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    Reaching New Frontiers through Smart Technology and Managed Services

    Con Balaskas, Solutions Director, Motorola Solutions Australia and New Zealand

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    Con Balaskas, Solutions Director, Motorola Solutions Australia and New Zealand

    As consumers we are used to procuringa variety services every day to achieve our desired outcomes in flexible and affordable ways.We subscribe to energy products to live comfortably in our homes, transportation services to get to work and video streaming for entertainment.

    Despite the many benefits of managed services, the pace of transition toward services consumption models has been slower for some sectors of the Australian economy including public safety and commercial organisations.

    The value proposition for managed services in Australia today is becoming clearer. We are not dissimilar to other developed economies facing new challenges. This includes more complex threats to community safety, fiercer commercial competition, and rising customer and community expectations.

    In the current environment,most organisations need advanced technology solutions to remain competitive but are expected to achieve better outcomes with reduced resources and budgets.

    Australia’s mining sector provides a good example of this. After the sunset of the mining boom the sector needed to manage budgetary pressure by reducing its capital spend.Despite analysts forecasting another year of volatile commodity prices in 2019, mining exploration, production, and maintenance are all expected to lift in coming years.

    The completion of key projects including Wheatstone, Ichthys, and Prelude will increase production over the next two years, and the industry will likely need to scale up its contract labour workforce to meet growing demand.

    As an organisation that invests considerable R&D resources to develop technology for the heavy industrial and emergency services sectors, Motorola Solutions has consistently observed two common and fundamental needs for these sectors—sustaining and increasing safety and productivity.

    However, pressure on production targets and spikes in employment have the potential to put the safety culture within mining organisations at risk. Two-way radio networks are the primary form of communication for mining organisations today, but the greater adoption of service-based consumption models will enable them to procure a greater variety of services while leveraging technology megatrends including ‘big data’ analytics and artificial intelligence.

    Consider the benefits a mining organisation could gain by adopting a broader suite of technologies as a platform of cloud-based services.

    This could include a variety of technologies—from video analytics to maintain a close watch on worker safety and machinery, to purpose-built mobile applications to improve daily workflows and broadband connectivity to extend access from secure radio networks to contract workers using smartphones or other devices.

    Now think about the economic argument of advanced technology boosting productivity and safety for a mining company.

    For organisations wanting overcome the challenge of limited field resources and more complex, the advantages of managed services has never been clearer

    It is estimated that reducing the cycle time taken for a mining truck to complete a load-haul-dump process by one minute could help to deliver more than $50 million Australian dollars in annual profit.

    Enabling Scale and Flexibility through Services

    The flexibility of ‘as-a-service’ models enables any organisation to keepup with the rapid pace of technology change and extend the capabilities and capacity of their operations and people. Importantly, investing in service-based technologies also helps organisations to remain agile and flexible and to scale up or down their investments as circumstances change.

    Similar trends are occurring in Australia’s emergency services sector where new challenges are driving the need for a broader mix of technologies. One clear example of this is seen with Victoria Police, an organisation that consumes a variety of services via a comprehensive technology platform. This includes a combination of mission-critical voice communications, data services and smart mobile apps.

    Last October, Victoria Police announced another major managed service capability to provide advanced, real-time number plate scanning and in-car video technology to help reduce the state’s roadtoll. The cloud-based number plate recognition solution will enable police to rapidly scan through thousands of vehicle number plates to identify dangerous and unauthorised drivers in real-time, saving officers many hours in their daily work.

    Guaranteeing Performance for Peace of Mind

    For safety-exposed sectors including mining and public safety, reliable business performance isn’t just important— it’s non-negotiable.

    Having delayed or failed communication for a paramedic en-route to an incident or when blasting is about to occur on a mine site can have disastrous and potentially fatal consequences.

    Putting the operation and management of technology systems into the hands of experienced service providers enables emergency services and mining organisations to focus on their core mission—working productively while protecting communities and people. The same can be said for any sector sets stringent KPIs for operational productivity and employee safety; including transportation, manufacturing and utilities. Any service provider serving these industries should be prepared to make significant investments to meet and exceed its customers’ KPIs.

    Achieving these service levels influenced our decision to provide a Network Operations Control Centre (NOCC) for our managed service customers. The 24/7 centre provides a communications backbone for the voice and data networks we operate and manage throughout Australia and the Asia Pacific region.

    While constant availability and support via control centres is important, it is not the only factor needed to meet the performance levels expected of “mission-critical” customers.

    To succeed in delivering managed services to these industries, technology vendors also require highly skilled and trained teams, best-in-class standards, frameworks, and industry-leading tools to monitor and maintain performance.

    Any organisation looking to outsource its technology needs to a service provider must satisfy itself that the contract will achieve its desired outcome while transferring risk to the service provider in clear and measurable ways.

    Embarking on a new era of cloud-based innovation

    As we look to the future, Australian organisations will be able to take advantage of a variety of new tools and digital services to remain competitive, increase operational efficiency, and protect people and communities.

    Service-based consumption models will enable companies to take advantage of a variety of new and emerging data sources—from harnessing the power of the Industrial Internet of things to applying sophisticated analytics tools and beyond.For organisations wanting overcome the challenge of limited field resources and more complex, the advantages of managed services has never been clearer.
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