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Show to focus on broadband ROI

Technology is willing but the business case remains suspect heading into SuperComm 2003.
By Tim Greene , Network World , 06/02/2003
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Amid the din of product announcements this week at SuperComm 2003, you can expect to hear a strong call for more readily available broadband access that will bring less-expensive connections to small corporate offices and telecommuters.


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The root cause for any delay of such offerings might be that service providers need convincing that the investments they make will pay off relatively soon.

"They have a concern if they will make money off [these new services]," says Marie Hattar, chairwoman of the Broadband Content Delivery (BCD) Forum and a marketing executive for Nortel. "Just doing a technical demonstration is not enough. Everyone's question is, where's the ROI?"

She says her group will back up that assessment at the show with the results of a survey of providers that it commissioned from TeleChoice about barriers to broadband deployment. The BCD Forum also will disseminate business cases for new services such as IP voice and data over a broadband connection such as DSL or cable modem in an attempt to sway providers.

Similarly, the DSL Forum will push specific services that the technology can support, such as video streaming, distance learning and gaming, says Tom Starr, the organization's president and a network executive at SBC.

"The issue is getting DSL available to more customers. There's still a number of communities that don't have it," Starr says. Service providers need the confidence that customers will buy the services if they are made available, he says.

Broadband will be dominant at the show, with more than half of the 450 exhibitors displaying broadband products or services. Technologies represented will include DSL, cable modems, Ethernet, Fiber to the Home and broadband wireless.

Availability of services, not technology, is the issue, experts say.

One contributing factor is competition, according to the FCC. The argument goes that if a competitive provider offers a broadband service in an area, the established carriers also are more likely to offer some form of broadband service. Part of the competition equation is the degree that the established carriers must accommodate competitors by leasing lines and switching capabilities.

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