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How the telcos use mapping data

How the telcos use mapping data

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 05 Mar 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Rogers Wireless uses geographic information systems to analyze neighbourhoods and speculate on what potential customers might want. How MTS Allstream handles problems with address formats

With growth starting to slow, some of the country's biggest telecom companies are turning to location intelligence technology to better target customers and drive future business goals.

At this week’s Intelligent Enterprise Expedition (IEE) 2008 in Toronto, companies from across the country got together to share their experiences in utilizing geographic information system (GIS) technology within the enterprise environment. And while the conference featured GIS adopters from a wide variety of industries, it was telcos such as Rogers Communications Inc., Telus Corp., and MTS Allstream Inc. that seemed to be at the forefront in their integration of location intelligence technology.

In his keynote speech, Terry Canning, vice-president and general manager of Rogers Business Networks, said that his company turned to the spatial technology in its effort to move from a mass marketing approach to a targeted marketing focus.

“What we need is pictures,” Canning said. “Maps allow us to really visualize our marketplace. And by overlaying customer data, it gives us the opportunity to understand more about our customers and where they live.”

GIS is a mapping tool that allows users to capture, store, analyze and manage data related to positions on the Earth’s surface. For instance, a typical system might be able to offer the crime statistics, income level, and unemployment rate of city at a street by street level.

Canning said that by interconnecting physical locations with customer attributes, location intelligence has empowered his company to look at customers on an individual level as opposed to just a “point on a map.” Using the system, Rogers can now “zoom in” on any address, pick out the socio-economic characteristics of the entire community, and use the information to accurately predict what the potential customer might want.

“Because we can now look at details down to the street level, we find ourselves asking questions we never would have thought of previously, such as, ‘how come nobody on that street is buying our services,’ Canning said.

But Rogers isn’t the only telco to get on the GIS bandwagon. With MTS Allstream’s location intelligence system, the Winnipeg-based company can filter data using 53 different map layers ranging from network availability to incumbent local exchange carrier (ILEC) boundaries.

“So, whether it’s sales, marketing or network planning, they can choose the type of report they want with the map and have it delivered instantly,” Andrea Dawkins, GIS manager at MTS Allstream, said.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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