Convergence Reality:Telia's Trials
Cisco loses an integrated network contract. What went wrong?
by Gote Andersson. teledotcom.com
Building an integrated, multiservice network is easier said than done. Just ask frustrated executives at Telia AB (Stockholm), which last month scrapped a hard-won and highly publicized contract with Cisco Systems Inc. (San Jose, Calif.) for equipment and services.
Despite considerable effort, Cisco has not been able to supply a multiservice asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) and Internet protocol (IP) network to Telia as specified in a contract signed in February. Telia had hoped to deploy its integrated network by January 2000. Instead, Telia is going back to the drawing board, forgoing the new network to simply upgrade its X.25/frame relay network with equipment supplied by Nortel Networks Inc., in order to meet increasing traffic demands, says Marianne Nivert, the executive in charge of Telia Network Services.
Problems like this, say analysts, are going to be inevitable as service providers and data equipment manufacturers venture into the uncharted waters of multiservice network deployment.
Cisco's troubles with Telia represent a disappointment that goes beyond simply losing a 500 million SEK (US$60.5 million) contract. The setback comes just as Cisco is trying to shore up its reputation as a carrier-class equipment supplier.
When first announced, the order was seen as something of a breakthrough for Cisco, which was able to undercut the offers of traditional telecommunications equipment providers such as Nortel, Lucent Technologies Inc. and L.M. Ericsson AB (Stockholm).
By June, however, the honeymoon was over. Nivert says Cisco was warned about its failure to meet the prescribed delivery schedule for the new equipment. Soon after that, Telia began working simultaneously with other suppliers.
At the time, Goran Marby, managing director of Cisco Sweden, asserted that his company was on target to supply the necessary equipment and fulfill the contract obligations. By August, however, it was apparent that the equipment supplier was not hitting its deadlines.
This did not sit well with Telia, who has developed a reputation for pushing vendors very hard to deliver equipment, says Chris Lewis, research director at The Yankee Group Europe (Watford, U.K.). "Telia is in the forefront of incumbent thinking for next-generation networks. It has some very ambitious national and international plans," says Lewis, adding that the Swedish carrier viewed the need to abandon its original plans as a setback.
So what went wrong?
"There wasn't one technological thing that led to the decision," says Carl Engineer, director of marketing at Cisco. "Telia was on a schedule and had to move forward and offer services."
Telia has three national data communications networks. An ATM network is based on equipment from Lucent and General DataComm Inc. (GDC, Middlebury, Conn.), which is primarily used to offer local-area network (LAN) interconnect services. The IP network, based on Cisco gear, is the fastest growing Telia network. The third network is an X.25/frame relay network used to supply packet-data services.
With traffic growing rapidly, Telia was faced with the prospect of upgrading the capacity of all three networks. But the carrier elected to replace the ATM network with a multiservice network that could, over time, support the traffic of all the other networks.
Telia and many other international service providers share the belief that a single IP-based network will ultimately provide more efficient, scalable communications traffic support with dramatically reduced operational costs, and it was this vision that Cisco brought to the table in February. The contract called for Cisco to deliver network equipment, operations support systems (OSSs), education and consulting services.
"Networking is the easy part," says Robin Bosworth, managing director at telecom consultancy Schema Ltd. (London) "The hard part is integrating the front- and back-office support systems for billing, customer support and provisioning."
Neither Cisco nor Telia has commented publicly on specific technical problems that contributed to the botched network plans, but tele.com sources say the service provider's concerns rested on the capabilities of Cisco's support systems rather than the gear itself.
Cisco remains confident in its multiservice network equipment strategy as it continues to win contracts from service providers such as Qwest Communications International Inc. (Denver) and Telef¢nica S.A. (Madrid). And it hasn't given up on Telia, either. "We continue to have a lot of work with Telia on many different fronts," says Cisco's Engineer. Cisco, meanwhile, is on track to provide equipment for an IP-based multiservice network for Telenor A/S (Oslo). Telenor and Telia have announced merger plans. The deal is expected to be finalized in four weeks. |