Network Policy: $100M And Growing


There was a time when all a carrier had to do to meet demand was increase
its bandwidth. But with average revenue per user (ARPU) trending flat,
carriers are under increasing demand to get more out of their networks than an increase in bandwidth will provide.


The answer, according to Yankee Group analyst Mark Bieberich, is policy
control. Bieberich explained on a conference call with journalists that
policy management describes functions associated with network attachment, call
session, resource and admission control among other policy containers.


It’s a market that Yankee has forecast to be worth $100 million in 2007,
growing to $700 million by the end of 2010.


“The key driver is that policy management and real-time network resource
control are codified in certain standards like IMS , and, as
service providers embrace the standards, they’ll have policy management in
conjunction with that,” Bieberich said.


But even without the widespread deployment of IMS (IP Multimedia
Subsystem), which is an architectural framework for delivering voice, video
and data over IP, network policy deployment is growing.


“We see it deployed now in standards and pre-standards environments, though
standards will help maturation,” Bieberich said.


Yankee Group sees policy-enabled service control layers for carrier networks
sandwiched between the core IP transport layer and the application layer.
Policy there becomes the conduit across which application and services
traverse the IP network.


Network policy in essence makes the network more aware and in control of the
traffic and users that are connected to it. What policy control enables from
a bandwidth point of view is better utilization so on-demand services
can be provisioned with on-demand bandwidth.


Bieberich also argued that carriers could take advantage of granular network
policy control to create new revenue sources, such as targeted advertising.


In the case of IPTV, network policy could enable a way of targeting
particular content advertising to end users based on policies since the
network policy engine would have access to usage patterns and demographics
data. So advertisers could place target customers they are really after.


Network policy can also help to enable what Bieberich referred to as context-aware services that provide users with a specific service based on use case.


“If the network is smart enough to know how I use broadband connectivity and
the types of services I want, then it becomes easier to create a context-aware service and deliver it to me regardless of where I am and what type of
device I’m using,” Bieberich said.


In addition to the potential for additional revenue generation there is also
an economization of bandwidth through network resource control.


According to Bieberich, “the business case for policy management is made up
of equal parts revenue generation and cost reduction.”

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