I took away six key messages from
the conference on the future of mobility in the Middle East:
1.
Small Cells Are the Next Big Thing: Operators
from large countries like Saudi Arabia to smaller countries like Qatar all
wanted to learn how they could use small cells to help them cope with the huge
traffic that they are experiencing on their mobile networks and to improve mobile coverage, especially indoors
and in heavily congested areas.
2. Small Cells Are Not an
Add-On: SPs realize that future
of mobile networks lies in a heterogeneous network (“HetNet”) world where
licensed and unlicensed mobile networks coexist and complement each other. With their unique strengths, Wi-Fi and
licensed small cells are quickly becoming important components of an integrated
access portfolio complementing the macro mobile access network.
3.
A New Enterprise-SP Partnership: Enterprises
have already invested in Wi-Fi in order to bring mobility to the
workplace. However, they now face the
rising challenge of BYOD – employees using their own devices to work and
expecting the same service and experience that they enjoy outside of the
office. Several speakers explained how
enterprises want to partner with service providers to provide a highly reliable
integrated Wi-Fi and cellular service to their employees. A critical first step is using small cells in
enterprises to improve the quality and coverage of mobile voice in the
workplace.
4.
Vertical Solutions Are Key: Several
speakers provided excellent details and case studies of how SPs need to be
creating specific vertical solutions to be successful in selling small cell
solutions in the enterprise market. The
key verticals that offer the biggest opportunities and have the most unique
needs include: education, hospitality, hospitals and retail.
5.
Wi-Fi Offload Comes to the Rescue: Saudi
Arabia has the highest mobile growth in the region and some of the highest mobile
usage in the world. The country expects
the number of mobile subscribers to increase 5-fold over the next 3 years and mobile
broadband data to triple over the same period.
Amro Mohamed Al Buti, Head of Application and Content Design at Saudi Telecom
described a fascinating case study of how they are using small cells to
intelligently offload up to 7% of their anticipated mobile traffic, saving them
$3.6 Billion by 2020.
6.
It’s All About the Data: Operators
and vendors alike recognize the value that is waiting to be released from small
cell technologies. Hidden in the
technology is an incredible amount of information and insight that providers
can exploit to deliver tangible value to their bottom-line. Data analytics and location-based services
offer real opportunities to monetize small cell deployments. The challenge to all participants was: “stop
letting Google extract the information from your network and create value.”
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