Essential telcos continue to explore now business-building initiatives as a way of tackling market commoditisation.
Despite this, over the last seven years there has only been a 28% growth in total shareholder returns.
The B2B sector provides forward-thinking telcos with numerous opportunities for growth, however it is market differentiation which is the fundamental success factor. Because of this, the Internet of Things (IoT) rises to the top for telcos hoping to stand out from the competition and improve their business model.
IoT has the power to deliver new operational advantages to businesses across sectors by building a mesh of advanced analytics, automated capabilities, and real-time insights. Yet many companies that have invested in IoT technologies struggle to realise its promised benefits. Connectivity is one of the key roadblocks to realising this potential.
Across industries, there is a need for IoT solutions that are quick and simple to deploy. As we approach 2023 many telcos have already upgraded to 5G. This puts them in pole position for the year ahead with the opportunity to provide market-ready mobility and roaming IoT solutions that work “out of the box” by connecting the dots from device through to network in one bundle.
Let’s take a closer look at why IoT offers such promise for telcos and how they can deliver rock-solid implementation options.
It’s time for telcos to invest in the future of IoT
IoT technology offers telcos the chance to carve a new, service-provider-shaped role that will, in turn, help to increase recurring revenue margins and reduce churn. This aligns with the need of the customer to drive OPEX vs CAPEX spending. From smart hospitals and intelligent factories through to fleet management and autonomous cars, there is no shortage of B2B use case examples that demand lower latency, high bandwidth, and high reliability while roaming or in real-time motion. Telcos have the unique opportunity to provide solutions to enable these use cases to help customers realise the value of IoT very quickly.
For this reason, robust mobile network coverage is essential to the future of IoT adoption and telcos are already poised to help with their core business offering. Telcos can pull through massive core connectivity services that will elevate them from selling the “pipe” to selling tangible “business outcomes.” In this way, telcos have a strategic way to push against rising market commoditisation. For example, the IoT market in Australia and New Zealand is expected to reach $24 billion by 2026. Providers who are able to help enterprises realise digital transformation goals and provide all important network connectivity will be able to showcase the true value of their services.
Adding to the story further is the lack of an all-encompassing market leader for the delivery of IoT services. Here, market fragmentation is so pronounced that analysts predict it will create significant uncertainty, as highlighted by Michele Mackenzie and Tom Rebbeck of Analysys Mason: “A firm that wanted to add connectivity to its device would struggle to choose a technology. It could simply add both—Qualcomm and others have modules that offer NB-IoT and LTE-M connectivity—but this adds complexity and cost; exactly what the industry wants to avoid with solutions for IoT.”
Telcos that act now to seize the IoT market will benefit from first-mover advantage. But with Verizon, Telefonica, Claro Brasil, and NTT Docomo already making strides in this direction, the race is on to solve the existing supply chain challenges.
The simplification of IoT delivery
IoT promises a radical improvement to the way we live, work and play. The technology is based on a network of physical objects that are continuously connected to the internet in order to send real-time updates back and forth, creating a rich data flow from edge devices to central servers.
The ability to deliver a seamless digital self-service experience to B2B customers relies on having a robust supply chain—and here lies the core opportunity. IoT service delivery is made up of a number of interconnected layers that need to be unpacked if supply chain issues are to be solved:
Connectivity: IoT relies on high speed, low latency, and reliable internet. Ideally, this coverage should seamlessly accommodate the many use cases in play. Secure, private 5G networks are needed at scale.
Devices: There are endless IoT device manufacturers, which creates a complexity introduced by multi-vendor, non-integrated IoT solutions across the supply chain. Logistics, inventory, validation, contract management, and support need to be assessed for each vendor. In addition, device manufacturers use varying products and standards that make software compatibility difficult to guarantee.
Applications: Similar to device hardware, IoT software applications are being produced by a large volume of ISVs. This market fragmentation creates multiple risk areas when it comes to interoperability, device compatibility, and versioning with no clear standards in play. Privacy is also a key concern, as highlighted by new EU legislation that aims to tackle cyber attacks with steep fines aimed at developers who don’t comply.
Commerce: If customers are looking to purchase simple business subscriptions for IoT solutions, telcos will struggle to realise the full sales potential of any product or service. With a fragmented supply chain, telcos are faced with manual IoT vendor integrations to their BSS and OSS systems that can take several months and cost hundreds of thousands of pounds per vendor. This makes the task of building an IoT product catalog that delivers value and optionality to customers an astronomical task.
While solving these challenges won’t be an overnight task, a solution can be found through the power of partner ecosystems.
How partner networks can transform the future of IoT
Telcos hold an ace card when it comes to the future of IoT. With the offering of stable, 5G connectivity already in hand, telco players solve a major market challenge for all channel players keen to harness the potential of IoT.
But accelerating IoT adoption across the B2B market needn’t—and shouldn’t—be a solo journey. Trying to solve every challenge alone will not only increase the scale of the project but also cost critical time-to-market. Combined this could see telcos lose the edge that first-movers hold.
Instead, telcos can partner up with other channel players to solve the supply chain issues from end to end. Established distributors will have logistics, inventory, and contracting covered for numerous vendors and suppliers, meaning new products and services can be added quickly. Some distributors may even have their own IoT divisions with experience building tech stacks for a variety of use cases while ensuring interoperability.
Finally, telcos can aim to work together with a supply chain platform partner- particularly those with a large set of pre-integrated vendors.. Joining forces ensures that the right bundle of IoT solutions can easily reach the hands of customers, helping to minimise the workload associated with product fulfillment. The right supply chain platform partner will be able to automate complex subscription and billing workflows automatically or even offer a digital self-service experience that lets customers select their IoT solutions on demand.
These partnership ecosystems provide easy access to hardware and software vendors, alongside a powerful on-demand digital delivery experience. Because of this telcos need only bundle connectivity and move on to sales.
About the Author
Mark Wass is Strategic Sales Director, UK and North EMEA at CloudBlue. CloudBlue is a SaaS company helping businesses transform themselves, whatever their position in the supply chain. Our managed marketplace platform takes the complexity out of distributing subscription- based solutions in the everything-as-a-service world. CloudBlue technology does heavy lifting for all processes that make everything-as-a- service commerce a reality, so our customers’ businesses become more efficient and more profitable.
Featured image: ©leungchopan