By Andrew Spivey | 29 Mar 2023 | IN-6892
The integration of multiple complimentary value-added services is set to drive the next stage of innovation and create additional value for consumers within the consumer Wi-Fi market.
Log In to unlock this content.
This content falls outside of your subscription, but you may view up to five pieces of premium content outside of your subscription each month
You have x unlocks remaining.
Isolated Wi-Fi CPE Value-Added Services to Give Way to Converged Solutions |
NEWS |
The deployment of value-added services—software level programs which add additional features to Wi-Fi CPE—has emerged as a key area of innovation and differentiation within the Wi-Fi industry. Each individual service can help improve network performance and/or unlock new features, but the realization of their full potential depends on their integration with other services. This will allow for the convergence of data from diverse sources, spanning from location and motion sensing to device and application usage, which will provide a deeper and more comprehensive array of data than possible with any single service. This convergence will ultimately increase the value proposition of these services, drive further innovation, and enable the flourishing of new business and service models.
All for One and One for All |
IMPACT |
Value-added services include features such as Wi-Fi management, cybersecurity, enhanced privacy, parental controls, and Wi-Fi motion sensing. The software is typically created either by a developer specializing in one individual service (which they intend to sell to Internet Service Providers (ISPs), equipment vendors, or directly to the end consumer), or by an ISP or equipment vendor in-house (for the purpose of enhancing the capabilities of their hardware). The former model tends to create singular services focused on a specific use case, with examples including Wi-Fi Sensing solutions from Cognitive, Origin, and Aerial, parental control applications from Bark and Qustodio, and the latency management program Domos, discussed further below. In contrast, the latter often involves the creation of a platform which encompasses a broader suite of services, like Optim from ActionTec or SURFboard from Arris. However, both models have inherent deficiencies. Two of the key challenges of isolated services is that the direct value which can be extracted from them can be limited, and the data they collect cannot be used in conjunction with data from other services. On the other hand, platforms built to span multiple services are often comparatively basic in their features and limited in the data they collect, as the developers lack the singular focus on a specific use case. The optimal arrangement is a combination of the two. A collaboration and integration between multiple complimentary specialized value-added services will create a comprehensive platform. This will allow for the sharing of data between multiple services, generating far richer data than any individual service alone could provide, integrate the services into one centralized control platform, and streamline the integration of these services into hardware. This realization of this fact is slowly being reflected in the market, as was evidenced in the recent partnership between a trio of Wi-Fi value-added software providers—Cognitive, Lansweeper, and Domos.
The first, and perhaps most recognizable, member of this new alliance is Cognitive, a leading developer of the nascent Wi-Fi Sensing technology, which leverages Radio Frequency (RF) signals from pre-existing Wi-Fi infrastructure to detect presence and motion. The company counts over one hundred ISPs as customers and has a deep and long-standing partnership with Wi-Fi services provider Plume. The second is Lansweeper, which maintains an IT Asset Management (ITAM) software providing full visibility of all connected devices, users, and software on a network. Finally, the third member Domos has developed a platform for managing, analyzing, and optimizing end-to-end latency. In March 2023, the three companies announced that they would combine their specialized solutions into an innovative package of smart home services for ISPs to deploy in residential Wi-Fi networks. The integration of these three solutions will converge data from multiple sources to provide a much richer and more comprehensive array of data than would be possible with any individual solution. ISPs will then be able to use this data for tasks ranging from resolving service quality issues, optimizing Wi-Fi networks, or the development of new revenue streams.
Convergence Opportunities |
RECOMMENDATIONS |
As industry competition intensifies—particularly between ISPs but also amongst equipment vendors—the simple throughput and performance differentiators of the past will no longer be sufficient to stand out from the pack. In this context, the leveraging of rich and insightful data from converged value-added services will be key in the next stage of innovation for consumer Customer Premise Equipment (CPE) and will enable their raising of their value propositions to consumers. The gains from converged services will help to maintain existing customers and attract new ones, reduce operational costs, and open up new revenue streams with additional products and services. ISPs looking to introduce value-added services to their customers should consider the following points:
Value-added service vendors have much to benefit from integrating their solutions with those of other vendors. Opportunities include:
At the same time, when forming partnerships value-added software vendors should ensure that they deliver on some of the following factors: