Infrastructure List Gets Mapping Capability Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Wednesday, 04 April 2007
Telco Industry researcher, Market Clarity has released a new edition of its Australian Telecommunications infrastructure catalogue.
The business intelligence service is a unique resource first launched in October last year. It identifies the location of Australia's current telecommunications infrastructure in a database that tracks information on the infrastructure holdings deployed and in service from 118 different infrastructure owners.

Market Clarity has added Geographic Information Systems (GIS) mapping to the expanded database enabling the production of detailed telecoms infrastructure maps so that carriers, service providers and government agencies can identify the location, ownership and components of Australia's telecoms infrastructure.

For example, the database features key details on 4,500 DSLAM locations, up from 4,000 when the service was launched last year. It also includes 700 access fibre service areas covering 1,480 POPs held by 23 owners, HFC network coverage from 5 owners, and 1,770 fixed wireless broadband base stations owned by 66 organisations.

Also included are location details of 2G and 3G mobile network base stations held by four owners, as well as long-haul fibre networks from 11 providers covering 200+ towns served by 500 POPs, and long-haul microwave networks held by 28 owners.

"The SQL-based telecom infrastructure database can quickly resolve complex queries, correlating telecoms infrastructure against ABS population, household and business demographics, as well as service take-up data."

Using the new GIS capabilities, Shara Evans, CEO of Market Clarity, will be presenting for the first time a composite picture of Australia's telecoms infrastructure at the CommsDay Summit 2007 held in Sydney today. It will cover Telstra and non-Telstra infrastructure.

Evans said the composite picture of Australia's telecommunications infrastructure investment had taken two consultant years to develop.

"It is a unique vehicle that allows you to see first hand where telecoms infrastructure is located," she said. "There is no other resource like it available to government, developers, and lenders seeking to invest in Australia's telecommunications infrastructure."

Market Clarity's telecoms business intelligence service provides organisations and government with highly robust information on Australia's telecoms infrastructure.

"The information requirement may be small or large. It may be related to specific infrastructure types or owners, as well as corresponding demographic information at a regional, suburb or postcode level. The business intelligence service outputs can then be used to identify the most likely candidates for investment."

"It can also be used to refine a business case or a proposal to include tangible information about the market, or used in a third party review of a business case to verify facts, fine tune proposals or identify areas that may have been missed," she said.

"Enterprise customers can also benefit from Market Clarity's telecoms business intelligence service. For instance, an enterprise customer may want to know the available infrastructure-based options to connect one or more sites. The telecoms business intelligence service can identify the providers that have broadband access infrastructure in every postcode, along with the contact details for each infrastructure owner - providing an infrastructure locater service," she said.

Evans said the information drawn from the Market Clarity telecommunications infrastructure database could be cross correlated with the firm's Market Tracker forecast databases to more accurately assess likely take up rates of a service or a technology.

"The business intelligence service provides organisations looking to participate in telecom infrastructure investments with a third party independent resource that can assist them in identifying specific areas they should target in their proposals or provide an independent business case verification check. This can be a very affordable way to check assumptions behind their business case."

She said the Market Clarity Telecoms Business Intelligence Service also provided a resource for SMEs, enterprises and government agencies seeking cost effective ways to connect a given site to a customer's network in a remote area.

Evans said the telecoms infrastructure database has been updated over the past 6 months via primary research, carrier and service provider resources and ACMA radiocomm license applications. Also used were diverse secondary research sources such as news articles, press releases, service maps and published industry studies by the federal government, industry groups, as well as state and local governments.

"The Telecoms Business Intelligence Service allows you to identify telecoms infrastructure by ownership and location captured to State, Statistical Division, Statistical-Sub Division and postcode levels. Infrastructure identification can also be correlated to the presence of competing infrastructure. The telecoms infrastructure database also includes the technology and location of backhaul services, access services, and information about residential, business and population demographics."
Related news items
Newer news items
Older news items
 
mobilised

Carrier News

Ructions At Engin Signal Changing Strategy
With the 30 per cent acquisition of pure play VoIP service provider, Engin, by the Seven Network, it was only a matter of time before major upheaval filtered its way to the broadband telephony provider's staff.
Older news items
 

Industry News

Vendor News

Aspect Maps Out UC Product Plans
Contact Centre software specialists, Aspect Software, has embarked on a corporate strategy to educate the market on the part the contact centre plays in an organisation's overall unified communications strategy.
Older news items
 

VoIP Solutions

Product News

WA Dept Education Goes IP With Panasonic
The West Australian Department of Education and Training has chosen Panasonic for the upgrade of all future school telephony systems to IP-capable solutions.
Older news items