This document describes how TELUS implemented an iVAULT system to improve access to and use of their spatial data. Key points:
1. TELUS integrated their disparate GIS systems and data into a single iVAULT system with a spatial data store, allowing unified access for field users and departments.
2. The iVAULT system included a new FieldView application for viewing, searching, analyzing and editing spatial and attribute data via web and mobile.
3. The spatial data store cleaned up TELUS' IMAGE database and consolidated over 1,000 design files, improving data quality and access.
4. The unified system allows TELUS to better analyze customer and network data
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
TELUS Case Study: GIS for Telecommunications
1. TELUS Case Study: iVAULT
implementation improved corporate
intelligence
Developed by Pacific Alliance Technologies
A member of StarDyne Technologies
www.pat.ca ivault.pat.ca
2. • Development Partners with:
• Bentley, Autodesk, ESRI
• Microsoft Gold Certified
• iVAULT CMS for GIS developed for:
• ESRI ArcGIS Server
• MapGuide Enterprise/Opensource
• Google Maps
• Est. 1998, now a member of StarDyne Technologies
• Revenues of $40 million+
• 320+ Staff
• In the top 25 of Canada‟s software companies
3. Agenda
0. Business Context
1. Project Overview
2. Architecture Diagram
3. Spatial Data Store
4. FieldView Next Generation
5. Business Benefit: Customer Delivery Analysis
Tools
6. Workflow: Increasing TELUS TV
Subscribership
7. Workflow: Data Aggregation for Network
Planners
8. Workflow: Wi-Fi Planning Tool
4. 1. Project Overview – Current State
• To get access to comprehensive data TELUS‟s hundreds of field users
needed to use many disparate systems:
• GeoExplorer (MapGuide 6.5), Google Maps, Fieldview 1.0 – all over an aircard and
in separate windows.
• They were using consumer GIS applications side-by-side with corporate applications
to meet business workflows
• Many Departments could better use their spatial data to advise
decision-making:
• Technology Strategy,
• Marketing,
• Cable Screening,
• Planning,
• Engineering and Construction.
5. 1. Project Overview – Future State
• GeoHAWK needed to prove out two foundational technical components:
1. The IMAGE data could be accessed and aggregated with other business systems
2. The Field View Next Generation application could be used for delivery of custom
analysis tools
• GeoHAWK needed to provide:
1. A Spatial Data Store as a holistic repository of spatially enabled data providing
enterprise wide access to TELUS infrastructure information and related business and
service information.there anything I shouldn‟t mention? Is
Is
TELUS using Google Maps under license?
2. A more flexible, targeted web & mobile mapping solution for all user communities.
3. The capability of viewing, searching, analyzing and editing both spatial and attribute
data through a browser and capturing/editing data in the field (using smart phones).
4. Easy administration through a web-interface and a report generation tool
5. A viewer that could work with the Telus Spatial Data Store.
• Started the project by quickly prototyping Google Maps and Bing Maps
6. 2. Architecture Diagram
Field View Alternative Customer Delivery
Geo-Web Apps Analysis Tools
Intergraph IMAGE Cable Field Force Planning Boundary
Field View Replacement Screening Feedback (FDSA) Manager
.dbf
Spatial NET AGSI Go360
Microsation Enterprise Spatial Application Service
.dgn files
MicroStation
map tiles
Integrated Cadastral
Spatial Information Society
Periodic Replication Data - Utility Data
Spatial ETL Exchange - Cadastre
Legacy Intergraph
Framme FME Server or
Application: AGSI Location Warehouse
IMAGE Address
BC
IMAGE
Oracle IMAGE
Live Spatial Data Warehouse AB
Link Spatial Data
MicroStation
Store Geo-Edmonton
MicroStation
map tiles
MicroStation
map tiles Location
Calgary JUMP
MicroStation
map tiles PDS
map tiles
Existing Technology Dependencies
Legend: GeoHAWK Technologies
New Technology Components
7. Agenda
0. Business Context
1. Project Overview
2. Architecture Diagram
3. Spatial Data Store
4. FieldView Next Generation
5. Business Benefit: Customer Delivery Analysis
Tools
6. Workflow: Increasing TELUS TV
Subscribership
7. Workflow: Data Aggregation for Network
Planners
8. Workflow: Wi-Fi Planning Tool
8. 3. Spatial Data Store
• A geospatial Oracle data store was designed and implemented
• This was connected to the data store in the TELUS Intergraph Framme environment as well
as other corporate and commercial spatial data stores.
• The IMAGE database segregates each feature table into one of almost one
hundred “segments”
• This was to overcome performance issues that have since become redundant so the first
step was to eliminate the concept of segment tables
• combined all the segments for a particular feature into a single table
• We next cleaned the existing British Columbia data, removing records that
had invalid FRAMME keys, duplicate records, or were orphans (pointed to
parent records that did not exist)
Data Anomaly Removed Archive Tables Comment
Invalid Keys 76,000 PROB_feature RB_PRMRY & RB_SCNDRY values
Duplicate Records* 3,300 DUP_feature based on the FRAMME keys
Orphan Records 340,000 OR_feature See slide: IMAGE data Anomalies
• The resulting SDS data model for attribute data in all other respects is identical to the
conceptual IMAGE data model. It is a compromise that will enable some enterprise
reporting and web display while permitting continued maintenance with FRAMME.
9. 3. Spatial Data Store
• Huge Data Investment:
• 300 staff working for 10 years = ~3,000 person years of investment in the data
• This ¼ person year project unlocked all that data
• IMAGE Database Anomalies
• Migration of data to the target model was complicated by the large number of data
issues
• A comprehensive data cleaning exercise brought the database to a state of integrity by
removing duplicate records and records with invalid FRAMME keys and orphan child
records.
• MicroStation elements are implicitly joined to database records by way of the
RB_PRMRY and RB_SCNDRY values
• The process found a substantial percentage of the MicroStation elements had no
corresponding database row
No Table Total Records Orphan Record Count
1 SDO_COPPER_SEG5701_SYMB 15,680 1,533
2 SDO_COPPER_SEG5701_TEXT 186,079 50,888
3 SDO_COPPER_SEG5701_LINE 15,260 2,717
10. 3. Spatial Data Store: Populating the SDS using ETL
• To embark on this initiative, we first had to determine a target coordinate
system to provide seamless coverage for western Canada and,
potentially, all of Canada
• Chose the Mercator EPSG: 3875 projection (same as Google Maps)
• A mathematical transformation was required to change all location data
from the province-specific coordinate systems to the new single,
seamless coordinate system.
• Several sample workflows were developed using TELUS data to
determine which of these attributes would be required for individual
element types, with the ultimate goal that adequate MicroStation data
richness was being retained
• About a dozen workflows were built to process and load the hundreds of
MicroStation V7 design files, with FRAMME database linkages, into
Oracle Spatial tables.
Class Area DGNs cell arc ellipse line mtext shape text node Grand Total
Common CODL 398 1 13 25,524 32,319 2 56,831 77 114,767
Copper CODL 330 4 12 15,256 46,895 27 17,847 21 80,062
Fiber BC 12,523 157,052 689,614 2 199,000 5 1,045,673
11. Agenda
0. Business Context
1. Project Overview
2. Architecture Diagram
3. Spatial Data Store
4. FieldView Next Generation
5. Business Benefit: Customer Delivery Analysis
Tools
6. Workflow: Increasing TELUS TV
Subscribership
7. Workflow: Data Aggregation for Network
Planners
8. Workflow: Wi-Fi Planning Tool
12. 4. FieldView Next Generation (FVNG)
Current Version
of FieldView
• Limited
functionality
• Not integrated with
any
other system
• No orthophotos
• Limited Attribution
• Better attribution is
available in IMAGE
– but not
accessible
13. 4. FieldView Next Generation (FVNG)
• Web-map
publishing options:
- ArcGIS Server/Bing
Maps
- Google Maps
- MGOS
• Hosted iVAULT
MapGuide
OpenSource
• Connects to and
aggregates many
spatial data formats
• Web-based
administration with
iVAULT
14. 4. FNVG- Authentication
• Linked with Active
Directory & LDAP
authentication
• Role specific:
• Data Layers
• Map types
• Attributes
• Searches
• Functionality
• Session
TELUS Confidential 14
15. 4. FVNG – Data Searching & Querying Capabilities
• Any of TELUS's
corporate data or
IMAGE data is now
searchable and
locatable
TELUS Confidential 15
16. 4. FVNG – Data Mining & Reporting Capabilities
• Any of TELUS's corporate
data or IMAGE data is
now available to users
based on security access
for that user
• Report generation tool
facilitates easy creation of
TELUS specific reports
• Query results can be
displayed in:
• HTML
• Excel
• The map as a tooltip
or in the results panel
• A Custom Report
TELUS Confidential 16
17. 4. FVNG - Database Editing Capabilities
Any of TELUS's corporate data or
IMAGE data is now editable
through custom forms designed in
the iVAULT administrator
TELUS Confidential 17
18. 4. FVNG- Customized Toolbox
The Administrator has a configurable framework
from which to expose web and role-based spatial
and database tools.
TELUS Confidential 18
19. 4. FVNG - Map Markups
Field crews pass through notes on the data
through a redlining layer.
TELUS Confidential 19
20. 4. FVNG - Dynamically Themed Layers
Interested in which customers have TELUS
phone service but not TELUS Internet? – Create
a new theme.
TELUS Confidential 20
21. 4. FVNG- Administrator
All components of the interface are controlled by
the Administrator through an easy-to-use,
browser-based, interface.
TELUS Confidential 21
22. 4. FVNG - Administrator – Site Configuration
The Administrator can configure different lay-outs
for different job roles.
TELUS Confidential 22
23. 4. FVNG- Administrator – Data Configuration
Adding data sets is a process of pointing to the
sources of the data and specifying which roles
can view them at which scale.
TELUS Confidential 23
24. 4. FVNG - Administrator – Tools Configuration
The Administrator also configures which roles can
view, edit and report on which components of the
corporate data.
TELUS Confidential 24
25. Agenda
0. Business Context
1. Project Overview
2. Architecture Diagram
3. Spatial Data Store
4. FieldView Next Generation
5. Business Benefit: Customer Delivery Analysis
Tools
6. Workflow: Increasing TELUS TV
Subscribership
7. Workflow: Data Aggregation for Network
Planners
8. Workflow: Wi-Fi Planning Tool
26. 5. Business Benefit
• FieldView NG provided TELUS customer data mapped by property
and themed for the first time – the benefits of which are that it:
• Advises and informs decisions on new infrastructure investment
• Allows Service Managers to better direct field crews
• Directs and provides change over time to support target marketing
• Custom Delivery Analysis Tools provided by FieldView NG:
• Services by Address • Fibre Visualization
• Customer Churn • Cable Counts
• Field Locate • Orphan Cable
• Document Linking • Bridge Taps
• Trouble Ticket • Wi-Fi Analysis
27. 5. Business Benefit
• Allows Analysts to run scenarios against the data:
1. Which customers will benefit from an infrastructure upgrade?
2. How many prospects benefit?
3. What‟s the revenue potential vs. cost?
4. What‟s the marketing plan for this area?
28. Agenda
0. Business Context
1. Project Overview
2. Architecture Diagram
3. Spatial Data Store
4. FieldView Next Generation
5. Business Benefit: Customer Delivery Analysis
Tools
6. Workflow: Increasing TELUS TV
Subscribership
7. Workflow: Data Aggregation for Network
Planners
8. Workflow: Wi-Fi Planning Tool
29. 6. TELUS TV- Customers by Use for Network
Planning
• Network integrity is
better if customers are
serviced by Distribution
cables rather than
Feeder cables.
Determine which urban areas need upgrading.
TELUS Confidential 29
30. 6. TELUS TV- Loaded Plant in Loop
• In rural areas this
shows which
customers would
benefit from an
investment in
equipment (load
coils) at certain
intervals.
• In this case, the
area is serviced
by digital
subscriber loop
access modules
(DSLAMS) and Determine which rural areas need upgrading.
any identified
areas would
indicate were
there‟s a higher
probability of a
records issue.
TELUS Confidential 30
31. 6. TELUS TV – Tailored Marketing
The Network Planners can pass this qualification
map onto Marketing so that they can tailor their
campaigns.
TELUS Confidential 31
32. 6. TELUS TV – Customer Classification: Business vs.
Residential
Identify current TELUS residential customers.
TELUS Confidential 32
33. 6.TELUS TV: Customers – Overlay Subscriber Data
onto areas qualified for service
These are existing TELUS customers that qualify
for the service and could be up-sold to a different
package. The purple have been up-sold and the
green are potential up-sell opportunities.
Action: Use this analysis as the basis of a Direct
Marketing campaign.
TELUS Confidential 33
34. 6. TELUS TV: Customers – Current Service Type
Of the current customers – which service do they
use? Who do we send the flyer for the upgrade
promotion from TELUS DSL to TELUS TV?
TELUS Confidential 34
35. 6. TELUS TV – Qualification Classification
When a prospect calls to purchase the service the
phone representative can quickly determine the
highest level of service available to the prospect
(this used to require two systems).
Different quality of services allow different
products to be sold in certain areas. The client
service rep can use this tool (the same one
produced by network planning and used by
marketing) to determine the quality of package a
prospect qualifies for.
TELUS Confidential 35
36. 6. TELUS TV: Trouble-shooting
Bridge tap shows TELUS areas where they may
need to go in and 'cut pairs' to improve
transmission characteristics, i.e. Reduce dB loss.
It is a primary cause of clients experiencing
trouble with their high speed service when others
in the neighborhood aren‟t having trouble.
Action: The Planners can identify areas were the
highest level of service is available.
TELUS Confidential 36
37. 6. TELUS TV- More Trouble-shooting
• Network integrity is
better if customers are
serviced by Distribution
cables rather than
Feeder cables.
• This report allows
TELUS to identify
areas where there may
be some „clean up‟ to
do in terms of how the
cable is being used, or
• Perhaps it is an area
where TELUS needs to
look at the cable
classifation in the
records. i.e. it could
point to records issues. Customers by Use for Network Planning
TELUS Confidential 37
38. 7. Business Benefit from Data Aggregation
• . Administrative
Boundaries were in a
different system so the
Planners couldn‟t see
who the clients were that
would be compacted by
an upgrade.
• Other data that was
previously in other
systems:
1. TELUS Buildings Allows the field crews to see all TELUS assets on
a common base map within ONE system.
and Cabinets
2. TELUS Mobility
Towers
3. Trouble Tickets
TELUS Confidential 38
39. 7. Business Benefit from Data Aggregation
.
1. Wireline data
from IMAGE
2. Copper Cables
and Drop Cables
3. Fibre optic
related features
4. Poles, ducts &
Vaults
Allows Network Planners to see all physical plant
in ONE system.
TELUS Confidential 39
40. 8. Wi-Fi Network Designer Tool
• Developed to provide TELUS network planners with a tool to cost
out targeted Wi-Fi network support for overburdened 3G networks
• User selects Wi-Fi Access point technology for trial
• Wi-Fi network developed using TELUS owned or joint owned poles
• Buffer automatically generates based on range of selected
technology
• User can analyze the one time and re-occurring equipment and
implementation costs associated to the network design
• Saved networks can be shared across the enterprise
TELUS Confidential 40
41. 8 Wi-Fi Network Designer Tool
The Wi-Fi Network Designer application allows for
planners to cost out infrastructure enhancement
projects and technology prior to implementation.
TELUS Confidential 41
42. 8. Wi-Fi Network Designer Tool – Analysis and Reports
Bottom line: Now that TELUS‟s data is liberated
they can quickly and cheaply run scenarios
against that data.
TELUS Confidential 42
43. Questions?
Chris Webber – CW@pat.ca
Contact Us: Visit our Websites:
Head Office www.pat.ca
604.676.6000
Toll-free ivault.pat.ca
877.691.9171
Check for
Seattle upcoming and recorded
206.409.9105
webinars:
Email: sales@pat.ca
http://ivault.pat.ca/webinars
Page 43
Editor's Notes
Leveraging Consumer GIS to Meet Your Corporate Goals, Google Maps, Bing Maps and others are providing consumers with a plethora of functionality and data for free. Like any consumer product, it is not a panacea for corporate users. However, there is a lot of functionality that can be tailored to the needs of utility workflows. Come see specific workflows that show the benefit of mashing-up corporate GIS with Consumer GIS and how others are leveraging consumer GIS to increase their GIS Return on Investment! We will show specific examples from a recent project demonstrating how a major utility derived market investment and additional revenue from their GIS project.
Dan’s Slide
PAT assisted TELUS in determining the optimum design for the Spatial Data Store and Field View NG data base, application and hardwarePAT implemented a Web Mapping application that provides targeted Web 2.0 capabilities for high performance mobile web mapping on both Smart Phone and PC platforms
History of green ones
Leveraging Consumer GIS to Meet Your Corporate Goals, Google Maps, Bing Maps and others are providing consumers with a plethora of functionality and data for free. Like any consumer product, it is not a panacea for corporate users. However, there is a lot of functionality that can be tailored to the needs of utility workflows. Come see specific workflows that show the benefit of mashing-up corporate GIS with Consumer GIS and how others are leveraging consumer GIS to increase their GIS Return on Investment! We will show specific examples from a recent project demonstrating how a major utility derived market investment and additional revenue from their GIS project.
When FRAMME was developed Intergraph’s revenue was triple Oracles. No one thought that Relational Database Management Systems were going to win the day.
Leveraging Consumer GIS to Meet Your Corporate Goals, Google Maps, Bing Maps and others are providing consumers with a plethora of functionality and data for free. Like any consumer product, it is not a panacea for corporate users. However, there is a lot of functionality that can be tailored to the needs of utility workflows. Come see specific workflows that show the benefit of mashing-up corporate GIS with Consumer GIS and how others are leveraging consumer GIS to increase their GIS Return on Investment! We will show specific examples from a recent project demonstrating how a major utility derived market investment and additional revenue from their GIS project.
Data Searching \\ Querying Capabilities
Leveraging Consumer GIS to Meet Your Corporate Goals, Google Maps, Bing Maps and others are providing consumers with a plethora of functionality and data for free. Like any consumer product, it is not a panacea for corporate users. However, there is a lot of functionality that can be tailored to the needs of utility workflows. Come see specific workflows that show the benefit of mashing-up corporate GIS with Consumer GIS and how others are leveraging consumer GIS to increase their GIS Return on Investment! We will show specific examples from a recent project demonstrating how a major utility derived market investment and additional revenue from their GIS project.
Leveraging Consumer GIS to Meet Your Corporate Goals, Google Maps, Bing Maps and others are providing consumers with a plethora of functionality and data for free. Like any consumer product, it is not a panacea for corporate users. However, there is a lot of functionality that can be tailored to the needs of utility workflows. Come see specific workflows that show the benefit of mashing-up corporate GIS with Consumer GIS and how others are leveraging consumer GIS to increase their GIS Return on Investment! We will show specific examples from a recent project demonstrating how a major utility derived market investment and additional revenue from their GIS project.
A cable is either Feeder or Distribution. Feeder cable should supply digital switches and cross connect boxes. Distribution cable is the cable that connects from those hubs ‘distributing’ service to our customers. Therefore, no customers should be served by Feeder cable. This allows us to identify areas where we may have some ‘clean up’ to do in terms of how we are using our cable, or perhaps it is an area where we need to take a look at how we’ve classified our cable in our records. i.e. it could point us to records issues.
‘loaded’ plant is cable that requires a signal boost because it’s a ‘long loop’ from the CO to the customer (and back). That boost is provided by inclusion of ‘load coils’ at certain intervals. This is normally only found in rural areas where we have not put in digital subscriber loop access modules (DSLAMS) closer to the customers. Loaded plant is not suitable for providing higher speed services such as TELUS TV so we are looking for areas where we can eliminate that kind of configuration from our network. It’s another way to analyze our network topology. In this screen there is no loaded plant, which is good. Because Cloverdale, our study area, does have some rural territory there is a smattering of loaded plant on the fringes of the CO. However, since this collection of customers we are plotting here are only those served by a digital switch, we should NOT have ANY, so it’s an indicator of where we should look for records issues if we see some customers where their circuit includes loaded plant.
A cable is either Feeder or Distribution. Feeder cable should supply digital switches and cross connect boxes. Distribution cable is the cable that connects from those hubs ‘distributing’ service to our customers. Therefore, no customers should be served by Feeder cable. This allows us to identify areas where we may have some ‘clean up’ to do in terms of how we are using our cable, or perhaps it is an area where we need to take a look at how we’ve classified our cable in our records. i.e. it could point us to records issues.
Wi-Fi Network Designer application allows for planners to cost out infrastructure enhancement projects and technology prior to implementation
Jeff is rerunning this to provide more accurate numbers