most cases
long term costs. Incumbents will be affected to the same extent
strategic measures which involve changes of the business or
as alternative operators. Arthur D. Little expects these players to
operating model.
initiate cost saving measures year on year.
An example is the recent announcement of Deutsche Telekom to
The management has to ensure that the organization acts
consolidate the wireline and wireless organization, where the cost-
cost consciously to leverage operational saving measures. The
aspect was one of a number of key arguments. This has re-ignited
organization has to have the tools and procedures, including full
the fixed-mobile consolidation process in the industry. A few
cost transparency, in place. Basic cost controlling techniques have
incumbent front-runners like Swisscom and KPN already started
been established in most organizations but it is now essential for
this process some years ago and now present themselves as true
steering tools and procedures to be aligned to actual business
FMC-companies in front of the customers.
drivers.
The consolidation impacts on all key business aspects, such as
Operators need to act now in order to realize strategic saving
sales/marketing (e. g. shop consolidation), customer care (e. g.
measures and optimize forthcoming investments related to FTTx
call centre consolidation), IT (e. g. system consolidation, shared
Bell Canada and Telus, two Orange UK and T-Mobile UK Tele2 and Telenor build joint
major CDMA operator, are are planning to merge in a venture for LTE rollout
jointly deploying a national 50/50 joint venture Rollout starts in 2009, service
HSPA network Expected key benefits will launch expected for end 2010 Genius Brand, a joint venture
HSPA network go-live expected derive from joint network with focus on USB data between PCCW and Hutchison,
for early 2010 on 1900 MHz and activities (including site modems won 30 MHz in the 2.1 GHz
850 MHz rationalization and backhaul) Spectrum sharing in the 900 band 01/2009
Network is planned to be EUR 270 mio. OPEX and MHz and 2.6 GHz band Joint venture is expected to
upgraded to LTE at a later stage CAPEX savings projected p.a. Planned LTE coverage of 99% deploy LTE
starting from 2015 of population by 2013 No timeframe committed yet
Side box:
Case study – Barriers to overcome when consolidating
Jesus Portal
wireline & wireless organizations
Director TIME practice
Technology barrier +34 91 70274 34
portal.jesus@adlittle.com
By nature there is a significant difference based on the technology
itself and related physics. The challenge for a successful integration
lies in finding and consolidating the relevant competences that are Slim Saidi
overlapping (e. g. rollout supervising, supplier management) and Director TIME practice
maintaining the individual activities specific to the technology (e. g. +971 4433 5401
radio site approval, splicing). saidi.slim@adlittle.com
Cultural barrier
A substantial discrepancy, most particularly for all wireless and Additional author: Clemens Boehmer, Manager TIME practice
wireline operations, is the difference in company culture.
Wireline operators build on a long tradition within the telecom-
munications industry with substantial resources already invested
in deploying and maintaining remote telecommunication
elements. Wireless operators however, have been active for only
a couple of years and developed their wireless infrastructure
based on a smaller number of network building elements.