Thursday, May 28, 2009

Actix predicts coordinated future for radio network engineering and status management by Actix

London, 26 May 2009 - Actix, the leader in Network Status Management (NSM) solutions, today predicted that with the arrival of 4G, network managers will have a sharper focus on the delivery cost per data bit. A better co-ordination between radio network engineering and status management, Actix has found, can drive a reduction of almost 30% in day-to-day RAN engineering costs.

With the advent of LTE technology, mature operators will be managing at least three overlaying Radio Access Networks (RANs) - 2G, 3G and 3.9/4G networks. A large portion of the delivery cost of every bit is RAN-related, and the challenging economics of mobile broadband will enforce the need for a much sharper focus on delivery cost per data bit if operators are to remain profitable.

"Mobile carriers are under immense pressure to increase margins by cutting expense, while still delivering the ultra-high bandwidth, mobile broadband data services that consumers are coming to expect," said Sanjay Nagdev, Chief Sales Officer at Actix. "As operators focus on lowering the cost per bit of mobile data, the spectral efficiency of LTE is proving attractive, and driving some to make early investment into 3.9G and 4G technologies. However, simply overlaying this over existing 2G and 3G networks won't get the most out of the investment - operators need to remove cost layers, not add more. With multiple tier one operators now deploying NSM solutions, it's clear that RAN automation is an essential step towards improved cost effectiveness."

Through the use of modern solutions that help maximise the productivity of all network resources, by consolidating, automating, systemising and prioritising network engineering processes, Actix solutions have already delivered cost savings as high as 30%, while increasing the 'lost' capacity returned to the network by almost an order of magnitude. In one case, Actix was able to assist in accelerating the deployment of new network assets, cutting network deployment time by 75%.

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