Saturday, April 5, 2008

Mobile Calls: 40% Are Churn Inducing

About four out of 10 mobile calls have call quality low enough (Mean Opinion Score score of 2.5) to put the relationship with the customer at risk, a survey of 630 million live mobile calls in 12 countries strongly suggests.

The reason is that subjective call quality below a MOS score of 2.5 is considered "unacceptable" by users and the ITU. When so many mobile calls are right at the threshold, they are, by definition, not "quality" calls.

You might wonder how it is that so many calls, and so many carriers, in so many countries, can have that many calls of questionable quality, when network engineers will tell you the networks are performing quite well.

The problem is that both the survey results and the network engineers are generally right: the "network" is working as it should. The problem is that problems outside the network (ambient environment around the user handset, for example) are disrupting performance. If you test the "network" in the old way, the ambient disruptors cannot be detected.

In mature markets such as the U.S. and Western Europe, 23 percent of all calls fall below the industry minimum. In rapid growth markets, such as the Middle East, India and South America, 59 percent of all calls fall below the industry minimum.

There are three primary issues, says Ken Croley, Ditech Networks director. Ambient noise, or noise that originates in the caller’s environment and enters the device’s microphone, was rated “objectionable” on up to 50 percent of all calls in some regions.

Acoustic echo, which is often caused by mobile handsets and headsets, was rated “objectionable” on up to 11 percent of all calls in some regions. That includes distortion-inducing elements such as Bluetooth ear pieces, for example.

Voice level mismatch, which makes it sound like a caller is speaking either too loudly or too softly, was rated “objectionable” on up to 28 percent of all calls in some regions, and is generally seen as a byproduct of codec mismatches.

The finds came as "a shock to carriers," says Croley. The distortions are "external to the network and missed by the network tests precisely because external to the network." Audio can bounce off a car windshield and back into a microphone, for example.

The corollary is that the problems cannot be fixed by adding more base stations or adding bandwidth. By definition, the issues are caused outside the network, by messiness in the user's aural environment.

Ambient noise levels are an issue as well: think of the trade show floor at CTIA or a crowded bar on Friday night.

The audits were conducted using Experience Intelligence (EXi), a technology developed by Ditech that quantifies the impact of voice quality impairments caused by the places where people make calls, codec impairments, and mobile devices like phones and headsets.

EXi is based on the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) G.107 E-Model, a widely used industry standard, and the technology has been utilized in the communications industry as a complement to existing voice quality test and measurement solutions.

Ditech believes the problems can be fixed by using EXi. Of course, there is the other solution: ban Bluetooth, prohibit talking in noisy places and outlaw talking while driving. Right.



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi, I am working on a project entitled "IP Carrier Network". I have tried search information on it, but I couldn't find the exact info which tells me what "IP Carrier Network" means. For instance, your blog "IP Carrier" consist of many post about it, however I still couldn't understand. Please guide me because I'm interested in knowing its

-features and limitation
-vendors and products
-future impacts in the marketplace for residential services and commercial services

Could you kindly reply to this comment or email me at silvermission@hotmail.com? Thanks for your help.

Anonymous said...

In addition to my previous comment, I just need to clarify my concern about the different between "IP Carrier Network" and "IP Carrier"

Thanks.

Gary Kim said...

These are tough questions to answer in a short reply. All telecom, cable and wireless networks are moving from legacy protocols to IP. As part of that change, business models will have to change radically as well.

One cannot yet specify all the services, applications or features that will develop. But it is safe to say these will include every current service, plus all sorts of things that haven't been invented, thought of or made into a financially self-sustaining business yet.

When I say "IP carrier," I mean global or local service providers, including telcos, cable companies, ISPs, metro fiber companies, competitive local exchange carriers, wireless companies, providers of virtual private network or hosted phone system services, independent VoIP providers as well as companies allied to the carriers, such as channel partners.

I am not primarily speaking of the technology but of the business models, services and applications to be provided.

Perhaps the term "next generation network" is most apt.

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