Achieving Broadband Britain - a Partnership model for enabling a Digital Networked Economy

Similar documents
Europe's Digital Progress Report (EDPR) 2017 Country Profile Lithuania

THE LARGEST CELEBRATION OF RURAL BUSINESS IN THE UK

The implementation of a national agenda for ICTs: The Colombian case

June Page 1 of 7

Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI) Country Report Latvia

ENVIRONMENT, FOOD & RURAL AFFAIRS COMMITTEE: INQUIRY INTO BROADBAND IN RURAL AREAS

DRAFT DIGITAL STRATEGY

EIB Investments in Digital Economies outside the European Union

Europe's Digital Progress Report (EDPR) 2017 Country Profile Slovenia

AN INSIGHT INTO THE AUTHORITY S KEY ACHIEVEMENTS

The Future of Broadband Internet Access in Canada

Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI 1 ) 2018 Country Report Czech Republic

Brussels, 7 December 2009 COUNCIL THE EUROPEAN UNION 17107/09 TELECOM 262 COMPET 512 RECH 447 AUDIO 58 SOC 760 CONSOM 234 SAN 357. NOTE from : COREPER

Broadband Stakeholder Group 1. The Impact of Public Sector Interventions on Broadband in Rural Areas

h h e

URBAN II Evaluation Project Case Study: URBAN ON LINE (Gijon)

Lessons from Korea. Asian Tiger Capital Partners. November

Europe's Digital Progress Report (EDPR) 2017 Country Profile Ireland

Plan of Action for the Information Society in Latin America and the Caribbean elac 2007

Economic and Social Council

COMMUNICATIONS ALLIANCE LTD DIGITAL ECONOMY FUTURE DIRECTIONS CONSULTATION PAPER. Submission

Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI) Country Report Greece

Financial Instruments in Tourism Development

Speech by Commissioner Phil Hogan at the Presidential Seminar on the Problems of Communication in Rural Areas

Canada s Broadband Approach

Digital Platform Proves Critical to Growth of Leading CPG Company

Broadband stimulus and the economy Dr. Raúl L. Katz (*) Adjunct Professor, Division of Finance and Economics

THE STATE OF THE DIGITAL NATION

450,000 2, Mbps NEXERA IS BUILDING THE FUTURE COMPANY PROFILE DECEMBER 2017

Horizon 2020 update and what s next. Dr Alex Berry, European Advisor 15 December 2015, Royal Holloway

Digital Economy.How Are Developing Countries Performing? The Case of Egypt

Functional separation in Sweden New remedy in the Electronic Communications Act. Bo Andersson, 7th June 2008

MEETING NOTES AREA BROADBAND MEETING

SPECTRUM INTERNET ASSIST

CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS SETS NEW INDUSTRY STANDARD BY LAUNCHING NEW LOW-COST, HIGH-SPEED BROADBAND SERVICE FOR U.S.

PARTNERS AND PROJECTS Charity registration No SC in Scotland

Investment in ICT and Broadband for Economic Recovery and Long-Term Growth

BUILDING INFRASTRUCTURE FOR ICT DEVELOPMENT IN TANZANIA

igd IMPACT PRACTICAL, BUSINESS-DRIVEN IMPACT MEASUREMENT ICT // 2014

Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI) Country Report Hungary

NEXERA IS BUILDING POLAND S DIGITAL FUTURE WITH PLN 1.3 BILLION INVESTMENT IN NEXT GENERATION ACCESS PROJECT

450,000 2, Mbps NEXERA IS BUILDING THE FUTURE COMPANY PROFILE

Director General July 30, 2010 Telecommunications Policy Branch Industry Canada 16th Floor, 300 Slater Street Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0C8

Swindon Joint Strategic Needs Assessment Bulletin

A decade of the information society

Property Investment Guide: South Manchester

Digital Smart City Strategy Call for Submissions from Industry

The spirit of Trinidad and Tobago s Connectivity Agenda is captured in the following values:

Fastershire Overview. Gloucestershire LEP. 17/4/18 Matt Smith Operations Manager

Galit Wellner Board Member

Europe's Digital Progress Report (EDPR) 2017 Country Profile France

TRANSPORT CAMPAIGN GET THE MIDLANDS MOVING

European Perspective Phil Hogan, European Commissioner for Agriculture & Rural Development

GOOD PRACTICE. Leeds City Region Growth Programme

Creative Industries Clusters Programme Programme Scope

Digital Bangladesh Strategy in Action

Ofcom s consultation on the renewal of the Channel 4 licence: Out of England Quota.

Measuring the Information Society Report Executive summary

New Brunswick Information & Communications Technology Sector Strategy

JOINT PROMOTION PLATFORM Pilot project on joint promotion of Europe in third markets

REGIONAL I. BACKGROUND

House of Commons: Written Statement (HCWS129)

Developing Green Social Enterprise: The case of the East Midlands, UK

Canadian Accelerators

Europe's Digital Progress Report (EDPR) 2017 Country Profile Malta

OECD-NITA Workshop May, Copenhagen. Søren Jensen, Senior Vice President TDC Business Nordic

INFORMATION FOR CLUBS

Strategic University Research Programme Communications Special

Expansion of Individual Placement and Support (IPS) services Proposal Guidance for Wave 1 Funding

Highlands and Islands Enterprise Creating a Digital Scotland

Sources of funding for A&A education to deliver the vision of Europe 2020

6 Telecommunication Development Sector (ITU-D)

North-Western Kuhmo Village Optical Fibre Cooperative

England s Economic Heartland

The Importance of a Broadband Plan

ICTs and Labor Market Intermediation The Souktel Case Palestine

How to increase national absorptive capacity for green technology

Trading our way out of trouble. Liberalisation and trade past, current and future policy trends

Yannis Caloghirou. einfrastructures: The future of the Information Society. EU einfrastructure initiative Athens, June

Work-Life Innovation

Innovation Policies and Knowledge Transfer: Some Experiences from Ireland

Devon & Somerset County Councils United Kingdom. Avanti Communications February 2014

Mind s FoI data. Freedom of Information data on follow-up after hospital. April A note on the data

SK Telecom s. Digital Inclusion Policy

DRAFT WORK IN PROGRESS. Professor Tim Kendall Mental Health National Clinical Director NHS England and NHS Improvement

APEC Telecommunications and Information Working Group Strategic Action Plan PREAMBLE

WHY BROADBAND? By Joe A. Sumners, Ph.D., Director, Economic & Community Development Institute, Auburn University

Is the EIT a model for realizing the knowledge triangle?

ANDY STREET S DIGITAL PLAN FOR THE WEST MIDLANDS

APT Ministerial Conference on Broadband and ICT Development 1-2 July 2004, Bangkok, Thailand

Business Plan Operating Year Update

International Institute of Communications 2011 Annual Conference

Community ICT Champion: City of London Community ICT project

Recommendations for Digital Strategy II

STRATEGIES FOR BROADBAND DEVELOPMENT: access and adoption

THE 2016 INFORMATION COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY SECTOR ASSESSMENT IN SUMMARY

Helmholtz-Inkubator INFORMATION & DATA SCIENCE

Using information and technology to transform health and care

VACANCYSOFT. Business Intelligence through Vacancy Data. Regional Trends Report. South East

Navigating the road to Opportunities and challenges for telecom operators in the Middle East

Transcription:

Achieving Broadband Britain - a Partnership model for enabling a Digital Networked Economy Trish Jones GM Regional Broadband Partnerships OECD Workshop 25th October 2004

Agenda Coverage and reach: where we are, where we are going Addressing the challenge - BT s contribution to Regional Partnerships and Route map model Beyond the footprint to stimulate demand and create a digital networked economy BT working in partnership with regional and local key players to release the power of Broadband

Broadband at the Heart of BT 94% UK coverage 3584 exchanges enabled 1644 from pre-registration scheme launched in July 2002 advanced 1m footprint through Partnerships 99.6 % by July 2005 - commitment given by BT in June 2004 1447 exchanges in systematic build 565 exchanges without a trigger Take-up 13.6% with 3.7m connections and growing - with regional variation from 9.2% in NE to 19.1% London

Since September - extended reach to remove the distance limits Trials in Milton Keynes, Dingwall and Fort William delivering ADSL services beyond the previous 60dB (6km) limit Distance limit for its 512kb/sec ADSL broadband services now removed. Increased range for 1Mb premium services More than 1million additional homes and businesses now able to get ADSL service. Raising the average percentage of households on an enabled exchange that can get broadband from approx 96% to 99.8%. By July 2005, as many people will be able to get ADSL broadband services as can currently get good analogue TV reception for ITV1, Channel 4, BBC1 and BBC2

Community Engagement - Making it happen faster April 2000 our first 400 exchanges - 26% Move from push to pull Demand led approach to supply - launch of pioneering Actnow partnership in rural Cornwall Coverage was only 66% when BB registration scheme was launched in July 2002 Registration campaigns - 470,000 Worked actively with over 600 campaign groups Get on and get it ; Campaign in a box launched 16th June 2003 Nov 2003-80%, May 2004-90% June 2004 - announced systematic build Insufficient demand to enable every exchange Trigger Levels breaking the vicious circle Need to enable exchange to generate demand

Cornwall Launch April 2002 - our pioneer for a demand led approach Originally 1 exchange, no trigger levels and low demand Formal intervention to raise competitiveness of Businesses : partnership structure, management and formal project approach needed. EU Regional aid contributions supported capital investment, advisory services and Small Business adoption actnow in Cornwall: enabled 12 exchanges 1100 new ADSL lines in first 12 weeks 29% of SMEs have taken up broadband - 4500 SME sign ups, 5100 lines Businesses now moving to Cornwall due to Broadband service availability 32K ADSL connections 16.5% take-up Extended by 7 more exchanges without capital intervention and fast tracked another 15 ecommerce Skills Development Experience centre & portal Business Support Awareness & marketing Access/Hardware Technology

Actnow Results - economic benefits Employment: 25% of those see economic benefits - had increased staff numbers since getting Broadband Turnover: 36% actnow sample v 35% others -had increased turnover in the last year. Average increase for sample 34% v 14% for others Productivity: 48% actnow sample & 32% others had increased productivity. Half as many sampled businesses had increased their productivity in shorter time period of 7/8 months against 12 Average GVA for actnow sample was 249,000 v 148,000 Broadband contribution - grossed across Cornish businesses equates to circa 7m Profitability: 40% actnow increased since connecting to BB v 33% others. But 28% increase v 15% others

Route map - the need for a partnership approach To maximise broadband coverage and create demand Increasing take-up in areas where it is low Create demand in areas where not yet available Increasing complexity Partnership activity: Average cost of intervention per household Localised marketing User incentive Localised support Partial supply side Supply side model Reduced market demand Increased cost of provision Partnership models 1 2 3 4 5 1 70 90 110 150+ Connected cities e.g. Leeds, Newcastle Caerphilly, South Yorkshire, Leicestershire Wiltshire, West Sussex, Merseyside Actnow, H&I NE & NI

The Value of Partnerships Scottish Islands Lowlands (16) Merseysid e Wrexha m Cheshir e Gwyned d Shropshir Caerphilly e (2) West Mids REDI South Wales (3) Wiltshire Cornwall (2) Devon Hampshire Highland s (2) West Sussex One North East W. Yorks N. Yorks S. Yorks Since November 2002 BT has established 56 areas of public private technology neutral partnerships Yorks Southbank Manchester, Burnley Leicester Kent Partnerships to continue to: Brentwood East Sussex and Hastings finish the job for 100% community engagement create growth and demand for on-line services nurture usage for social & economic benefit.our job has only just begun Derbyshire

Beyond ADSL - Developments in July 04 Extended Reach Extend 512kbps Reach to 99.8% within an enabled exchange Extend 1MB Reach to 97% 2MB Reach remains at 82% Satellite & Exchange activate Infill at the extremes and for small exchanges where triggers have not been set BT Openzone & Internet kiosks SDSL roll-out to over 150 exchanges Radio Opportunity Infill market significantly reduced for 512kb and 1Mb asymmetric Opportunity - higher speeds & 2 mg symetric beyond current SDSL coverage & to all exchanges incl business parks & rural - Commercially viable without funding - Demand based roll-out - Announcements in November

Broadband Britain - a BT perspective Significant societal and economic benefit will flow from widespread coverage and adoption of Broadband in the UK Technology evolution is inevitable Broadband facilitates multiple connections, applications and services to be consumed simultaneously: People people People device Device device Broadband transforming the way we live

The changing landscape The 21 st Century is a World with Broadband Everywhere Customers want more choice, flexibility and control Convergence is gaining momentum and needs an underlying infrastructure to deliver and support it 21CN is a radical transformation for BT - supporting new converged services Simplicity is key

21CN - A single, fully integrated multi-service network supporting multiple converged services (voice, data, video) 2008 2009 Broadband dialtone available to most customers key milestones 2007 Mass PSTN migration reaches more than 50% of customers 2006 Large scale non PSTN service migration begins 2005 Mass PSTN migration begins 17 new product launches/enhancements based on re-usable capabilities New operations & service management capability in place 2004 Broadband available to 99.6% Strategic vendors announced Broadband growth on MSAN/combo cards First new service launches based on re-usable capabilities PSTN transformation trial Deep fibre trial Converged network Service creation Experience development centre

Success is beyond networks and coverage and lies in people making maximum use of new services Marketing investment to stimulate demand local and multi-channel Improve broadband services providing business solutions Getting citizens to use services to access government and local government services Education to improve skills Local stakeholders to work together to nurture the development of new services and benefits enjoyed

What we have learnt about SMEs from working in partnership Small business are increasingly net savvy and want; ( Actnow data) Fast response to their enquiry Easy access 24/7 Supplier with knowledge and ICT savvy Good fulfilment and support Competitive pricing Local delivery

An innovative first for small business Hosted Exchange Subscription Office Broadband Products & Services Sales & Support All the benefits of Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 including personalised email, calendar, contacts and folders Available from your PC or via your mobile. A managed service Microsoft Office Small Business Edition inc. Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Publisher and Business Contact Manager Upgrades to latest releases Easy monthly payment terms Additional licenses as required Access Support Security Web Hosting Local partnership resellers One point of contact, One bill BT Broadband Office Complete featuring Microsoft technology

BT is shaping the BB sector for consumer citizens too BT Rich Media BT Rich Media is a joint venture between BT Retail and BT Wholesale. BTRM have been formed to help content owners exploit their assets, by ingesting them from any source, encoding, editing and distributing to any device. BTRM also provide billing and subscriber management services where required by the content owner.

Scaleable, powerful and flexible We can take content of any kind, in any form, and distribute it rapidly and securely to any audience on any device in any country

Our platform is placed at the heart of the new opportunity, uniting. Communities through: Providing creative and technical training Shared experiences Video (TV, VoD, self generated) / Audio (radio) Internal and external inputs Securely (password / pay-mechanics) Neighbourhood watch for: Policing (web cam security offering ) Facilitating control and involvement for citizens in all aspects of their environment (social, health, sports etc.)

Working in Partnership to release the power of Broadband The last 0.4% Champion policy on the last 565 exchanges Champion take-up with business and citizens 3.7m to 5m during 2006 Create a true digital networked economy Set output improvement targets on BB driver projects Develop BB driven applications & content (local); Industry sectors, Education & on-line learning, Health & tele-medicine, Rural economic growth, tele-working, social & community networking, access to public services and training.

Creating a connected Region Community wins Access to latest technology Fast, constant, quality service Tailored services Market growth for local companies Community ICT literate UK Plc and Region Wins Innovative supply & demand growth models EU best practice and positioning Stimulate and nurture demand Content and service providers win Better business opportunities Helps smaller content providers reach a broader customer base Local stakeholders win Sustainable investment New services Increased profile for Region/Nation Partnership body for other activity Innovation All telecom companies win Advertising helps everyone Demand led & visible Creates Competitive retail and wholesale markets Conducive to encourage more investment