qlikview.com
October 2012
ACHIEVING A COMPETITIVE EDGE
THrOuGH BusINEss DIsCOVEry
How User-Driven BI Enables Telecommunications Providers
to Increase Customer Retention and Reduce Costs
Achieving A Competitive Edge Through Business Discovery | 2
Table of Contents
Executive summary 3
Cost reduction vs. Customer Experience 4
Business Discovery 6
Conclusion 8
Achieving A Competitive Edge Through Business Discovery | 3
Executive Summary
The telecommunications industry is shifting into an unfamiliar landscape. Texting has overtaken talking in the UK, machine-to-machine technologies present new revolutionary possibilities and the generation of vast volumes of data offer unprecedented insights into consumer behavior.
This white paper focuses on two competing priorities – cost reduction and creating positive customer experiences. Both are critical factors for success, but they can also innately contradict each other. The paper explains that it is possible to achieve both by providing customers with self-service (which is rapidly gaining popularity as the customer’s favourite method of engagement). However, self-service is only effective if it creates a real sense of customer empowerment through ease of use and powerful functionality, delivering a level of service superior than that of a call center.
Key to user-friendly self-service applications is Business Discovery software. Through its flexible architecture and intuitive visualizations, users are able to effectively manage their own accounts and reveal new insights about their usage. But Business Discovery goes much further for telecommunication companies; it unites disconnected silos of data across the enterprise, improves operational performance, aids decisions on financial performance and improves sales, all through increased intelligence and insight.
QlikView’s Top Telecommunications Concerns • Cost reduction • Improving customer experience • Product differentiation • Reducing churn • Monetizing data
• Managing big data
• Social media engagement
• Threat of OTT providers
• Exploiting M2M
opportunities
• Low growth in
Achieving A Competitive Edge Through Business Discovery | 4
Cost Reduction vs. Customer Experience
It is a challenging time for the telecommunications industry. This year alone has seen Alcatel abandon profit targets after posting losses of 40million
euros and Nokia Siemens Networks shed 17,000 jobs worldwide.1 Overall,
Forbes has predicted global growth of the telecommunication services market to shrink from 7% in 2011 to 4% in 2012.
The pressures and threats behind this drop come from a multitude of sources: fierce competition from over-the-top providers, the erosion of traditional revenues in fixed voice and SMS services, the 25-fold increase in data volume being met with only a 2-fold increase in revenue, massive investment requirements for increased network capacity, EU regulations to cut roaming costs and unwavering shareholder pressure.
It is then no surprise that cost reduction has become a major theme for the telecommunications sector. Rivals are now sharing networks to minimize costs such as in the case of Orange and T-Mobile, Bell Canada and Telus, and Vodafone and Telefónica. According to research company Ovum,
Vodafone’s and Telefónica’s venture could produce combined savings of more
than £1bn by 2015.2
Outsourcing is another way companies are seeking to reduce expenditure. The American operator Sprint handed over the day-to-day running of its network to Ericsson, transferring 6,000 of its employees to Ericsson in
the process.3
Against this difficult, ultra-competitive backdrop, customer support would stand to be a likely casualty of such cost cutting measures. However, delivering an excellent customer experience is arguably just as important as reducing costs, and comes at a time when customers are at their most fickle and demanding. Not only is customer experience a means of differentiation in a crowded marketplace, but it is also a vital aspect to increasing revenue. Bain and Company research revealed that a 5% improvement in retention rates can yield as much as a 75% increase in profits for companies across a range
of industries.4
It is no coincidence that some of the best performing companies such as Apple are renowned for their high levels of customer satisfaction. Business Week highlighted how Rackspace, a cloud hosting company, is able to thrive against established giants such as Amazon by delivering what it terms as ‘Fanatical Support’. This dedication to customer service includes 24/7 365 support, unmatched expertise and no scripted answers. For example, when Amazon’s cloud server crashed, customers received a two-week credit and an apology letter. When Rackspace’s server went down, its employees called thousands of customers personally to apologize. Rackspace has also been known to deliver pizzas to customers working late and sing “Happy Birthday”
via speakerphone.5
“
Margins are under
pressure and could
drop from the current
figure of 35–40% to
as low as 15% within
five years.
”
Achieving A Competitive Edge Through Business Discovery | 5
As well as improving customer retention, there are also a host of other benefits for providing an outstanding customer experience. Pleased customers can turn into brand promoters, advertising the benefits by word-of-mouth or social media, and can provide valuable insight and feedback into new product innovations. Furthermore, retaining customers through good customer experiences is a far more efficient method of protecting revenue than by winning new ones; new customers require costly market research, advertising and promotions. TM Forum identified numerous advantages of renewals over new customers:
• Less price sensitive
• Require less education
• Easier to forecast
• Account management costs decline over time
• More likely to buy ancillary products6
But just as there are great benefits to providing an excellent customer experience, so are there severe punishments for failure. For example, RIM was forced to offer compensation to mobile operators when its systems went offline for three days across many parts of the world and gave many
users more than $100 worth of free applications7 (incurring significant brand
damage in the process). So although cost reduction is critical, customer service failure can end up being more expensive.
So the question for telecommunication providers is how best to marry the two interdependent challenges of cost reduction and customer service. Self-service has emerged as a particularly persuasive answer. Not only is it a cheaper mode of customer support, but evidence suggests that it is actually preferred by younger demographics. The article by Annie Turner “Is self-service the answer to better customer experience?” stated: “Allowing customers to serve themselves should be a big win-win for service providers and customers – it’s cheaper than complaints via a call center and, if done properly, increases customer satisfaction.”
The savings are potentially massive. One operator providing unstructured supplementary service data (USSD) based self-care services has
generated annual savings of over $40million on interactive voice response
(IVR) costs alone.8
However, self-service can only generate cost savings and enhance customer experience if it is correctly implemented and meets customer requirements.
“
Losing ownership of
the client
”
was ranked as the telecoms sector’s top business risk in 2008 and 2010. Ernst & Young
Achieving A Competitive Edge Through Business Discovery | 6
Business Discovery
Self-service applications need to be intuitive, accessible and visually engaging. QlikView’s Business Discovery platform is designed to be all of these. Its clear and intuitive
dashboards invite users to analyze their phone usage, and its flexible architecture enables them to investigate numerous scenarios and different permutations instantaneously to reveal new insights.
Listed by Gartner as a leader in the 2012 Business Intelligence Platform Magic Quadrant, QlikView technology is utilized by some of the biggest names in telecommunications, including T-Mobile, Vodafone, Canal Digital and Telstra.
One major global operator uses QlikView in its self-service application to provide corporate customers with a complete view of their global, local and individual mobile costs. Users can get an overview of usage and spend without running any reports and run standard and bespoke reporting. QlikView’s mobility also means it can be remotely accessed from anywhere in the world with total security.
This represents the best of both worlds – Business Discovery creating great customer experiences and lower support costs for the operator. However, QlikView goes beyond self-service applications to provide intelligence across the entire business. It helps increase efficiencies and identifies potential areas of cost savings by:
• Creating a single version of the truth through fast, flexible executive dashboards
KPIs covering areas such as P&L analysis, cash flow optimization and cost center analysis
• Improving call center performance by offering a complete view of agent and
team performance by combining data from multiple sources
• Providing cradle-to-grave analytics of the customer journey
• Reducing downtime by enabling transactional network alerting information to aid
the understanding of communication trends, allowing for proactive prediction of network availability
• Providing onsite network engineers with real-time information, fed straight to
their smart phones
The functionality that enables users to conduct Business Discovery in such an easy-to-use and flexible manner lies in the architecture. Through Associative Experience, Global Search and Comparative Analysis, users are able to swiftly realize previously unseen relationships and opportunities.
Achieving A Competitive Edge Through Business Discovery | 7
AssociAtive experience
Associative Experience is similar to Google’s Instant Search – providing instant results as the user types. By managing association among data sets, e.g. customer revenue and geographical area, at the engine level and not the application level, it increases flexibility. It also doesn’t need to be reconfigured to answer new questions, enabling ad hoc cost analysis and reporting, vastly speeding up the querying process independent from IT.
GlobAl seArch
Traditional BI can only provide insight into a limited number of fields at a time, meaning users have to manually switch to different parts of their application and keep re-running searches. Global searches enable users to search every field simultaneously, highlighting available matches for immediate access and therefore increasing search certainty. It provides the ability to locate data in structured and unstructured fields, allowing the user to drill down to identify trouble spots.
compArAtive AnAlysis
Comparative analysis is used when contrasting multiple data sets similar to stock performance analysis. By comparing the performance of two or more groupings of products, over measures such as time or region, data relationships can be spotted along with opportunities and threats.
“
Telecommunication
Organizations that
use QlikView saw
an average increase
of 17% in customer
satisfaction
”
IDC, the leading market intelligence company
Achieving A Competitive Edge Through Business Discovery | 8
Conclusion
Scalable and easy to use, Business Discovery is the means to meet customer
expectations and lower costs. By turning unwieldy and disconnected data sources into intelligence, it empowers telecommunication providers to better understand their own service performance, identifying the most profitable customers and areas of possible cost savings. In an industry characterized by competition, complexity and uncertainty, it allows users to extrapolate intelligence with ease, creating a greater market knowledge and insight that can then go on to become a competitive advantage.
“
I regularly hear from customers about the ease with which QlikView
was deployed across their entire organization, and the range of new
analyses it created over their traditional BI solutions. I always recommend
that prospects download the free personal edition so they can see for
themselves how simple and powerful Business Discovery can be.
”
Achieving A Competitive Edge Through Business Discovery | 9
End Notes
1 Financial Times, Alcatel shares slide after profit warning
2 Cited from Financial Times, Vodafone and Telefónica to share networks 3 CNET, Sprint outsources network to Ericsson
4 “Loyalty Rules!” Frederick F. Reichheld, Bain and Company, Inc. 5 Business Week, How Rackspace beats the behemoths 6 TM Forum, Exploiting analytics
7 Financial Times, Angry O2 customers demand compensation
GlobAl heAdquArters
Qlik Technologies, Inc. 150 N. Radnor Chester Road Suite E220
Radnor, PA 19087
Phone: +1 (888) 828-9768
Fax: +1 (610) 975-5987
INsIGHT EVErywHErE
QlikTech has offices worldwide with expert, friendly staff ready to
help you drive smarter, faster decisions with QlikView.
For contact details please visit:
http://www.qlikview.com/us/company/contact-us
qlikview.com
© 2012 QlikTech International AB. All rights reserved. QlikTech, QlikView, Qlik, Q, Simplifying Analysis for Everyone, Power of Simplicity, New Rules, The Uncontrollable Smile and other QlikTech products and services as well as their respective logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of QlikTech International AB. All other company names, products and services used herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The information published herein is subject to change without notice. This publication is for informational purposes only, without representation or warranty of any kind, and QlikTech shall not be liable for errors or omissions with respect to this publication. The only warranties for QlikTech products and services are those that are set forth in the express warranty statements accompanying such products and services, if any. Nothing herein should be construed as constituting any additional warranty.