Keynote sessions for the second day of the annual FTTH Council Asia Pacific Conference focused on real-life business models and network monetization.
No debates about the need for fiber
Sometimes what’s not said is more important than what is said. Day two covered FTTH rollouts in Singapore, Japan, China, Indonesia, Taiwan, South Korea, Malaysia, and New Zealand.
The words DSL, bonding, and vectoring were not mentioned. There were no debates around the need for fiber. There were discussions around FTTH pricing plans and decommissioning the copper plant.
FTTH service differentiation
In the wholesale-retail model, retail service providers must differentiate through service offerings rather than on basic FTTH network availability. Families seeking bandwidth, often referred to as bandwidth seekers, have choices regarding which service provider they choose.
Let’s compare and contrast for a moment. In the US, a bandwidth seeker may have the choice between Verizon’s FiOS and a cable operator such as Comcast. Or the bandwidth seeker may have a choice between a DSL-based network from AT&T and a cable operator. The evaluation of the service providers begins with evaluation of the different underlying networks.
Contrast this to the situation in Singapore, where the bandwidth seeker has a choice of services from multiple retailers where the underlying network is the same fiber. The evaluation is not around the medium but around the services running on top of the medium. Case in point: one retailer in Singapore is focusing on high-end gamers.