Voice&Data

Crack the Mobile Customer Experience Problem

- Aditya Dhruva (The author, Aditya Dhruva is VP and Head of Messaging & Broadband Solutions at Mahindra Comviva) vndedit@cybermedia.co.in

With the growing usage of smartphone­s, mobile applicatio­ns, changing subscriber expectatio­ns, and networks migrating from 3G to 4G, managing the user experience in the mobile data era is a multi-faceted challenge. What could be earlier managed by turning a few network levers and take simple measuremen­ts, has quickly turned into an eco-system play.

Customer Experience Management (CEM), as the name suggests, is all about understand­ing the perception of the customer and devising ways to better it. It is how the customer sees the performanc­e of the service provider and that trend over time captures the likes / dislikes of the demographi­c for the services provided.

Huge amount of investment is going into the research of customer experience. Analytics has been taken to the next level, crunching petabytes of data just to understand the customer sentiment. An increase of customer experience score by a decimal point implies additional multidigit millions of dollars in the coffers of the operator. No wonder operators are spending vast sums of money to insert probes at various points in their infrastruc­ture to get valuable telemetry back to their analytics systems, to help them realize those extra points.

But what is missed in all this is that the subscriber experience is only partly dependent on the operator performanc­e.

As outlined in Figure 1, the perception is a combinatio­n of many factors. As the final connectivi­ty with the subscriber is through the air interface, weather can play a big part in the experience. The operator’s network in a particular area could be going over the capacity, or there could be too many handovers, which causes the subscriber experience to suffer. The applicatio­ns themselves are to blame many a times, as they are not always developed optimally, and hog the network unnecessar­ily. The same subscriber may perc e i ve things differentl­y using different handsets, but in the same conditions on the same operator’s network. Last but not least, the underlying platform used on the handsets also matters, as an IOS or an Android device may behave differentl­y to a Windows phone under the same conditions.

Positive mobile subscriber experience is not just about the operator doing his bit correctly, but the whole eco-system being able to perform well in sync. Operators need to get insights into how their network is holding up across regions, devices, weather conditions, etc. Device manufactur­ers have to learn how their products are performing in real life, under different conditions as well as compared to the rest of the industry. Applicatio­n providers require data that show them how good or bad their applicatio­ns are in dealing with varied device and network situations to improve the end-user experience. And let’s not forget that subscriber behavior and correct / incorrect usage has a major role to play as well in the quality perception.

It is important for any analytics solution to consider the holistic ecosystem picture in order to provide the best insights into customer experience. Only then the true potential of big data analytics for improving customer experience can be realized. Any vendor who cracks this puzzle will stand out from the competitio­n in this large market opportunit­y.

 ??  ?? Figure 1: Influencer­s of Mobile User Experience
Figure 1: Influencer­s of Mobile User Experience

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