Telecom Spend Trends A Blog About Telecom Expense Management and Telecom Life Cycle Management

29Feb/080

The joys of following cell phone rate trends!

In the past two weeks, all of the major carriers decided on some form of the all-you-can-eat plan, which commoditizes cellular usage to some extent. This decision goes one step further in the wireless sector's inevitable march to being another set of dumb pipes just like cable and landline telecom. The cable providers will fight this, since it's hard to make money when you can't justify value-added services. But at the same time, it's really hard to be both an infrastructure provider and a content provider at the same time. (This is why great content creators like Electronic Arts aren't in charge of the Internets.) So, how good are each of the plans that came out this week? Let's take a look at each one.

26Feb/080

Never Fail, My Blackberry!

This isn't really a TEM entry per se, but why am I being so melodramatic? As you may know, RIM had a serious outage earlier this month. In response, Vodafone took the wise step of hiring Neverfail to insure availability when the Blackberry network has further problems. This is great, except that I thought the Blackberry outage was because of a system failure at the single point of failure at Waterloo. I'm not sure how Neverfail can get away from routing emails through Waterloo.

25Feb/080

IBM goes Global (with TEM)

Wait, doesn't IBM always have a global product for every possible technology in existence? Until February 20th, the answer was "apparently not." IBM announced last week that it is launching a global Telecom Expense Management solution complete with 6-8 weeks of consulting and followed up with a fully outsourced suite of services. The solution is going to be powered by Rivermine, which IBM started working with last year.

24Feb/080

Telecom Expense Management

My hope is to use this blog to show how the world of Telecom Expense Management (TEM) is affected by recent trends in telecommunications, mobility, software, outsourcing, spend management techniques, and whatever else might end up affecting the major players in the field.