https://www.channelfutures.com/wp-content/themes/channelfutures_child/assets/images/logo/footer-new-logo.png
  • Home
  • Technologies
    • Back
    • SDN/SD-WAN
    • Cloud
    • RMM/PSA
    • Security
    • Telephony/UC/Collaboration
    • Cable
    • Mobility & Wireless
    • Fiber/Ethernet
    • Data Centers
    • Backup & Disaster Recovery
    • IoT
    • Desktop
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Analytics
  • Strategy
    • Back
    • Mergers and Acquisitions
    • Channel Research
    • Business Models
    • Distribution
    • Technology Solutions Brokerages
    • Sales & Marketing
    • Best Practices
    • Vertical Markets
    • Regulation & Compliance
    • Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
  • MSP 501
    • Back
    • 2022 MSP 501 Rankings
    • MSP 501 Information Center
  • Intelligence
    • Back
    • Galleries
    • Podcasts
    • From the Industry
    • Reports/Digital Issues
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
  • Channel Futures TV
  • EMEA
  • Channel Chatter
    • Back
    • People on the Move
    • New/Changing Channel Programs
    • New Products & Services
    • Industry Honors
  • Resources
    • Back
    • Advisory Boards
    • Industry Organizations
    • Our Sponsors
    • Advertise
    • 2022 Editorial Calendar
  • Awards
    • Back
    • 2022 MSP 501
    • Channel Influencers
    • Circle of Excellence
    • DE&I 101
    • Channel Partners 101 (CP 101)
  • Events
    • Back
    • CP Conference & Expo
    • MSP Summit
    • Channel Partners Europe
    • Channel Partners Event Coverage
    • Webinars
    • Industry Events
  • About Us
  • DE&I
Channel Futures
  • NEWSLETTER
  • Home
  • Technologies
    • Back
    • SDN/SD-WAN
    • Cloud
    • RMM/PSA
    • Security
    • Telephony/UC/Collaboration
    • Cable
    • Mobility & Wireless
    • Fiber/Ethernet
    • Data Centers
    • Backup & Disaster Recovery
    • IoT
    • Desktop
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Analytics
  • Strategy
    • Back
    • Mergers and Acquisitions
    • Channel Research
    • Business Models
    • Distribution
    • Technology Solutions Brokerages
    • Sales & Marketing
    • Best Practices
    • Vertical Markets
    • Regulation & Compliance
    • Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
  • MSP 501
    • Back
    • 2022 MSP 501 Rankings
    • MSP 501 Information Center
  • Intelligence
    • Back
    • Galleries
    • Podcasts
    • From the Industry
    • Reports/Digital Issues
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
  • Channel Futures TV
  • EMEA
  • Channel Chatter
    • Back
    • People on the Move
    • New/Changing Channel Programs
    • New Products & Services
    • Industry Honors
  • Resources
    • Back
    • Advisory Boards
    • Industry Organizations
    • Our Sponsors
    • Advertise
    • 2022 Editorial Calendar
  • Awards
    • Back
    • 2022 MSP 501
    • Channel Influencers
    • Circle of Excellence
    • DE&I 101
    • Channel Partners 101 (CP 101)
  • Events
    • Back
    • CP Conference & Expo
    • MSP Summit
    • Channel Partners Europe
    • Channel Partners Event Coverage
    • Webinars
    • Industry Events
  • About Us
  • DE&I
    • Newsletter
  • REGISTER
  • MSPs
  • VARs / SIs
  • Agents
  • Cloud Service Providers
  • Channel Partners Events
 Channel Futures

Telephony/UC/Collaboration


Opcenter: Patchwork ICP "Networks" Complicate Convergent Billing

  • Written by Channel
  • March 31, 1999

Posted: 04/1999

Patchwork ICP "Networks" Complicate
Convergent Billing

By Jon Sehr

Most growing competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) and interexchange carriers
(IXCs) consider themselves more than local or long distance companies. They often call
themselves integrated communications providers (ICPs) and are building convergent
offerings, bundled packages of various services, to lock down strong customer
relationships before incumbents are permitted to provide similar offerings. These packages
generally consist of a mix of local voice, long distance, mobile, Internet and
high-bandwidth data services such as asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) or frame relay. The
challenge, however, is that growing providers rarely, if ever, have the network facilities
necessary to supply all of these services to their customers. This means service
unbundling and resale are necessities.

Emerging ICPs, then, bill their customers directly and push, if nothing else, a brand
name that all services are associated with, regardless of the underlying provider. A
growing competitive provider needs its customers to know they are being cared for,
creating a rosy fagade to shield the customer from the chaos that often occurs behind the
scenes.

Time for Some New Tricks

As ICPs build their businesses faster than they can possibly build out their networks,
they become increasingly dependent upon incumbents to provide underlying services, either
through loop unbundling or resale. The customer can’t be the wiser, raising some
challenges for the ICP.

David Vranicar, senior vice president of information technology, Birch Telecom, Kansas
City, Mo., provides a straightforward example that will apply to just about any CLEC.
Though Birch does have some of its own switching and network facilities, it still relies
on reselling San Antonio-based Southwestern Bell service for a large portion of its
customer base in Kansas and Missouri. Aside from access, transport and switching, Bell
also provides Birch with directory assistance and operator services.

"We have very consciously tried to shield the customer from any confusion. We’re
trying to build the Birch brand and the idea that we’re providing the service. We don’t
highlight the fact it’s being provided by another," Vranicar says.

Ironically, due to the nature of consumer protection laws that protect
access to dial tone, if a subscriber only sends a partial payment, the payment first
mustbe applied to the local phone service, the customer’s emergency lifeline. Anything
left over is then distributed to other underlying providers.

As Birch is in its initial growth stages, its plan is to let customers know who’s
looking out for them, regardless of the underlying provider. In this case, opposite from
those discussed earlier, Birch may not provide the service, but they do have the
customer’s attention, and a large part of that is accomplished through brand
association–the products are branded Birch, the operators answer "Birch
Telecom" and it says Birch on the bill.

This is all fairly logical, but it’s not so simple. Resale-based CLECs struggle with
two major issues: customer activation and trouble repair. If a customer calls with a
problem that is actually a Bell network problem, Birch must rely on Bell for the proper
information and to go fix it. Similarly, when a customer is awaiting switchover and
activation, there’s no guarantee the Bell technician will show up on site when he’s
supposed to. Birch can’t point the finger at Bell like Bart Simpson saying, "I didn’t
do it."

"It’s difficult and in some cases takes longer than we’d like, but it’s just the
way it is. You have to find ways to work around that," Vranicar says.

Vancouver, Wash.-based CLEC GST Telecommunications Inc. provides a more complex
example. GST has made several acquisitions in the past year, mainly of small long distance
carriers. It owns network stretching from Washington to Idaho, along the West Coast, into
Arizona and over to Texas. The network involves 14 switches with intermachine trunks on
which GST carries its own traffic as far as it can. For off-net customers, GST has
agreements with AT&T Corp., Sprint Corp., MCI WorldCom Inc., and Qwest Communications
International Inc., Denver. The service providers pass usage data for off-net customers to
GST and they bill customers directly. Customers are signed on to GST long distance
service, unaware of the underlying arrangements or providers. In some cases, these
customers use GST only for long distance and their traffic may never touch GST’s network.
GST does, however, retain control of rate plans and billing in all cases.

Cautionary Billing Tale No. 1:
Convenience Turns Cannibal

Fundamental changes
occurring in the way billing and payment are done greatly affect marketing efforts and
control of the customer, says Deborah Strong, vice president of management consulting, DMR
Consulting Group, Montreal. For example, many people pay their telecommunications bills
with a credit card, effectively consolidating all of their invoices onto a single
statement. The problem for providers is that the credit card provider controls the
marketing messages that accompany the bill; the carrier has effectively surrendered its
right to direct bill and sell to the customer in an effort to provide some convenience.

GST provides local service mainly with dedicated and channelized T1s it calls
PowerTrunk and PowerFlex, respectively. In these cases, the T1 connection to the customer
is provided by the incumbent but all switching is provided by GST, as long as the customer
is within the CLEC’s footprint. Some of its customers have locations outside the
footprint, in which case GST must rely on resale to serve them. GST also purchases
unbundled loops to serve those customers that do not require T1 capacity. The CLEC also
owns a frame relay network, is building an ATM network and provides Internet access
through its San Francisco-based subsidiary Whole Earth Networks.

Currently, GST runs multiple billing systems, a result of its numerous acquisitions,
and brands its services with the former service provider’s name noted as a GST company.
GST is in the process of moving its entire customer base onto Cambridge, Mass.-based Kenan
Systems Corp.’s Arbor/BP convergent billing platform to simplify its offerings and move to
a solely GST brand name, says Patti Bowie, director of billing at GST.

Moving to the convergent system will allow GST to add value through the bill. First, by
combining data for all services on one system, GST can implement promotions and discounts
much easier than it can with multiple systems. Second, GST can offer numerous reporting
and data manipulation features to the end customer by delivering bill detail on diskette
or CD-ROM. "Most people don’t want the bill just neatly presented when it’s 1,000
pages of call detail," Bowie says.

Pitfalls

One of the essential pitfalls of convergence–accomplished through arrangements with
multiple underlying carriers–is handling partial payments. An ICP might be the central
provider and might own the bill, but it’s also therefore responsible for collections.

Cautionary Billing Tale No. 2:
Agents of Change

Problems may arise when
service providers use external agents to sell their services. With a service–such as long
distance–that’s easily transferred from one carrier to another, external agents and
internal salespeople may trade customers back and forth to keep the commissions rolling.

To prevent this, independent consultant and billing specialist Jim O’Neill says
commissioning plans will become far more complex, requiring billing systems to become more
robust to manage them. Rather than a percentage of sales, commissions may be based on
collections or customer longevity. The plans will vary depending on the service in
question and the types of commission fraud to which they are vulnerable.

Ironically, due to the nature of consumer protection laws that protect access to dial
tone, if a subscriber only sends a partial payment, the payment first must be applied to
the local phone service, the customer’s emergency lifeline. Anything left over then is
distributed to other underlying providers. This creates float issues for the wholesalers,
unless they manage to guarantee payment from the LEC, in which case, the LEC is on the
hook for its own delinquent customers. If the other providers aren’t paid, they can cut
off services such as long distance or wireless, making the customer a churn candidate.

Now, customers that don’t pay their bills aren’t necessarily customers worth having,
but the ICP needs to hold onto those customers who generally pay their bills and might
just have a problem for one month. An unexpected service cutoff could drive an otherwise
good customer away. The laws governing these issues vary from state to state, making this
an extremely complex issue for any multistate service provider.

Additionally, in recent months there has been debate over establishing "truth in
billing" requirements to combat slamming and cramming. Essentially, these rules will
require billers to note exactly where charges are coming from and who’s providing
underlying services. This could be a thorn in ICP brand managers’ sides as they fight to
establish their brand names by keeping customers shielded from underlying carriers. They
may be faced with no option but to reveal the true patchwork of their networks in the fine
print.

Jon Sehr is a freelance writer specializing in telecommunications services billing
and operational support systems.

Tags: Agents Telephony/UC/Collaboration

Most Recent


  • Adam Wilson Vonage CP Europe Still
    Vonage a 'Single Communications Stack Provider' for Partners, Customers
    These are the biggest opportunities for Vonage partners today.
  • NextGen 101 logo feature size
    2022 Channel Futures NextGen 101 Winners, Part 2: #50-#1
    These are the top 50 companies in the Channel Futures NextGen 101 for 2022.
  • NextGen 101 logo feature size
    2022 Channel Futures NextGen 101 Winners, Part 1: #101-#51
    These are some of the hottest next-generation IT service providers in the industry.
  • stacking cash
    Nitel Buying Hypercore Networks, Eyeing More Acquisitions
    Nitel is following an inorganic growth plan backed by private equity investor Cinven.

Leave a comment Cancel reply

-or-

Log in with your Channel Futures account

Alternatively, post a comment by completing the form below:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Content

  • Sign a Contract
    Unisys Adds Managed UCaaS with $153 Million Unify Square Acquisition
  • Fortune 500 2021 logo
    AT&T, Microsoft, Verizon, More Tech, Telco Companies Make Latest Fortune 500
  • Telephone poles and lines
    Granite Buys Epik: Score One for Legacy Telecom
  • New
    Martello Technologies Group Targets MSPs, VARs with New Partner Program

Upcoming Events

View all

MSP Summit

September 13, 2022 - September 16, 2022

Channel Partners Conference & Expo

May 1, 2023 - May 4, 2023

Galleries

View all

2022 Channel Futures NextGen 101 Winners, Part 2: #50-#1

June 27, 2022

2022 Channel Futures NextGen 101 Winners, Part 1: #101-#51

June 27, 2022

8 Channel People Making Waves This Week at Splunk, Telarus, More

June 24, 2022

Industry Perspectives

View all

Why MSPs are Attractive Cyberattack Targets

June 24, 2022

IT Partner Programs Must Evolve to Meet Market Demands

June 21, 2022

How Your Organization Can Benefit from the NIST Cybersecurity Framework

June 20, 2022

Webinars

View all

VEP Platform for Delivery of uCPE, SD-WAN and SASE

June 29, 2022

The Digital Worker: How to Empower Customers with a Flexible, Scalable VDI Solution to Enable Remote Work

June 30, 2022

Growing Partner Revenue and Customer Satisfaction with Power Management Services

June 23, 2022

White Papers

View all

Work Goes Remote – (and Other Top ITOps Trends)

May 25, 2022

The New Bottom Line: How MSPs Can Meet the Healthcare Crisis While Evolving Their Businesses

April 19, 2022

How to build a Security Operations Center (on a budget)

April 4, 2022

Channel Futures TV

View all

AT&T, Microsoft, Cisco, ThreatLocker on Unlocking Partner Potential

Vonage a ‘Single Communications Stack Provider’ for Partners, Customers

June 27, 2022

IBM, Partners and the $1 Trillion Hybrid Cloud Opportunity

June 26, 2022

Agents Share ‘Secrets,’ Industry Opportunity

May 11, 2022

Twitter

ChannelFutures

We got some partner insights from @HPE Partner Growth Summit, They shared their sentiments on the new partner progr… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…

June 28, 2022
ChannelFutures

.@XMCyber_ acquires @Cyberobserver. #cloudsecurity dlvr.it/SSxvt0 https://t.co/re42mofbdT

June 27, 2022
ChannelFutures

.@HPE has rolled out a new program aimed at growing @HPE_Partners' as-a-service business journey, along with severa… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…

June 27, 2022
ChannelFutures

The Channel Futures top 50 NextGen 101ers are here! See the managed service providers that are the future of the te… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…

June 27, 2022
ChannelFutures

Congrats to the NextGen 101 Class of 2022, part of the #MSP501 community! This list honors industry-leading managed… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…

June 27, 2022
ChannelFutures

Part Two of the 2022 Channel Futures NextGen 101 has been revealed. Who made the list? #MSP501 @MSP_501… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…

June 27, 2022
ChannelFutures

Part One of the 2022 Channel Futures NextGen 101 has been revealed. Who made the list? #MSP501 @MSP_501… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…

June 27, 2022
ChannelFutures

#MSPs can offer niche specialties to augment cloud service #hyperscalers offer, says @ThisisCloudBlue.… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…

June 27, 2022

MSP 501

The industry's largest and most comprehensive partner awards program.

Newsletters and Updates

Sign up for The Channel Report, Channel Futures Update, MSP 501 Newsletter and more.

Live Channel Events

Get the latest information on the next industry-leading Channel Partners event.

Galleries

Educational slide shows and images from live events.

Media Kit And Advertising

Want to reach our audience? Access our media kit.

DISCOVER MORE FROM INFORMA TECH

  • Channel Partners Events
  • Telecoms.com
  • MSP 501
  • Black Hat
  • IoT World Today
  • Omdia

WORKING WITH US

  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Newsletter

FOLLOW Channel Futures ON SOCIAL

  • Privacy
  • CCPA: “Do Not Sell My Data”
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms
Copyright © 2022 Informa PLC. Informa PLC is registered in England and Wales with company number 8860726 whose registered and Head office is 5 Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG.
This website uses cookies, including third party ones, to allow for analysis of how people use our website in order to improve your experience and our services. By continuing to use our website, you agree to the use of such cookies. Click here for more information on our Cookie Policy and Privacy Policy.
X