Lacking a Clear Plan for Public Cloud Will Cost Operators Millions, Optiva Warns at MWC
February 20, 2019Optiva Inc., an innovative software provider of
mission-critical, cloud-native monetization solutions to leading communication
service providers (CSPs) globally, is cautioning CSPs at Mobile World Congress
Barcelona (MWC) that failure to move core, cloud-native applications to the
public cloud will result in the loss of competitive market position and
millions of dollars from their bottom line.
At a series of complimentary Optiva Insider events at MWC, Optiva executives will unveil their new Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Simulator. The simulator allows operators to see, specific to their circumstances, the resources and revenues they are wasting with on-premises implementations of their core BSS applications. In the case of one Middle Eastern CSP, hosting their disaster recovery on the public cloud is leading to savings of 78 percent of its TCO.
In Ovum’s February 2019 report “Understanding the Business Value of Re-architecting Core Applications on the Public Cloud“ Roy Illsley, distinguished analyst at Ovum stated that:
“To meet and exceed customers’ expectations, CSPs need to quickly introduce new services and then scale their infrastructure dynamically, upon demand. However, using traditional monolithic applications running on-premises made both these needs impossible because organizations have slow testing and release procedures and an overly complex and bureaucratic change procedure. This made changes slow, as organizations must perform capacity planning and purchase new hardware for the infrastructure, as well as deploy and test applications; these activities typically take months.”
Illsley continued: “The public cloud provides a perfect answer to both of these dilemmas; the public cloud providers have invested in the infrastructure, and the clients can choose to use as much or as little of it as they need. When this flexible infrastructure is combined with new cloud-native approaches to application development, the monolithic applications are decoupled and decomposed, and then containerized into sub-components, and the ability to rapidly develop and iterate changes to production is significantly improved. This capability has driven the growth of public cloud because organizations can move from concept to production quickly and scale any service to meet the demand.”
“CSPs are under such intense pressure to deliver cost-savings that it is surprising that operators have been so slow to engage with the public cloud,” said Danielle Royston, CEO of Optiva. “Private clouds, where operators still have to host and manage virtualized data in their own data centers, do not deliver on the promise of significant TCO reduction. Beyond some initial hardware savings and incrementally better operational capability, CSPs will not generate significant cost savings until they move significant workloads to the public cloud.”
Royston concluded: “With dozens of 5G network launches coming in 2019 and 2020, the volume of application data is set to expand exponentially. That means it is time for CSPs to do their due diligence on the public cloud and deliver what is probably one of the easiest and most fundamental moves available for the long-term health of their businesses. Telco leadership needs to start planning their move now, in 2019, and not wait for 2029.”
The complimentary Optiva Insider events include Kubernetes as a Stepping Stone, providing insight into how CSPs can start with an on-premise deployment of a BSS application and then move to the public cloud with the same installation at a future date. A second set of sessions called Let’s Go Full Cloud! explores the advantages and strategies for CSPs that want to move immediately to the public cloud.