Globalization is not new but thanks to advances in mobile communications and collaboration technologies, enterprises can now work effectively across international borders. As the global mobile landscape continues to evolve, Europe is a hotbed of change. Companies based or operating in the EU should take a look at these five trends to inform enterprise mobility management decisions in 2023.
1 - Fierce competition gives rise to new and retooled rate plans.
Competition is heating up among mobile wireless providers in Europe. Major national carriers are competing fiercely to win enterprise and small and medium business (SMB) customers. They’re also facing new adversaries in mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) and carrier resellers.
To win new business, mobile wireless providers have launched or repackaged offerings, such as unlimited, self-optimizing and pooling plans, that have proven popular because they promise to simplify contracts and generate cost savings. However, savvy buyers should look past the marketing message and read the fine print. Over time, customers may find that with all-in-one plans, they’re buying more than they need and paying more, not less. Well-managed standard mobile rate plans often prove to be more cost-effective and provide a better user experience.
When navigating European carrier plans, ask the following questions:
Traditionally, European companies would purchase devices directly from their mobile carrier, often paying for them as a one-time, upfront cost. Larger enterprises might negotiate with the carriers for “tech funds,” which are basically credits toward hardware purchases made through the carrier. On the surface, tech funds are designed to discount or offset hardware costs, but often in practice, any savings is reduced or eliminated by higher airtime rates.
Lately, European companies are breaking the link between the airtime provider and the hardware purchase by working with third-party suppliers specializing in hardware logistics. The advantages include the ability to:
While European buyers are beginning to embrace third-party hardware vendors, there’s still little traction for the bring your own device (BYOD) model. European companies continue to shy away from BYOD because of security concerns, difficulty enforcing policy, the complexity of supporting disparate devices, and the risk that older devices won’t support the latest software updates. Additionally, corporate-provided devices are seen as an employee perk and staff-retention strategy. In some European countries with strong employment rights, providing employees with corporate phones as a way of delineating employees’ professional and personal lives.3-
3 - European and multinational companies are consolidating vendors.Large multinational companies lean toward consolidating carriers in global and European markets to simplify their vendor management and gain economies of scale. Many companies are negotiating cross-border, or cross-country, deals with the big network alliances, most notably Vodafone Global Enterprise, FreeMove and Telefónica.
When evaluating vendor consolidation, consider the following:
5G has been growing slowly in Europe and is now available in most countries. However, depending on your carrier, 5G may be limited to a select number of locations. 5G typically is deployed in major urban areas to meet the demands of a dense user base rather than cross-country coverage.
Today, 5G covers 66 percent of the overall EU population based on population density, not geographic coverage). Italy, The Netherlands and Denmark have the highest 5G coverage in Europe, with more than 95 percent population coverage. Belgium, Slovakia and Hungary have the lowest coverage, with less than 20 percent population coverage. The EU continues to prioritize 5G coverage through its 5G Action plan with the aim that all populated areas have 5G coverage by 2030.
5 - Brexit continues to impact roaming legislation and charges.Following its departure from the EU in 2020, the United Kingdom is no longer covered by the EU’s roaming legislation allowing for charge-free usage of mobile plans across international borders within the EU’s 27 countries. This legislation is known as, “roam like at home,” because when moving between EU countries, users continue to use their usage allowance as if they’re at home.
Initially following the United Kingdom’s vote to leave the EU, most major U.K. network operators announced that they would continue to follow the “roam like at home” legislation and not introduce roaming charges within Europe. However, carriers have since gradually added more EU roaming charges, typically following a daily or monthly fixed-charge model, and then allowing users to leverage their home allowances.
As you navigate these changes, you must check your carrier contracts to determine which countries are included in which roaming zones, along with the associated charges. For EU carriers with users traveling to the United Kingdom, companies should re-check their carrier contracts for U.K.-specific roaming fees.
It’s also worth noting that while roaming may be inclusive under the “roam like at home” rules, fair usage policies still protect the carriers against abuse, such as a user permanently roaming in another country. Carriers can enforce usage limits, throttle data and, in some circumstances, ask users to pay a roaming surcharge.
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