Telco industry ranks bottom in UK for customer service

The Institute of Customer Service has released its Customer Satisfaction Index stating the telco industry is the lowest ranked sector in the UK, reports Telecoms.com.

While the industry has made improvements over the last twelve months, it finished in last place with an index of 72.9, behind the likes of utilities and public services. The industry was one of the strongest improvers over the course of the last twelve months, improving its score by 1.2, it is still the industry with the highest numbers of complaints, 20% of customers compared to a national average of 12%.

“It’s encouraging to see the telecoms sector is making progress, but prevention is always better than cure, so the industry should take note of the areas which need to be focused on,” said Jo Causon, CEO of The Institute of Customer Service. “Efficiency, effectiveness and empathy are key and organisations should always follow up with customers to ensure that the problem is resolved.”

One statistic which could be seen as concerning for the industry is the number of customers who would be prepared to pay a higher cost for enhanced customer service. This was another area where the telco industry was ranking last with only 24% agreeing. The concern here would be surrounding the industry’s long-standing quest to avoid being relegated to the ranks of utilities, though the survey does suggest the industry is heading that direction.

Over the course of recent months, numerous value adds, bundle packages, brand marketing campaigns and customer services initiatives have been launched by the telcos in an effort to avoid being commoditised. Competing on price is worst case scenario for the industry, and despite the efforts, when surveys like this imply a high proportion of customers are basing their decision on price, in could indicate the industry is heading towards a ‘race to the bottom’.

In terms of best performers, giffgaff and Tesco Mobile were the highest performers in the telco industry, and the only two who featured into the top 50 overall.

BT outage impacts 10% of customers in capital

BT Sevenoaks workstyle buildingBT has confirmed around 10% of its customers experienced an outage this morning, which has reportedly been linked to a power incident at the former Telecity LD8 site in London, which is now owned by Equinix, reports Telecoms.com.

BT first acknowledged the outage this morning on Twitter, which took down broadband services for a number of customers in the London area.

The LD8 data centre in London’s Docklands currently houses the London Internet Exchange (LINX), one of the world’s largest Internet Exchanges with more than 700 members which include ISPs such as BT and Virgin Media, as well as content providers.

“We’re sorry that some BT and Plusnet customers experienced problems accessing some internet services this morning,” said a BT spokesperson. “Around 10% of customers’ internet usage was affected following power issues at one of our internet connection partners’ sites in London. The issue has now been fixed and services have been restored.”

While the comment has stated the problem was limited to London, BT’s service status page does indicate dozens of cities and towns across the UK experienced issues. These service challenges have not been directly linked to the same incident to date.

The LD8 data centre has been under control of Equinix over recent months since the US company acquired Telecity for $3.8 billion. Equinix claims it is now the largest retail colocation provider in Europe and globally, after the deal added 34 data centres to the portfolio, though eight assets had to be off-loaded to keep competition powers in the European Commission happy.

“Equinix can confirm that we experienced a brief outage at the former Telecity LD8 site in London earlier this morning,” said a Equinix spokesperson. “This impacted a limited number of customers, however service was restored within minutes. Equinix engineers are on site and actively working with customers to minimise the impact.”

During email exchanges with Telecoms.com, neither BT or Equinix named either party, though this is understandable as it is a sensitive issue. Despite BT stating all services have been recovered at the time of writing the service status page lists dozens of towns and cities who are still experiencing problems. Although not directly linked, as long as service problems continue BT is likely to be facing a mounting customer service challenge.

Machine Learning – It’s All About the Data | @CloudExpo #IoT #Cloud #BigData #MachineLearning

Big Data. Analytics. Internet of Things. Cloud. In the last few years, you cannot have a discussion around technology without those terms entering the conversation. They have been major technology disruptors impacting all aspects of the business. Change seems to occur at breakneck speeds and shows no sign of slowing. Today, it appears the one constant in technology is change. Constant change requires constant innovation which thereby introduces more new technologies. One of the new technologies entering the conversation is machine learning. Gartner identified machine learning as one of the top 10 technology trends for 2016. It is definitely a hot topic.

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Microsoft’s Cloud Drives Fourth Quarter Revenue

Microsoft’s fourth quarter has been a tale of growth and decline, with earnings much higher than expert predictions. Net income reached $5.5 billion while revenue came to $22.6 billion, which is significantly larger than the anticipated $22.1 billion. The driving force behind this massive growth: the cloud.

Microsoft’s intelligent cloud division reported a 7% increase in revenue, boosting it up to $6.7 billion. Microsoft Azure alone grew 102% with cloud services also seeing an increase of 5%. This significant increase in the cloud computing sector is largely due to CEO Satya Nadella, as he poured billions of dollars into growing the cloud and building new data centers around the world as well as partnering and acquiring many companies, including Tigo and GE. In addition, Office 365 saw a 54% increase while Office consumer products and cloud services grew 19%.

office 365

However, not all of Microsoft’s sectors experienced growth. The More Personal Computing sector experienced a 4% decline largely due to a 71% decrease in phone sales.

Windows 10 also grew 16%, while Microsoft announced that its plan to have Windows 10 on one billion devices by the year 2018 is unlikely to come to fruition in that short time span,

Microsoft closed its fiscal year with $92 billion in revenue and $22.3 billion in net income.

Previously an industry dominated by Amazon, Microsoft, as well as IBM and Google, are making significant advances with the cloud. This is likely to lead to increased competition within the industry, which will drive steep cloud service prices down.

Comments:

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella: “The past year was pivotal in both our own transformation and in partnering with our customers who are navigating their own digital transformations. The Microsoft Cloud is seeing significant customer momentum and we’re well positioned to reach new opportunities in the year ahead.”

The post Microsoft’s Cloud Drives Fourth Quarter Revenue appeared first on Cloud News Daily.

Microsoft looks to cloud as key strength of latest financial results

(c)iStock.com/Nicolas McComber

Microsoft cited the strength of its cloud portfolio on the firm’s ‘customer momentum’ as it reported a $3.1 billion (£2.4bn) net income for the quarter ending June 30.

Revenue was $20.6bn GAAP, with operating income at $3.1bn. Office commercial products and cloud services revenue grew 5%, heavily driven by the Office 365 side, while Office consumer products and cloud services grew 19%.

For Azure, revenue grew 102%, with Azure compute usage more than doubling year on year, while the install base for Microsoft’s enterprise mobility suites grew almost two and a half times year on year. The company claims its overall user base in the wider context of enterprise mobility is 33,000; figures from earlier this month, when Microsoft rebranded EMS from Enterprise Mobility Suite to Enterprise Mobility + Security, put the number of EMS customers at more than 27,000.

“This past year was pivotal in both our own transformation and in partnering with our customers who are navigating their own digital transformations,” said Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in a statement. “The Microsoft cloud is seeing significant customer momentum and we’re well positioned to reach new opportunities in the year ahead.”

Microsoft’s strategies and manoeuvres are of course never out of the press, but the firm’s planned acquisition of LinkedIn, slated at $26.2bn, in June was evidently the biggest. This was inferred by Amy Hood, EVP and chief financial officer. “This fiscal year we invested in innovation and expanded our market presence in key product areas and geographies,” she said. “I am pleased with the execution from our sales teams and partners this quarter who delivered a strong finish to the fiscal year.”

Last week Microsoft secured a major victory when a federal court ruled the US government could not force the tech giant to hand over information stored in other territories, overturning a two-year-old previous judgement. Analyst figures argue Microsoft is in clear second place in the infrastructure as a service (IaaS) bracket, although significantly behind Amazon Web Services.

[slides] The Chinese Cloud Market | @CloudExpo @YourSpeedyCloud #SDN #Cloud #Storage

With over 720 million Internet users and 40–50% CAGR, the Chinese Cloud Computing market has been booming. When talking about cloud computing, what are the Chinese users of cloud thinking about? What is the most powerful force that can push them to make the buying decision? How to tap into them?
In his session at 18th Cloud Expo, Yu Hao, CEO and co-founder of SpeedyCloud, answered these questions and discussed the results of SpeedyCloud’s survey.

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Opinion: Why there is no such thing as managed IaaS

(c)iStock.com/theevening

By Jason Deck, SVP of Strategy, Logicworks

The age of managed infrastructure is coming to an end. Cloud providers like Amazon Web Services (AWS) have spent the last decade developing platforms that eliminate the manual, time-consuming maintenance of hardware, network, and storage, and enabling infrastructure to be controlled via software, i.e. infrastructure as code.

But contrary to what you might expect, enterprises are still managing IaaS. Buildout and maintenance tasks in AWS can be performed via API call and can therefore be automated, but many still choose to maintain AWS manually, instance by instance. Or perhaps worse, they purchase a “portal” to orchestrate IaaS. And these are very expensive and potentially risky choices.

What is the value of infrastructure?

As the vast majority of businesses become digital (software) companies, the value of infrastructure is only its ability to support business-critical applications that change frequently. Therefore, the best possible infrastructure is reliable and quick to spin up or destroy.

In the old world, the only way to make infrastructure more reliable was to throw more people and dollars at the problem. More people to monitor things like CPU utilization and replicate data, either in-house or outsourced to a managed service provider; more dollars to buy better hardware, live backups, and so on.

In IaaS, such concerns are irrelevant. AWS monitors hardware, CPU usage, network performance, etc. AWS can be programmed to take snapshots on a regular schedule. If you use a service like AWS Aurora, Amazon’s managed database service, you get replication, upgrades, and management built-in. If you want to improve reliability or disposability, AWS does not offer “premium hardware”; instead, you must architect your environment in new ways and rely on automation to improve SLAs. In other words, you must treat AWS resources like objects that can be manipulated with code.

In this new world, you do not care about CPU utilization. Your metrics of success are not measured in minutes of downtime. If you architect IaaS correctly, you should never have downtime. Instead, your KPIs are things like: How many times did we push changes to our infrastructure as code base? How many infrastructure changes produced errors? How long does it take to go from cloud architectural plan to delivering an environment?

Cloud automation is what drives better availability, better cost management, better governance, better time-to-delivery. So whether an enterprise chooses to build an automation team in-house or outsource it to an next-gen service provider, it should be at the top of enterprises’ cloud priority lists.

Cloud automation in action

IaaS gives you the tools to control infrastructure programmatically. In other words, you can manipulate infrastructure resources with code rather than through the AWS console or by manually typing in the CLI. This fits in with the larger vision set out in Agile philosophy, particularly the art of maximizing work not done; if you can automate, you should.

What does this look like in practice with AWS? Teams that want to spend less time on manual infrastructure maintenance usually do one or all of the following:

  • They use the fully managed cloud services that AWS already provides (likeAWS Aurora or AWS Redshift) as much as possible
  • They automate the buildout of infrastructure resources using a templating tool (like AWS CloudFormation)
  • They automate the install/configuration of the OS with a configuration management tool
  • They integrate infrastructure automation with their existing deployment pipeline
  • They prepare for the future of IT where serverless compute resources likeAWS Lambda abstract away infrastructure orchestration entirely

The impact of this model is enormous. When you take full advantage of AWS services, you minimize engineer effort, reduce risk by automating things like backups and failover, and get built-in upgrades. When you automate infrastructure buildout and configuration, you enable rapid change, upgrading, patching, and self-healing of AWS resources without human intervention. Engineers never modify individual instances directly; instead they modify templates and scripts so that every system change is documented and can be rolled back, reducing the risk and effort of change.

When you move to this model, you are building infrastructure as code, not managing infrastructure. Your engineers are now essentially “developers” of infrastructure software. This requires a new set of skills and an entirely new outlook on how engineers should spend their time.

The cost of managed infrastructure

Unfortunately, many enterprises still throw people and money at cloud availability and agility issues. They create (or buy) “orchestration portals” that tell them about instance performance and storage utilization and resource usage. They use the same security processes, i.e., spend many weeks of each deployment cycle manually testing infrastructure and keep compliance checklists in spreadsheets. They use only the most basic AWS services, perform manual upgrades and updates, and in the case of an issue, they nurse individual instances back to health. In other words, they still manage infrastructure.

What is the real cost of this model? A recently released report by Puppet found that high performing IT teams — that prioritize automation, high deployment velocity, and the “work not done” principle — spend 22% less time on unplanned work and rework than low-performing IT teams. High-performers have a change failure rate of 7.5%, compared to medium-performers with a change failure rate of 38%. Mean time to recover is 1 hour for a high-performing organization and 24 hours for a medium-performer. If you multiply mean time to recover by the average cost of downtime at your organization, the real cost of not prioritizing automation becomes unjustifiable.

What could your engineers do with 22% more time? What could they do if they were not constantly firefighting broken virtual machines — and could instead blast away the instance and rebuild a new one in minutes? They would spend more time on new projects, the products that drive real business value and revenues.

It is true that automation itself takes time and money. It also takes expertise — the kind that is hard to find. Yet infrastructure automation is the inflection point that jumpstarts organization’s DevOps efforts. These factors make it an ideal service to outsource; it is a skills gap that enterprises are struggling to fill, and a non-disruptive place where MSPs can provide value without replacing internal DevOps efforts. An next-generation MSP that has already developed proprietary infrastructure automation software is an ideal fit; just beware of companies that sell “Managed IaaS” that is just monitoring and upgrades, because they will not help you escape from infrastructure management.

The future of infrastructure as code

We are entering a world where infrastructure is not only disposable, it is invisible.The best way to manage infrastructure is not to manage infrastructure at all, but instead to develop an automation layer composed of AWS services, 3rd party tools, and your own custom-built software. No matter how your market changes or the state of IT in five years, investing now in automation will allow you to adapt quickly.

Major cloud providers are pushing the market in the direction of management-less IT, and it is only a matter of time before the market follows. Chances are that adherents of the “management” model will linger — both internal teams and external vendors — that want to patch and update machines with the same reactive, break/fix approach they used in the 90’s and 00’s in managed datacenters. When companies gain AWS expertise and realize how little value infrastructure management adds, IT will evolve into an infrastructure as code provider. Value creation is moving closer up the stack, and IT must follow.

The post There is No Such Thing as Managed IaaS appeared first on Logicworks Gathering Clouds.

Creating a Mobile Campus Has Never Been So Easy

At the advent of BYOD, not many people thought that it would revolutionize the network world. Today, mobile devices have gone from being simply a part of the network, to dominating the network infrastructure in almost every industry, including education. Due to their low cost and convenience, mobile devices have become a go-to device for […]

The post Creating a Mobile Campus Has Never Been So Easy appeared first on Parallels Blog.

Is 2016 Half Empty or Half Full? | @CloudExpo #IoT #Cloud #Mobile #Security

With 2016 crossing the half way point, let’s take a look at some technology trends thus far.

Breaches: Well, many databases are half empty due to the continued rash of intrusions while the crooks are half full with our personal information. According to the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC), there have been 522 breaches thus far in 2016 exposing almost 13,000,000 records. Many are health care providers as our medical information is becoming the gold mine of stolen info. Not really surprising since the health care wearable market is set to explode in the coming years. Many of those wearables will be transmitting our health data back to providers. There were also a bunch of very recognizable names getting blasted in the media: IRS, Snapchat, Wendy’s and LinkedIn. And the best advice we got? Don’t use the same password across multiple sites. Updating passwords is a huge trend in 2016.

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Parallels Access and macOS Sierra

It is great time to be a user of Apple devices – upgrades to each of the three OSes today: MacOS, iOS, and WatchOS, plus updates to all the betas.  The servers in Cupertino must be close to melting down from so many downloads from all over the world. It is also a great time […]

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