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Key Performance Indicators

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Why indicators are useful for regulators? Why indicators are useful ... Fort Hare. 9) Policy law and institutions. stakeholder roles & respon. admin procedures ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Key Performance Indicators


1
Key Performance Indicators
  • Maria A. Beebe
  • NetTel_at_Africa

2
Key Performance Indicators Agenda
  • Presentation
  • Why indicators are useful for regulators?
  • Why indicators are useful for consumers?
  • What set of indicators to use?
  • Discussion points
  • Which set of indicators are relevant to WATRA?
  • How do we gather and analyse data?
  • Who would like to do a pilot test?

3
NetTel_at_Africa Citizens are using ICT
Private sector
Public sector
Activists NGOs
Infrastructure
Network for Capacity-Building and Knowledge
Exchange in the Telecoms Sector
Policy
Academics
Regulators
Content and delivery
Peer to peer
4
Content development and delivery
UNISA
1) Macro environment and implications
of telecommunications
6) Approaches to regulation Basic
principles Types of regulation Rate of return,
price cap, etc
Fort Hare
2) ICT Technologies Basic Tech
Principles Network planning Convergence/standards
dev
WITS
7) Univ access/quality of service user or univ
service/access consumer protection service quality
Botswana
AFRALTI
8) Service pricing tariffing price
flexibility cost measurement, etc
3) ICT Industry Markets Interconnection Fair
trade competition Licensing approvals
Zambia
9) Policy law and institutions stakeholder roles
respon admin procedures governance, etc
4) Spectrum management
UNISA
W Cape
10) ICT applications e-business e-government e-hea
lth e-education e-.
5) Financial analysis Project analysis cost of
capital accounting statement
DaresSalaam
DaresSalaam
TRASA NARUC
USAID, CTO, DFID, SIDA?, NORAD? ITU, DBSA,
African Connections
Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Washington State,
USTTI, FCC
5
Interrelated components
  • Training
  • Post-graduate diploma
  • Masters degree
  • Executive development programme
  • Peering
  • Academic to academic
  • Regulator to regulator
  • Regulator to academic
  • Research
  • ICT applications ICT 4D
  • policies on ICTs and use of ICTs to implement
    public policy

6
Why is NetTel talking about key performance
indicators
  • African-led Post-graduate diploma and masters in
    ICT Policy and Regulation
  • Peering among regulators
  • Researching policy and regulation
  • ICT applications

7
Why indicators are useful for regulators?
  • Provide some yardsticks by which to evaluate the
    success or failure of their competition policies.
  • Compare the performance of telecommunications
    operators
  • Same country
  • in other countries
  • against certain thresholds
  • Shed light on validating and tracking the effects
    of regulation imposed on the market.
  • Examine why a competitive market is failing to
    emerge and come up with appropriate policy
    instruments.
  • Celebrate the success of their competition
    policies

8
Why indicators are useful for consumers?
  • Use information to ensure that they get the best
    possible deals for their money

9
Which indicators
  • WB Benchmarking Regulatory Bodies
  • ITU Indicators
  • OECD Indicators of Telecommunications Competition

10
Benchmarking regulatory bodies
  • How were the regulatory authority and its mandate
    established?
  • What kind of governing body is the regulatory
    authority?
  • How autonomous is the regulatory authoritys
    decision making?
  • Does the regulatory authority have enforcement
    power?
  • How much job security do commissioners and key
    staff have?
  • Does the regulatory authority have financial
    autonomy?
  • Does the regulatory authority use transparent
    decision making processes?

11
ITU indicators
  • The fourth World Telecommunication/ICT indicators
    meeting (Geneva, February 2005) discussed the
    following key indicators
  • Fixed telephone network
  • Mobile network
  • Text data network
  • Quality of service
  • Traffic
  • Tariffs
  • Other data tariffs
  • Staff
  • Revenue Investment
  • Community access indicators
  • Other indicators

12
Effective competition
  • focus on a general telecommunications market
  • more comprehensive in nature
  • emphasis on consumer behavior and benefits

13
Indicators for the evaluation of
telecommunications competition
  • Market structure
  • Supplier behaviour
  • Consumer behaviour
  • Consumer benefits

Source OECD (2003)
14
Telecommunications competition overview of
indicators
  • Market structure
  • Market share and trends
  • Entry barrier/ease of entry
  • Supplier behaviour
  • Active competition in price and rivalries
  • Absence of anti-competitive behavior
  • Provision of innovative services
  • Profitability and its trends
  • Consumer behaviour
  • Access to information
  • Ability to use information and market
    opportunities
  • Costs and barriers to switching suppliers
  • Countervailing buying power
  • Consumer benefits
  • A wide range of competitive services offered
  • Consumer satisfaction with price and
    affordability
  • Consumer satisfaction with the quality of services

15
Indicators
  • Market structure
  • Market share and trends
  • Entry barrier/ease of entry

16
Market structure parameters
  • Market share and trends
  • Volume-based call minutes, number of
    subscribers Value-based revenues
    Capacity-based number of lines installed
  • Entry barrier/ease of entry
  • Parameters for absolute barriers number of
    firms, regulatory restrictions, control of
    essential facilities, extent of economies of
    scale and scope
  • Parameters for strategic barriers advertising
    capital intensity
  • Vertical integration / Parameters for
    exclusionary barriers existence of vertically
    integrated firm and its price levels, including
    non-discriminatory access to wholesale products

17
Indicators
  • 2. Supplier behaviour
  • Active competition in price and rivalries
  • Absence of anti-competitive behavior and
    collusion
  • Provision of innovative services
  • Profitability and its trends

18
Supplier behavior parameters
  • Active competition in price and rivalries
  • Rivalry in price competition pricing trends, the
    extent of reaction to a price change, existence
    of price leadership
  • Rivalry in non-price competition level of
    marketing advertising costs, coverage of
    services or networks
  • Indirect measure the existence of recent entry
    or exit, the extent of such movement in the past

19
Supplier behaviour parameters
  • Absence of anti-competitive behaviour and
    collusion
  • Anti-competitive practices number and time spent
    for agreements on local loop unbundling (LLU) and
    interconnection, percentage of lines for LLU by
    incumbent, existence of carrier pre-selection and
    number portability, number of complaints reported
  • Existence and level of collusion (subjective
    assessment according to the context)

20
Examples of Anti-competitive behavior
  • intended to sustain high profits by deterring
    entry or by disciplining the prices of
    competitors
  • Predatory pricing
  • Slamming
  • Delay in interconnection agreements
  • Price squeezing
  • Installing large additional spare capacity

21
Supplier behaviour parameters
  • Provision of innovative services
  • Rate of diversification (differentiation) and
    speed for innovative services
  • Trends in profits across firms

22
Supplier behaviour parameters
  • Profitability and its trends
  • Trends in profits across firms

23
Indicators
  • 3. Consumer behaviour
  • Access to information
  • Ability to use information and market
    opportunities
  • Costs and barriers to switching suppliers
  • Countervailing buying power

24
Consumer behaviour parameters
  • Access to information
  • Consumer survey, regular information notice to
    customers, quality of websites for information,
    in-time provision of requested information

25
Consumer behaviour parameters
  • Ability to use market information and market
    opportunities
  • Consumer survey possession of correct and
    sufficient information for current services and
    alternatives, clear criteria for comparison

26
Consumer behaviour parameters
  • Costs and barriers to switching suppliers
  • Consumer survey extent and substance of barriers
    to switching suppliers
  • Level of switching made compared with level of
    satisfaction on information provided

27
Consumer behaviour parameters
  • Countervailing buying power
  • Number of consumer groups, percentage of large
    users and its portion in revenues, level of
    consumer expenses for services to total income

28
Indicators
  • Consumer benefits
  • A wide range of competitive services offered
  • Consumer satisfaction with price and
    affordability
  • Consumer satisfaction with the quality of services

29
Consumer benefits parameters
  • A wide range of competitive services offered
  • Churn rate of offered services
  • Consumer survey presence of sufficient service
    offers and changes in level of satisfaction

30
Consumer benefits parameters
  • Consumer satisfaction with price and
    affordability
  • Revenues/number of calls (fixed costs),
    revenues/number of calls minutes
  • Consumer survey price adequacy, affordability,
    simplicity and ease in rate structure

31
Consumer benefits parameters
  • Consumer satisfaction with the quality of
    services
  • Call completion/congestion/disruption rate, time
    for installation and repair, number of faults,
    number of reported complaints
  • Consumer survey level of quality, areas of
    concerns, the reason for low quality service

32
Telecommunications competition summary of
indicators
  • Market structure
  • Market share and trends
  • Entry barrier/ease of entry
  • Supplier behaviour
  • Active competition in price and rivalries
  • Absence of anti-competitive behavior
  • Provision of innovative services
  • Profitability and its trends
  • Consumer behaviour
  • Access to information
  • Ability to use information and market
    opportunities
  • Costs and barriers to switching suppliers
  • Countervailing buying power
  • Consumer benefits
  • A wide range of competitive services offered
  • Consumer satisfaction with price and
    affordability
  • Consumer satisfaction with the quality of services

33
For further enjoyment
  • Benchmarking Regulation (WB, 2002)
  • SCAN ICT Indicators of Information and
    Communication Technologies (ECA, 2003)
  • Indicators for the Assessment of
    Telecommunications Competition (OECD, 2003)
  • Key Indicators of the Telecommunication/ICT
    Sector (ITU, 2005)
  • Check it out http//www.nettelafrica.org

34
  • Many thanks!
  • Merci de votre attention!
  • Maria A. Beebe
  • beebem_at_wsu.edu
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