Prospects of Small Cells in the Middle East Region
1. Prospects of Small Cells in the Middle East Region
Posted by Abhinav Purohit on Jul 22, 2013 11:28:49 AM
The deployment of small cells is gaining interest in the Middle East region, particularly
within the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) nations. Operators such as Etisalat and du
in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Zain in Kuwait, and Ooredoo (Qtel) in Qatar have
already successfully tested femtocells and have announced deployment plans.
However, these are still early days for the technology in the region.
One of the prime reasons for the as-yet sluggish growth and uptake of small cells has
been the absence of a sound business case that adequately covers all parties, both
operators and end users. Traditionally, the developed markets have taken to the small
cell as a way to offload peak mobile capacity over fixed networks. Somewhere, tucked
behind the corner in this business case is the element of enhancing indoor coverage as
well, but offloading continues to occupy the primary focus.
The reason is simple; operators have been struggling with massive capacity crunches
caused by the proliferating use of smartphones over 3G/Long Term Evolution (LTE)
mobile networks. Some examples:
AT&T USA – "3% of its customers account for a whopping 40% of the traffic on its
network." (Source)
O2 Germany – "[The operator stated that its] network capacity is under stress in certain
locations and would lead to decreased performance in both telephony and mobile
data." (Source)
In such a situation, small cells proved just the solution that operators were looking for to
partly solve their capacity problems. Some examples:
Telefonica Spain – "Telefonica is moving towards street-level picocells and
femtocells." (Source)
Telstra Australia – "Telstra [looking] to combat congestion with small cell
networks." (Source)
The situation in the Middle East, however, is quite different. With the countries generally
covering smaller areas and possessing a relatively small number of subscribers (when
compared to some of the developed markets), network congestion is not as big an issue
in the region. To add to this, most operators in the region are already running 3G
services and several have launched LTE networks. So the 'network congestion'
business case does not resonate in the region in quite the same way it does in the
West.
However, what does ring a bell in the region is coverage and, therefore, an 'indoor
coverage'-driven small cell business case. To better understand this, let's look at the
spectrum bands currently in use (or planned to be used) in the region for LTE:
2. As is apparent from the above table, most of the ongoing LTE activity (with the
exception of Qatar) is in the high spectrum bands. However, these higher spectrum
bands that are hosting the LTE networks have an inherent limitation; they do not
penetrate buildings, leading to patchy indoor coverage. Mobile broadband is used
mostly by consumers as a standalone broadband connection, and so they expect full
utility from their connections – indoors, as well as, on the move. In the current setup, the
high-frequency deployments can lead to poorer in-building connectivity and, thus, erode
customer experience.
It is here that small cells enter the equation. To meet the growing customer demand,
operators are looking at investing in expanding indoor networks by using small cells. But
while undertaking such deployments, operators need to broadly address some key
issues associated with small-cell deployments, including spectrum allocation (femtocells
require additional licensed spectrum) and signal Interference (potential signal
interferences caused by femtocells). The issues combine to make the technological
business case for small-cell deployment.
Once the technological business case has been firmly established, the operators then
need to evaluate the customer deployment business case, namely: "Who Pays [for the
small cell]?"
The core of the "Who Pays?" argument relates to the party that should pay for the
deployment and maintenance of the small cells. Customers expect ubiquitous coverage,
whether indoor or outdoor. That's what they believe they are subscribing to when
choosing a particular operator's SIM card. As such, 'paying' extra (to deploy small cells)
for better indoor coverage does not go down very well with the users. On the other
hand, the operators' argument is that any subscriber wanting a superior service quality
(i.e., much better indoor coverage) should be willing to pay a premium for it.
Both arguments have their own merits (and demerits); however, I feel a hybrid approach
might be the best way forward. Operators could utilize a commonly used method for
pricing mobile devices – the subsidy model – and modify it for small cells. Here,
operators should subsidize the cost of the femtocell by bundling it with things such as a
mobile handset or data-usage plan, and, let's say, a lock-in period of a year or so. This
will not only help boost the uptake of femtocells, but also accrue benefits in terms of
assured revenue and customer retention for the duration of the contract.
Apart from better coverage, small cells can serve one more important function – the
analytics and intelligent services they offer on top of coverage. Small cells, coupled with
3. LTE deployments, could pave the way for future technology trends such as location-
based advertisements. From another perspective, advertisements can also be seen as
a monetization opportunity for operators that plan to invest in the technology.
As mobile broadband penetration increases in the region, small cells can help operators
improve network efficiency and coverage. This is not just an opportunity in the
consumer segment; it also holds immense importance within the enterprise segment as
well, where companies are increasingly focusing on the concept of fixed-mobile
convergence, which small cells can help achieve.
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