Foreword | p. xiii |
Introduction to IICs and OSS | p. 1 |
OSS' Role | p. 2 |
What are Some of These "Expectations?" | p. 3 |
What is an Internet Infrastructure Company (IIC)? | p. 5 |
IIC Business Models | p. 7 |
Dependent on OSS and One Another | p. 12 |
What is an OSS? | p. 13 |
A Detailed Look at OSS | p. 15 |
OSS Functionality | p. 15 |
A Little History | p. 15 |
Order Entry | p. 16 |
Service Validation | p. 17 |
Product Catalog | p. 18 |
Service Reservation | p. 19 |
Order Types | p. 19 |
Order Management | p. 20 |
Order Decomposition | p. 20 |
Workflow Management | p. 21 |
"Design and Assign" | p. 22 |
Communication with Trading Partners | p. 23 |
Interconnect Gateways | p. 23 |
Gateway Components | p. 25 |
Handling USOC Codes | p. 27 |
Network Inventory | p. 27 |
Inventory Management and Auto-Discovery | p. 29 |
Provisioning and Activation | p. 30 |
Flow-Through Provisioning | p. 31 |
Activation | p. 32 |
Provisioning with Trading Partners | p. 33 |
Billing and Mediation | p. 33 |
Mediation and Rating | p. 34 |
Convergent Billing | p. 35 |
The IP Effect | p. 36 |
Billing Schemes | p. 37 |
QoS and SLAs | p. 38 |
Network and Trouble Management | p. 38 |
Network Management Systems (NMSs) | p. 39 |
Trouble Management Systems | p. 41 |
Policy Management | p. 43 |
OSS in the Cable World | p. 46 |
OSS and the Web Portal | p. 46 |
The Web Portal as an OSS Component | p. 47 |
Defining eBusiness for the IIC Marketplace | p. 48 |
Automating the Internet Infrastructure Supply Chain | p. 51 |
What Stands in the Way? | p. 51 |
Interconnection as a Choke Point | p. 51 |
Lack of OSS Integration | p. 54 |
Why the Focus on Technology? | p. 55 |
TMN | p. 56 |
The Internet Infrastructure Supply Chain: Basic Components | p. 58 |
Wholesale-Retail: The DSL Example | p. 62 |
Digging Deeper | p. 64 |
Communicating with the Wholesalers | p. 65 |
The Internet, Workflow and Gateways | p. 68 |
Cable's Last Mile | p. 68 |
Provisioning a Cable Modem | p. 69 |
New Challenges for Cable OSS | p. 72 |
Real-Time Provisioning | p. 72 |
Open Access | p. 73 |
Device Conflicts | p. 73 |
The Growing Network | p. 74 |
Voice Services | p. 75 |
Infrastructure Services vs. Virtual Services | p. 76 |
The Mobile World | p. 76 |
The Mobile Supply Chain | p. 78 |
OSS for the Mobile IIC | p. 81 |
Basic Mobile Provisioning Process--CSR Based | p. 82 |
Looking at Some Missing Pieces | p. 84 |
Content Transformation | p. 85 |
OSS for 2.5 and 3G Networks | p. 86 |
Moving Forward | p. 89 |
Developing an OSS Strategy | p. 91 |
Value Proposition and Business Strategy | p. 92 |
Products and Services Strategy | p. 93 |
Network Strategy | p. 94 |
Sales and Service Strategy | p. 95 |
Budget and Investment Strategy | p. 95 |
Funding Strategy | p. 96 |
Operational Strategy | p. 97 |
Configuration and Process | p. 98 |
Enabling Competitive Differentiation | p. 99 |
Business Partner Integration and eBusiness Capability | p. 99 |
Flow-Through | p. 100 |
Business Intelligence | p. 101 |
Developing an Implementation Strategy | p. 102 |
The Build vs. Buy Decision | p. 102 |
Big Bang vs. Phased Deployment | p. 103 |
The "Big Bang" Method | p. 103 |
Developing a Phased Approach | p. 105 |
Best-of-Breed vs. OSS-in-a-Box | p. 107 |
In-House or Outsource? | p. 107 |
Risk Mitigation Strategies | p. 109 |
Lessons Learned | p. 111 |
The Enterprise OSS Platform | p. 113 |
OSS Vendors | p. 113 |
Evaluating the OSS Vendor and its Goods | p. 115 |
Vendor Origins | p. 116 |
Understanding Vendor Solutions | p. 118 |
Customization vs. Configuration | p. 118 |
Packages, Frameworks and Toolkits, and End-to-End Solutions | p. 119 |
Evaluating OSS Solutions and Vendors | p. 120 |
Common Pitfalls | p. 123 |
Evaluating the Applications | p. 124 |
Building the OSS Platform | p. 130 |
Tackling Implementation and Configuration | p. 130 |
The Web Portal's Role in OSS | p. 138 |
B2B Wholesale Portals | p. 140 |
Account Creation and Maintenance Transactions | p. 141 |
Ordering Transactions | p. 141 |
Trouble Ticketing Transactions | p. 142 |
Billing Transactions | p. 143 |
Business-to-Consumer (B2C) Portals | p. 143 |
Building Effective Web Portals | p. 145 |
Implementation and Architecture Case Studies | p. 145 |
Integrating the OSS Platform | p. 151 |
Common Integration Objectives | p. 151 |
Order Flow-Through | p. 152 |
Service Assurance Flow-Through | p. 152 |
Integrated Customer View | p. 153 |
Data Synchronization | p. 153 |
The Integrated OSS Platform | p. 153 |
Who Owns The Data? | p. 154 |
What Are The Transactions That Flow Among Systems? | p. 157 |
Sales Force Automation Transactions | p. 158 |
Web-Based Care Transactions | p. 158 |
Order Management and Provisioning Transactions | p. 159 |
Billing Transactions | p. 160 |
Business Goal: Service Assurance Flow-Through | p. 161 |
Network Monitoring Transactions | p. 161 |
Customer Relationship Management Transactions | p. 162 |
Web-Based Care Transactions | p. 162 |
Billing Transactions | p. 163 |
Business Goal: Deriving Integrated Business Intelligence | p. 164 |
Why Is Integration So Difficult? | p. 165 |
Application Package Flexibility | p. 166 |
Process and Data Assumptions | p. 167 |
Application Programming Interfaces | p. 168 |
Product Catalog Integration | p. 169 |
Business-to-Business Integration | p. 172 |
Integration Technologies | p. 173 |
Getting to the Data | p. 173 |
Integration Techniques | p. 176 |
Point-to-Point Integration | p. 178 |
Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) | p. 179 |
EAI Functional Components | p. 180 |
Other EAI Components | p. 183 |
EAI Vs. Point-to-Point | p. 184 |
What Connectors are Available? | p. 184 |
Where Do I Manage Workflow? | p. 185 |
What Kind of Skills Do I Need to Deploy EAI? | p. 187 |
Is Enterprise Application Integration Possible? | p. 189 |
How Much Time Does Integration Require? | p. 191 |
Integration Approaches and Phased Implementation | p. 192 |
Integration Case Studies | p. 192 |
Sales Force Automation to Order Management | p. 192 |
Order Management to Billing | p. 194 |
Order Management to Network Activation | p. 195 |
Service Assurance | p. 196 |
Web Portal | p. 198 |
Summing Up Integration | p. 199 |
Supporting the Life of an OSS Integrated Platform | p. 201 |
Moving to Production | p. 201 |
Migration Phases | p. 203 |
Lessons Learned in Conversion | p. 206 |
Support Organization and Cost | p. 207 |
Examining the IT Organization | p. 208 |
Maintenance | p. 208 |
Application Support | p. 208 |
Costs | p. 209 |
Configuration Management | p. 210 |
Maintenance Models | p. 210 |
Handling Mergers and Acquisitions | p. 211 |
Next-Generation OSS | p. 215 |
The Driving Force: The Next-Generation Network (NGN) | p. 216 |
Driving Intelligence into the Network | p. 217 |
Moving to Packets | p. 218 |
IP Switching to the Core | p. 219 |
QoS Guaranteed Service Delivery | p. 220 |
The Converged Network | p. 221 |
The Technologies and Protocols for NGN | p. 221 |
Integrated Access Device (IAD) | p. 221 |
Broadband Aggregator | p. 223 |
MPLS | p. 224 |
Softswitch | p. 226 |
Next-Generation DLC | p. 228 |
SIP | p. 229 |
DOCSIS and PacketCable | p. 231 |
3G Wireless | p. 232 |
Support for the Next-Generation OSS | p. 234 |
Multi-Domain Management | p. 234 |
QoS and SLA Management | p. 242 |
Real-Time Usage Collection and Billing | p. 243 |
User-Interface Considerations | p. 243 |
Component-Based Architecture | p. 244 |
Standards and Trends | p. 248 |
The Standards: TeleManagement Forum--NGOSS Framework | p. 248 |
The Web Services Revolution | p. 248 |
What Are the ISVs Doing? | p. 250 |
The Future of OSS | p. 251 |
Network Intelligence and Service Logic | p. 252 |
Application Services, Interactive Media and Billing | p. 252 |
Interactive Television | p. 253 |
Managing Where the Money Flows | p. 254 |
Further eBusiness Requirements | p. 256 |
Access--Privacy and Security | p. 256 |
Integration | p. 257 |
OSS Spending | p. 259 |
The Effect of Globalization on OSS | p. 259 |
Expertise | p. 260 |
velOSSity | p. 261 |
Glossary | p. 263 |
Index | p. 279 |
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