Fixed Telecom:

Alternative Trans-Border Telecoms Service Providers In Western Europe

Benchmark-It.co.uk
Management Report  April 2006

Single and Corporate User PDF - GBP 995.00  


Table of Contents

This new 302-page report profiles and compares 20 key alternative providers

of trans-border telecoms services, with a focus on Western Europe.

The report includes the following:

Profiles of 20 carriers

Verdict

Summary (strategy and recent activities)

Geographic reach

Portfolio

Management (revenues and reputation)

Who should buy the report?

Operators selling telecoms services in Western Europe

Companies investing in or supplying the above

Companies buying services from the service providers covered

Key benefits:

Source of key information on 20 service providers

Independent market analysis and comparisons

Gives customers time to concentrate on analysing implications and to

formulate action plans

Updated since last report:

20 updated player profiles

Analysis of player positioning and differentiation strategies

Market analysis and updated conclusions from previous report

Key conclusions:

The market remains competitive but is more stable than for some time

Service providers have selectively invested in new products and

network expansion, notably to emerging markets in Central/Eastern

Europe, China and India

Further consolidation amongst service providers is to be anticipated

Executive Summary

The market for the provision of trans-border telecoms to businesses in Western

Europe remains highly competitive, which is why all but the smallest of service

providers are struggling to register revenue growth above single digits, even though

traffic continues steadily to grow.

Within that context, service providers have managed, however, to launch new

products (Ethernet and VoIP in particular over recent months) and have also

increasingly invested selectively in expanding their footprint, most notably into the

emerging markets in Central and Eastern Europe, and into growing Asia Pacific

markets such as China and India.

The acquisition of AT&T and MCI by, respectively, SBC and Verizon has served to

strengthen their relative positions in the market as they not only benefit from a more

stable financial background, but are also finding a new impetus as a result of these

deals – this is largely helped by the fact that the acquirers had little or no international

presence. By contrast, BT Global Services is gradually absorbing BT Infonet so as

not to disrupt customers’ existing service levels.

Across the board, the international arms of incumbents are being combined with

domestic divisions that serve the largest national customers, giving the likes of BT,

France Telecom, KPN and Deutsche Telekom an opportunity to strip out duplication,

avoid potential internal political wrangles and to develop a single portfolio based on a

unified network. The associated economies of scale also help them to compete with

their smaller and nimbler rivals, as well as being able to position themselves further

up the value chain by offering more consultative and managed services (or ‘solutions’

as they insist on calling them).

The activity in the European market for consolidation has slowed somewhat in recent

months, with the only significant deals being that by BT to acquire Fiat’s Atlanet arm

in Italy and T-Systems’ acquisition of Volkswagen’s gedas IT subsidiary. The market

remains, however, oversupplied and further consolidation is to be expected – the

likely scenario is for there to be up to half a dozen truly global players, a few Europeonly

players, and a number of niche players focused either on a particular part of the

value chain or specialising in a particular service or vertical sector.

Virtual service providers continue to make waves and progress – their ‘infrastructurelite’

business models mean they can focus on customer service. However, their

‘infrastructure-heavy’ competitors keep dismissing them, despite their rapid revenue

growth – only time will tell whether a telecoms service provider can join the big

league with few physical assets. Indeed, if virtual operators continue their growth

paths they might well become acquisition targets themselves as their lack of assets

tends to make them potentially cheap when compared with traditional service

providers.

 





For full details, please email michellen@cmsinfo.com

Order Form




CMS, P&A House, Alma Road, Chesham, Bucks. HP5 3HB, UK
Tel:     +44 (0)1494 771734
Fax:   +44 (0)1494 778994
e-mail: michellen@cmsinfo.com
Please note: calls to and from CMS may be recorded for quality control and training purposes.
copyright © 2008 all rights reserved

For more information about us, visit CMSinfo.

footer bar