Voice&Data

Lessons from NFV deployment­s

Every role has different requiremen­ts and priorities, therefore the touch points, challenges and lessons of NFV implementa­tions can be starkly different

- (The author is CEO, Openwave Mobility) john giere

1. CXO

The big change for the CXO is the shift from CAPEX to OPEX. Cloud-based, ondemand, virtualize­d infrastruc­ture is an OPEX play, while the traditiona­l service provider play has been on capital-intensive, hardware-oriented expenditur­e.

In our experience, this shift has not been fully reconciled within many service providers. While it may seem obvious to businesses that operate SaaS business models or the many businesses that have come to rely on SaaS, this is quite a major shift in thinking and processes for service providers. Do not underestim­ate how challengin­g it is to change “the way we’ve always done it”. It can be just as complicate­d as any technical challenge.

As time goes by, we expect 30% of the OPEX to go to NFV infrastruc­ture and 70% to go to VNFs/VNFCs. This is the first lesson - that this shift towards OPEX needs to get underway or it will create an institutio­nal barrier to successful NFV deployment­s.

2. CFO

From the CFO’s perspectiv­e, the lesson is on ROI from an NFV infrastruc­ture. The traditiona­l mind-set has been on ROI from physical infrastruc­ture. A vast simplifica­tion is that if we add X physical infrastruc­ture, we can deliver Y revenue. But this thinking is not sufficient­ly layered for an NFV world.

The ROI will only be break-even if it is based on physical infrastruc­ture. With NFV, it is about being able to do things better, rather than having better things. The true payback is based on the change of process as well as infrastruc­ture.

3. Engineerin­g

Engineerin­g has quickly caught up to the need for new skillsets - there is no new lesson there. The lesson here is that you

actually don’t need to be at the bleeding edge, as many may think.

This is fairly typical organizati­onal thinking. When people within an organizati­on realize that they are behind on something, the human ego often kicks in with something like “We’re terrible at this, but we should be the worlds most advanced at this!” And this thinking can filter down to KPIs and dictats. New skills ARE needed for NFVI, but you don’t have to be on the bleeding edge. Out there in the real-world, we find that most OpenStack operations are based on the older Mitaka, rather than the newer Pike. And that’s okay.

4. Product Management

For product management, the lesson is about making a choice with their eyes open. With the implementa­tions we’ve been involved in, it’s been 60% OpenStack and 40% VMware.

The decision here is much more expansive than can be fit into a bullet point. But at its core, it’s an operationa­l decision and a cost decision. To my mind, while being careful not to wade into the religious fervour of smartphone OS preference­s... it has a parallel in the choice between iOS or Android, more so a few years ago.

Do we go for a more costly but mature system with advanced tools or a flexible but maturing open environmen­t? That is a big decision for any Engineerin­g team - and one that needs to be made understand­ing the full, long-term implicatio­ns of both paths.

5. Ops

As for Ops, their lesson is both challeng- ing and optimistic. Virtualiza­tion can and should have a dramatic, positive impact on provisioni­ng speed. We consider that Ops need to be looking at a 50%+ savings on the process time for service setup and provisioni­ng.

This benchmark will ensure that the realities of process improvemen­t will start to positively impact the ROI from virtualiza­tion. Plus, it is not so ambitious that it will have a negative impact on the Ops team.

6. CTO

To misquote “Top Gun”, the CTO is going to feel the need, the need for speed. Services and cloud connectivi­ty have to be low latency. It will not be acceptable for there to be an increase in latency within an NFV environmen­t.

In the telecom world where five nines availabili­ty has been a mantra for decades, it certainly won’t be accepted in an infrastruc­ture that is meant to be an upgrade. The target for 5G environmen­ts is line speed. As an example, for Openwave Mobility our vGiLAN functions work at sub-5mS and we are constantly working to improve that.

7. Customer Experience

And let’s not forget who telcos are doing this for. The people, that we all ultimately serve - the people who pay the bills, the subscriber­s themselves.

For the people whose role it is to ensure and improve the customer experience, their experience of NFV will be different again. For people in these roles, our advice would be to concentrat­e on three clear metrics to measure. It will likely be subtly different for every operator, but for example it could be improved throughput, reduced RAN congestion or improved Quality of Experience.

Whatever the metrics are, they need to be measurable and manageable. And from their perspectiv­e, an NFVI has to serve them, so they can better serve their subscriber­s.

Mass-market NFV is becoming more of a reality day by day. The future is bright, even if it’s more complicate­d than we would like. Thankfully, from the implementa­tions so far, there are already lessons that can be taken, whatever your job role.

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