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This article is part of: Executive Briefing Service, Enterprise Platforms
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In Q4 2012 Verizon was No.1 in Strategic Business Services (SBS) and had just bought a huge data centre provider. In Q4 2014, AT&T had overtaken Verizon in revenues from this segment. What happened, and what are the lessons for other telcos in the Enterprise SBS market?
Strategic business services’ – US telcos’ new frontier
Since the beginning of the Telco 2.0 Transformation Index project, we have become aware that US operators are increasingly emphasising a new sub-segment, ‘strategic business services’ (SBS), usually carved out of their existing fixed-line or ‘wireline’ enterprise operations. Typically, strategic business services includes the newer and supposedly higher-growth products, such as cloud computing, dark fibre or wavelengths, Ethernet VPNs, machine-to-machine mobile (although not always), security services, and Voice 2.0. There is no standard definition, and comparisons across carriers are therefore complicated. We prepared the table in Figure 1 for the first wave of the Index in Q4 2012 – since then, AT&T has made it clear that cloud is included in its definition.
Figure 1: Defining strategic business services
Source: Telco 2.0 Transformation Index
The story usually runs as follows: “although the wider enterprise or business wireline segment is stagnant or shrinking, the strategic services sub-segment is growing fast, offers higher margins and has lower-churn customers, so that’s the bit you should be looking at.”
US fixed operators have substantial customer bases in the SMB and enterprise space, who are typically taking “legacy” services like T-carriers (high speed data links based on TDM technology) or shared web hosting. As the cloud develops, these customers are becoming available to a new set of competitors from the IT industry – e.g. Microsoft Azure or HP – and from the Web 2.0 industry – e.g. Amazon Web Services, Rackspace, or Google. Further, some historic ISPs have intensified their efforts to sign up end-customers, like Level(3) or Zayo (ex-Abovenet). The challenge for the telcos is to move these customers onto more modern products without spilling them to the competition. As a result, the SBS segment is indeed a real indicator that needs watching.
Another reason that it’s important is that the US telcos’ business customers are typically very big spenders. In Self-Disruption: How Sprint Blew It, we showed that SMB users were typically very important indeed to Sprint, and that their failure to attend to their needs around the shutdown of Nextel and migrate them effectively to a suitable alternative tipped Sprint into a crisis it has yet to recover from. The following chart shows monthly average revenue per user (ARPU) for AT&T’s three major operating segments. Note that ‘Business Wireline’ corresponds to AT&T’s ‘Business Solutions’ reporting line. Business Wireless is included in ‘Wireless’.
Figure 2: AT&T’s business customers spend a lot
Source: Telco 2.0 Transformation Index
Note: ARPU is also known as ‘Average Revenue Per User’. Here, a ‘user’ is defined as a wireless or wireline connection, or ‘revenue generating unit’.
As Figure 2 shows, AT&T’s business customers spend several times more on average (per connection) than wireless, usually considered to be the jewel in the crown, and consumer wireline. Of course, this in part reflects that a considerable portion of AT&T’s enterprise revenues are generated by services beyond telephony, business broadband and video (the denominator) – even if many customers for these additional services will also purchase one or more of its core products. Some of these services fall within AT&T’s ‘strategic business services’ reporting line. Figure 3 shows growth over the last two years, and that Business Wireline managed to grow its ARPU 8.3%, while wireless began to feel the impact of the US price wars.
Figure 3: ARPU growth in Business Wireline has been strong compared to wireless
Source: Telco 2.0 Transformation Index
However, the performance in terms of ARPU owes something to the fact that AT&T lost a significant number of less-attached and lower ARPU customers. The next chart shows the drop in business broadband connections over the last three years.
Figure 4: Line loss in SMB is a problem for AT&T
Source: Telco 2.0 Transformation Index
The key competitor here is cable. Cable operators have dramatically increased their business services revenue recently, and have been offering very attractive pricing on symmetrical broadband, very often using extension drops from their fibre distribution networks. They have also been offering very keen pricing on voice (still a key product for businesses) and WLAN, and using some novel technical options to extend their Ethernet footprints.
As a result, the underlying performance of Business Wireline and its sub-segment, Strategic Business Services, was dramatically different. This is shown in Figure 5 below:
Figure 5: Ex-SBS, AT&T Business Wireline is shrinking
Source: Telco 2.0 Transformation Index
The challenge even for successful carriers in SBS is that a relatively small line of business has to scale up fast enough to make the much bigger enterprise segment grow. This poses significant challenges in terms of management. It is at least preferable, though, to the alternative – no growth in SBS, or indeed anywhere else in the enterprise segment.
AT&T vs. Verizon
Unlike in consumer wireline, AT&T and Verizon compete coast-to-coast in business wireline. AT&T is the market leader and Verizon is no.2, as the next chart shows. Verizon leads in wireless, where AT&T is no.2, the mirror image of the position in business.
Figure 6: AT&T is No.1 in US enterprise, ahead of Verizon
Source: Telco 2.0 Transformation Index
In the first wave of the Transformation Index, we noted that Verizon had just finished a reorganisation that created a new division, Verizon Enterprise Services (VES), regrouping all their SBS activities and all their industry vertical products. They had also just closed the acquisition of Terremark, a major operator of data centres. We therefore had some confidence that they might do well, even if AT&T was showing signs of improving its SBS offering significantly, taking an interest in developers, deploying a new and much stronger M2M platform, and diversifying its suppliers and technology partners via the Domain 2.0 programme.
So, what happened?
Contents
- Executive Summary
- ‘Strategic business services’ – US telcos’ new frontier
- AT&T vs. Verizon
- A consistent difference in SBS growth…
- … in an increasingly competitive and fragmented market
- How Did AT&T Do It?
- Verizon has partially de-emphasised its wireline activities
- AT&T’s successful bundling strategy
- AT&T’s open value networks
- Did technology choices make a big difference?
- STL Partners and Telco 2.0: Change the Game
- Figure 1: Defining strategic business services
- Figure 2: AT&T’s business customers spend a lot
- Figure 3: ARPU growth in Business Wireline has been strong compared to wireless
- Figure 4: Line loss in SMB is a real problem for AT&T
- Figure 5: Ex-SBS, AT&T Business Wireline is shrinking
- Figure 6: AT&T is No.1 in US enterprise, ahead of Verizon
- Figure 7: SBS is meant to be a growth sector but it has stalled for Verizon recently
- Figure 8: 18 months that changed the game
- Figure 9: AT&T is successfully bringing over its business customers and Verizon…isn’t
- Figure 10: Growth-share matrix for AT&T’s segments.
- Figure 11: Telecoms Operator SBS Revenues and YoY Growth, 2014
- Figure 12: Amazon AWS and Microsoft Commercial Cloud Revenues, 2012-14
- Figure 13: The growing wedge between AT&T and Verizon’s wireline capex
- Figure 14: AT&T Network Suite driving sell-through of additional services
- Figure 15: Google etc. make their own. IT companies go open-source. Telcos buy into VMWare’s proprietary ecosystem
- Figure 16: Not all telcos, though – AT&T committed early to OpenStack, more like a big technology player than a telco
- Figure 17: Three operator strategies in the cloud