Abstract
Product overview
Network planning software is a $178 million market growing with a CAGR of 10%.
The market is driven by the rapid growth of data networking in mobile and
wireline networks. Operators are investing in the data handling network
infrastructure to support the introduction and growth of new content services
that require much more data networking capacity.
The market for network planning tools and systems is divided into two major
parts - RF planning and network infrastructure planning. The RF planning,
used primarily by mobile operators for their radio to handset and microwave
backhaul planning in the radio access network, is growing moderately, while
the infrastructure planning portion has just begun its major expansion.
Network infrastructure planning will support both residential broadband and
mobile backhaul.
Historically, network planning is a function of individual engineers working
with limited tools. Recently, the market has shifted to utilise more
integrated tools, leading to new capabilities for existing vendors and
opportunities for new vendors. Ultimately, operators are building integrated
network lifecycle management where planning will be one key function of an
integrated system.
This report gives a view of the current state of network planning, a forecast
of spending growth and an extensive explanation of the changes that are taking
place as this market shifts from old-world handcrafted engineering to modern,
integrated automation.
The Network planning outlook provides a detailed five-year forecast. The
forecast is broken out by region and service types, providing forecasts for
eight different segment views. The report includes market shares of the
leading suppliers and explains the overall business environment for business
planning software. The report provides a definition of network planning,
including the different disciplines and approaches in network planning. It
explains, with diagrams, six different approaches to network planning.
The report addresses the following important issues:
- the most important drivers for operator spending in network planning
- the shift from expert, guru-led planning to a more systematic approach
- the differing requirements among mobile, residential-broadband and
business services
- why mobile data networks are changing the way mobile network planning is
handled
- where automation is crucial and why some operators continue to delay
network planning automation
- where there are significant shifts in spending patterns
- why some operators choose to outsource network planning altogether
- the impact of faster planning cycles on network planning software.
The report includes a table comparing the leading network planning suppliers
and a chart of the leading suppliers market share. The market share section
includes explanations of the positioning of the six leading suppliers. The
supplier summaries section includes short summaries of 14 leading suppliers.
Who should read this report
This 44-page report is offered as part of OSS Observer' s Service Fulfillment
research module and as a stand-alone report. It is an excellent source of
market data and intelligence about network planning software for operators,
network equipment and software suppliers, systems integrators, venture
capitalists and financial analysts.