\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO<\/a>) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore<\/a> Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n
“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our
MVNO<\/a> solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore<\/a> managing director Nikhil Jain<\/a> told ET.
\n
\nThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n
\nElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n
\nIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n
\nIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n
\n“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n
US-based research company International Data Corporation (
IDC<\/a>) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n
\nThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n
\nExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n
Nearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s
Future Group<\/a> and Canadian tablet maker DataWind<\/a>.
\n
\nConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It said that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director
Nikhil Jain<\/a> told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (
IDC<\/a>) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s
Future Group<\/a> and Canadian tablet maker DataWind<\/a>.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It SAID that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It SAID that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":56178474,"title":"Government asks banks to share IT breach info within 2 hrs","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/government-asks-banks-to-share-it-breach-info-within-2-hrs\/56178474","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecomnews"}],"related_content":[],"msid":56179987,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"\u200b\u200bSterlite Tech \u200blooks to tap into India\u2019s $4 billion MVNO pie","synopsis":"The company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.","titleseo":"telecomnews\/sterlite-tech-looks-to-tap-into-indias-4-billion-mvno-pie","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[{"author_name":"Muntazir Abbas","author_link":"\/author\/479234376\/muntazir-abbas","author_image":"https:\/\/etimg.etb2bimg.com\/authorthumb\/479234376.cms?width=100&height=100&hostid=268","author_additional":{"thumbsize":true,"msid":479234376,"author_name":"Muntazir Abbas","author_seo_name":"muntazir-abbas","designation":"Editor","agency":false}}],"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"ETTelecom","artdate":"2016-12-26 12:37:28","lastupd":"2017-03-23 12:58:10","breadcrumbTags":["Future group","IDC","MVNO","Datawind","Nikhil Jain","Elitecore","3G\/4G","\u200b\u200bSterlite Tech"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecomnews\/sterlite-tech-looks-to-tap-into-indias-4-billion-mvno-pie"}}" data-authors="[" muntazir abbas"]" data-category-name="" data-category_id="" data-date="2016-12-26" data-index="article_1">

斯特里特锌白铜技术看起来MVNO派进入印度的40亿美元

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Muntazir阿巴斯
  • 更新2017年3月23日下午12:58坚持
新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术为移动电话运营商特定的软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何整合我们的电信公司MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特锌白铜科技-Elitecore董事总经理Nikhil耆那教徒的告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(国际数据公司(IDC))估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大的平板电脑制造商DataWind

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。它说,订阅者收购在农村市场和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特锌白铜Tech-Elitecore董事总经理Nikhil耆那教徒的告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(国际数据公司(IDC))估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大的平板电脑制造商DataWind

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。它说,订阅者收购在农村市场和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。它说,订阅者收购在农村市场和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。新德里:斯特里特锌白铜技术希望受益于政府的最近的移动虚拟网络运营商(MVNO)政策,利用其最近获得的单位Elitecore技术拥有移动电话运营商的具体软件解决方案。

“我们所有的产品都是访问、网络和供应商不可知论者,使它适合任何电信公司整合我们MVNO与他们的系统解决方案,”斯特里特工业公司总经理Tech-Elitecore Nikhil Jain告诉等。

该公司还自主开发了业务和运营支持系统(BSS / OSS)解决方案,将适合MVNO全国部署。

Elitecore最近启用无线自由新加坡,一个MVNO,跨功能管理客户生命周期数字如新员工培训,计划定制、文档验证、在线支付和实时通知。

今年3月,印度电信部(点)公布了一项政策,允许电信服务提供商出售散装声音分钟和带宽小公司,或者一个MVNO,谁能转售。MVNO可以成功了的地区,主要在农村和偏远地区电话密度仍低于50%。

2015年,阿尼尔Agarwal-founded斯特里特工业公司已经收购了Ahmadabad-based系统集成商和供应商Elitecore技术来加强其专注在移动宽带空间与后者的投资组合包括软件解决方案为OSS / BSS和收入管理,也有助于MVNO推出服务。

“我们在印度有很多的竞争,但我们很好。成功的全球MVNO成功故事,对我们来说很容易战斗在主场,”Jain说,政府的举措将服务提供者和小non-telecom公司受益。

美国研究公司国际数据公司(IDC)估计,MVNO段,包括设备供应商或MVNE(移动虚拟网络的推动者)代表在印度40亿美元的机会,如果国家复制欧洲MVNO成功模型。

斯特里特工业公司高管说,公司已申请MVNO许可证是来自行业包括电信、零售、金融、媒体和娱乐和他们能够赚取利润。

专家,批准耆那教的思想,认为国家的融合电信和发展数字景观是跨业务纵向市场创造了机会。

近100家公司申请许可MVNO政权下转售本地电信服务以及在锅印度的水平。这些公司包括基肖尔比亚尼未来集团和加拿大平板制造商DataWind。

咨询公司德勤说公司MVNO空间可以捕获与背线60至8000万用户一个月收入在1000 - 1300卢比的未来两到三年。在农村市场,订阅者收购和tier-III城市,这将是即将举行的学术和经济中心,会刺激增长。
  • 发布于2016年12月26日,在37点坚持

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\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO<\/a>) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore<\/a> Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n
“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our
MVNO<\/a> solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore<\/a> managing director Nikhil Jain<\/a> told ET.
\n
\nThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n
\nElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n
\nIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n
\nIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n
\n“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n
US-based research company International Data Corporation (
IDC<\/a>) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n
\nThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n
\nExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n
Nearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s
Future Group<\/a> and Canadian tablet maker DataWind<\/a>.
\n
\nConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It said that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director
Nikhil Jain<\/a> told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (
IDC<\/a>) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s
Future Group<\/a> and Canadian tablet maker DataWind<\/a>.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It SAID that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It SAID that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n\n\t\"\"NEW DELHI: Sterlite Technologies is looking to benefit from the government’s recent Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNO) policy, leveraging its newly-acquired unit Elitecore Technologies which has specific software solutions for mobile phone operators.
\n\t
\n\t“All our products are access, network and vendor agnostic, making it ideal for any telecom company to integrate our MVNO solution with their systems,” Sterlite Tech–Elitecore managing director Nikhil Jain told ET.
\n\t
\n\tThe company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.
\n\t
\n\tElitecore has recently enabled Liberty Wireless Singapore, an MVNO, to manage its customer life cycle digitally across functions such as onboarding, plan customization, document verification, online payments and real-time notifications.
\n\t
\n\tIn March this year, India’s telecom department (DoT) unveiled a policy to allow telecom service providers to sell bulk voice minutes and bandwidth to smaller firms, or an MVNO, who could resell. An MVNO could be successful in less-penetrated regions, primarily in rural and remote areas where teledensity is still below the 50% mark.
\n\t
\n\tIn 2015, Anil Agarwal-founded Sterlite had acquired Ahmadabad-based systems integrator and IT vendor Elitecore Technologies to strengthen its focus in the mobile broadband space with the latter’s portfolio encompassing software solutions for OSS\/BSS and revenue management that also help MVNO to rollout services.
\n\t
\n\t“We do have a lot of competition in India and yet we are very well placed. Having successful MVNO success stories across the globe, it would be quite easy for us to battle it out in the home turf,” Jain said, adding that the government’s move will benefit both service providers and smaller non-telecom firms.
\n\t
\n\tUS-based research company International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that MVNO segment, including equipment vendors or MVNE (Mobile Virtual Network Enabler) would represent a $4 billion opportunity in India if the country replicates the European MVNO success model.
\n\t
\n\tThe Sterlite executive said that the companies which have applied for MVNO license were from across sectors including telecom, retail, financial, and media and entertainment and they would be able to make profits.
\n\t
\n\tExperts, approving Jain’s thoughts, believe that the country’s converging telecom and evolving digital landscape is creating opportunities across business verticals.
\n\t
\n\tNearly 100 firms have applied for license under the MVNO regime for reselling telecom services locally as well as at pan India level. These firms include Kishore Biyani’s Future Group and Canadian tablet maker DataWind.
\n\t
\n\tConsultancy firm Deloitte said that firms in the MVNO space could capture 60 to 80 million subscribers with a topline revenue between Rs 1,000-1,300 crore a month over the period of next two to three years. It that the subscriber acquisition in rural markets and tier-III cities, which would be upcoming academic and economic hubs, could fuel growth.\n\n<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":56178474,"title":"Government asks banks to share IT breach info within 2 hrs","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/government-asks-banks-to-share-it-breach-info-within-2-hrs\/56178474","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecomnews"}],"related_content":[],"msid":56179987,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"\u200b\u200bSterlite Tech \u200blooks to tap into India\u2019s $4 billion MVNO pie","synopsis":"The company has also indigenously developed business and operations support system (BSS\/OSS) solutions which would be fit for MVNO deployments across the country.","titleseo":"telecomnews\/sterlite-tech-looks-to-tap-into-indias-4-billion-mvno-pie","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[{"author_name":"Muntazir Abbas","author_link":"\/author\/479234376\/muntazir-abbas","author_image":"https:\/\/etimg.etb2bimg.com\/authorthumb\/479234376.cms?width=100&height=100&hostid=268","author_additional":{"thumbsize":true,"msid":479234376,"author_name":"Muntazir Abbas","author_seo_name":"muntazir-abbas","designation":"Editor","agency":false}}],"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"ETTelecom","artdate":"2016-12-26 12:37:28","lastupd":"2017-03-23 12:58:10","breadcrumbTags":["Future group","IDC","MVNO","Datawind","Nikhil Jain","Elitecore","3G\/4G","\u200b\u200bSterlite Tech"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecomnews\/sterlite-tech-looks-to-tap-into-indias-4-billion-mvno-pie"}}" data-news_link="//www.iser-br.com/news/sterlite-tech-looks-to-tap-into-indias-4-billion-mvno-pie/56179987">