Title: Telecommunications Expense Management Wireless
1Telecommunications Expense Management - Wireless
Russ Peery GSA TEM COTRJordan Weinstock
Booze Allen HamiltonTodd McMillen iSys
June 2009
2Federal Strategic Sourcing Initiative
- OMB implemented strategic sourcing on May 20,
2005 - Share best practices and build the strategic
sourcing community - Establish mechanisms to increase savings, value,
and socio-economic participation - Avoid unnecessary duplication of effort
- Three commodity teams were established.
- Express and Ground Domestic Delivery Services
- Wireless Telecommunications Expense Management
- Office Supplies
- difying an existing slide just highlight the text
and replace it with new text. - Dont move stuff around and youll be fine
3Telecommunications Expense Management Services
- January 2006, the FSSI Wireless team began
gathering spend and commodity inventory data from
the participating agencies - Market research and analysis determined that the
federal agencies were not effectively managing
their wireless assets. Unknown inventories and
spend. - Conducted an Industry Day (3rd Quarter FY 06)
- To mitigate the issues facing the agencies on
their wireless programs, the team determined a
Wireless TEM solution was appropriate.
4Primary Objectives - TEM
- Establish a common procurement vehicle through
which agencies may procure and utilize TEM
Services - Lower total costs associated with TEM while
achieving similar or improved service levels
versus today - Utilize business intelligence to better support
overall decision making and performance
management
5Key Features
- Solicitation Number 7TF-06-0018
- Contract Type Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite
Quantity (IDIQ) - Firm Fixed Price - Multiple Award Contract
- Partial small business set-aside
- Contract Maximum 93M
- Period of performance 2 years with 3 one year
options - Contract awarded 11 January to
- Avalon Technologies, Inc - GS07T08BGD0002
- Booz-Allen Hamilton - GS07T08BGD0003
- iSYS LLC - GS07T08BGD0001
6Benefits
- Optimized rate plans/lower effective per minute
pricing - Accurate billing and payment
- The ability to identify and eliminate unused
devices/lines - Improved compliance to rate plans and related
wireless spend management policies - Improved asset management
- Management of bill related issues and conflict
resolution
7Core Services
- Wireless Service Contract/Agreement
Administration - Inventory Management
- Invoice Management and Audit
- Rate Plan Optimization
- Management Reporting
-
8Optional Services
- Contract Optimization
- Ordering and Procurement
- Bill Payment
- Dispute Recovery
- Device Disposition/Disposal
9Jordan S. WeinstockBooz Allen Hamilton
June 2009
10Session Agenda
- Need for Wireless TEM
- Case StudyU.S. Postal Service
- Lessons Learned
11Wireless devices and services generate tangible
benefits, but also introduce new challenges
- Mobile spend is quickly outpacing fixed telecom
spend - Many organizations lack the required
resourcestools, policies, processes, FTEsto
fully support mobility - Mobile devices often blur boundaries between
business and personal use - Proliferation of smartphones poses increased data
security risks and increases complexity to support
Top Mobility Management Challenges
12According to Aberdeen, telecom is one of the top
three operating expensesrequiring proactive
management
Wireless Strategy andPolicy Management
- Do you have a comprehensive enterprise policy for
wireless services and mobile devices? - Do you conduct detailed reviews of your rate
plans and contracts? - Do you have an accurate inventory of mobile
devices, including assignment to staff? - Do you have sufficient FTEs to effectively
support procurement, invoice processing and help
desk operations? - Do you have automated controls to monitor policy
compliance, optimize cost performance and
identify potential waste, fraud and abuse?
Key Telecom Expense Management Components
Rate Plan andContract Optimization
Asset Management
Operational Support
Procurement
Invoice Processingand Audit
Business Intelligence
13Case Study United States Postal Service
- Situation
- Geographically dispersed organization with more
than 40,000 devices - Sought to centralize, standardize and save
- Key Issues and Pain Points
- Decentralized management of devices across
thousands of locations - Lacked visibility into plans, total spend and
optimization - Limited inventory, lacked visibility into device
assignment
14Case Study United States Postal Service (cont.)
- Our Contribution
- Centralized and consolidated inventory across all
carriers and users - Conducted quarterly rate optimizations delivering
hard dollar savings - Implemented online ordering portal enforcing
policies and controlling costs - Provided 24/7 help desk support for all wireless
issues - Results
- Realized savings of more than 5M to date
- Identified and disconnected more than 3000
devices with zero-usage - Resolved more than 2,000 monthly Tier I and Tier
II Help Desk inquiries - Supported 1,700 wireless service requests per
month
15Lessons Learned
- Active participation and buy-in from stakeholders
(e.g. - IT, legal, human resources, procurement,
finance) is critical in developing a
comprehensive mobility policy - Executive support and proactive communication
before implementation of a managed mobility
program will improve user acceptance - A centralized procurement portal is one of the
best ways to enforce compliance to organizational
policies and achieve wireless objectives - Help desk and operation support staff must be
knowledgeable of organizational policies,
processes and tools to ensure policy compliance,
user satisfaction and achievement of program
goals - Inventory accuracy can be significantly improved
through automation of human resource data feeds
and identification of points of contact
16Kelly CollinsDirector of Program
ImplementationAvalon Technology, Inc.
June 2009
17Comprehensive Mobility Lifecycle Management
(MLM)
MobileVisionTM
Technology management. Simplified.
18The Solution Mobility Lifecycle Management (MLM)
19Analytical Reports Business Intelligence
20Case Study Large Federal Agency
Result 20 cost reduction 1.3M over 24 months
- Background
- 2.8M/year carrier fees charges
- 5K wireless devices
- Agency Objective
- Lower Total Cost of Operations (TCO) by 20
- Reduce voice airtime charges
- Organize no-charge technology refresh
- Provide analytical reports
- Deliver policy enforcement
- Reduce end user hassle and downtime
- Limit burden on staff
- Hard Savings
- Reduced average MRC from 236K/month to
189K/month - 223K rate plan optimization
- 152K disconnect zero usage
- 20 reduction in carrier charges
- Soft Savings
- 580K - Wireless technology upgrades
- Over 2500 devices Upgraded or replaced
- 384K/year - Implemented new Sprint/Nextel Law
Enforcement rate plans - Maintained client staff at 1.5 x FTE
21Why MLM will work for you!
- Single Source
- Cost Operational Controls
- Asset Management Positive Inventory Control
- Improved Business Processes
- Increased Employee Productivity
- Reduced monthly wireless spend
- Increased Business Intelligence
22How to get Started 2 steps to success!
- Step 1 Collect 3 months of wireless invoices
- Establishes an inventory of active lines
- Provides initial consumption patterns for rate
plan optimization - Step 2 Call GSA today!
23Todd McMillen/Todd DzyakVice Presidents, Client
Services OperationsiSYS, LLC
June 2009
24Why TEM Services?
- Policy - Development, Implementation, Practices
- Asset Service Management
- Cost Control Management Oversight
25Policy - Development, Implementation, Practices
- TEM is mechanism to drive policy development by
defining - WHY are wireless services needed in organization
- WHAT type of services/equipment are authorized
- WHO is authorized (to have device, requests,
approvals, provision) - HOW are services and devices provisioned and
managed - WHERE do managers, staff, and customers go for
assistance - TEM can ensure policy implementation
- Through IT system
- Help desk
- On-sight support
- TEM provides management oversight by providing
- Asset/Service management
- Usage and cost reporting/monitoring
- Cost analysis and savings
26Asset Service Management
Asset Management Equipment Inventory What type of
equipment - Cell Phones, PDAs/Blackberry, Air
Cards, Pagers, Satellite, Push-to-Talk Radio
Cellular, International Are they older
equipment? (E911 compliant? TDMA?
1XRTT?) Determine who has these devices Is the
device being used or emergency spare? (voice
data usage) Service Management What services are
being paid for on each device? Are the rate plans
optimized to meet your organizations mission
requirements? Are you utilizing the carriers
pooled minute plans when needed? Are you buying
too many or too few minutes? Are you purchasing
text messaging in the best manner? (plan vs. pay
per use) Do you need an international calling
feature plan? Do you require WPS to be on certain
lines? Is Push-to-Talk Functionality necessary or
just a convenience? Do camera phones meet the
organizations security guidelines?
27Cost Control Management Oversight
- Optimize Rate plans to ensure that an appropriate
amount of peak minutes are purchased - Ensure end users are placed onto the appropriate
Data plans and feature plans that meet the
organizations requirements, but are most cost
effective - Review and monitor monthly usage and cost reports
to identify any anomalies
28A Southern California City
- History
- City has approximately 4,000 cellular devices
- Telecommunications are centrally managed
- Top user in minutes and most expensive line in
the city was identified as NOT being an employee
of the city, but just a regular citizen that
somehow was placed onto the citys account. - The Southern CA City was paying State of Kentucky
Taxes on one of their cellular accounts. - Approximately 45k/month was saved by placing
emergency devices onto a local pay per use
plan versus the carrier recommended National
Plan. - iSYS provides an internal Journal Voucher report
that allows the city to perform an internal
re-bill of cellular services to its various
departments. This allows the City to pay one
invoice to the cellular carrier, but also
allocates the budgetary expenses to the
appropriate cost centers.
29Points of Contact
- Michael Loria
- GSA/FAS
- Program Manager, 504.589.4348
- michael.loria_at_gsa.gov
- Russ Peery
- GSA/FAS
- COTR, 817.574.4318
- russ.peery_at_gsa.gov
- Lucy Cavazos
- GSA/FAS
- Contracting Officer, 210.341.8307
- lucy.cavazos_at_gsa.gov
- Gary Ibach
- Avalon Technology
- Vice President, 703.647.6675
- gary_at_avalontechnology.com
- Jordan Weinstock
- Booz Allen Hamilton
- Program Manager, 703.377.0937
- weinstock_jordan_at_bah.com
- Todd Dzyak
- iSYS LLC
- VP TEM Operations, 614.668.0799
- tdzyak_at_isysllc.com