Friday, May 25, 2012

Signal Alliance Introduces simple solution for E-Governance


The challenges facing Public Sector Governance in Nigeria in recent times has been a major cause for concern. To this end, Signal Alliance, one of the leading IT Systems Integration company in Nigeria recently organized a workshop for the Public Sector titled “ Public Sector Finance Management in the 21st Century: Transparency through Technology” and introduced the Globally recognized Serenic Navigator, an award-winning Financial Management Software.
The workshop, held at the Microsoft Nigeria office in Abuja, brought together various participants from different Federal Ministries, Departments and Agencies and highlighted the advancement of technology in providing financial management in the peculiar environment we have in Nigeria.
The workshop introduced a new and more cost effective approach that guarantees manageability and transparency in government business. The solution, which is based on the very robust Microsoft Dynamics NAV platform, is intended to offer best combination of advanced technology and fund accounting features available in Nigeria today.
The solution called ‘Serenic Navigator’, certified for Dynamics NAV, is the leading integrated solution for nonprofits with the best combination of advanced technology and fund accounting features available for nonprofits, international NGOs, and the public sector. Making the presentation of the solution to a cross section of public sector IT professionals in Abuja recently, the Solution Lead, Business Applications Division of Signal Alliance, Mr. Lukman Sulaiman, in his presentation advised that a seamless financial management solution for the public sector must be one ‘that is both cost efficient and easy to use’.
His words: “Operating with the Serenic Navigator on the Microsoft Dynamics NAV platform enables the public sector especially during auditing and improving cash flow management. It is also simple to learn and use as Microsoft Dynamics NAV business management software works with existing technology and scales as the enterprise grow to deliver long-term value”.
Serenic Corporation is an industry-leading publisher of mission-critical software products that satisfy the unique and sophisticated functionality requirements of nonprofit organizations, educational institutions, and government agencies. Serenic delivers highly scalable software solutions which serve the needs of an international clientele, regardless of their size. Serenic Navigator’s multi-language and multi-currency capabilities meet the sometimes unique requirements for accounting and operational systems that must be implemented in multiple locations throughout the world.
Built on Microsoft Dynamics NAV, Serenic’s products deliver fully integrated solutions that can, in many organizations, eliminate the need for multiple third-party business applications. A Microsoft Gold certified Industry Solutions Vendor, the Corporation’s products include the highly acclaimed Serenic Navigator, Serenic DonorVision, Serenic AwardVision, and Serenic BudgetVision. In addition, the Corporation is the exclusive developer of the human resources and payroll products for Microsoft Dynamics NAV users in North America.
Serenic was named the 2009 Microsoft Dynamics Outstanding ISV of the Year for the United States and earned membership in the 2009, 2010 and 2011 Microsoft Dynamics Inner Circle and the Microsoft Dynamics President’s Club, both prestigious achievements that acknowledge Serenic as a top performer within the Microsoft partner community.
Signal Alliance is one of the leading Systems Integrators in Nigeria and currently holds Gold competencies in Microsoft Solutions. In addition to this, they provide enterprise solutions in core ICT areas such as Unified Communications, Borderless Networks solutions and Network Monitoring, Service Management and Assurance, Enterprise Resource Planning and mobile applications.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Intercellular Plans comeback…To Transfer 70% Equity To Lari Com Investment


Intercellular Nigeria Plc, has held its 3rd Extra Ordinary General Meeting at the Function Room, Muson Centre, Onikan, Lagos, on Wednesday the 14th of March 2012. The meeting was to pass a resolution to transfer 70% equity stake held by the Sudatel Group to new investors, Lari Com Investment Company Limited with the aim of positively turning the company around for commercial launch and into profitability.
The Chairman of Lari Com, Mr. Abdel Basit Hamza AlHassan, promised at the said meeting, to strategically harmonize the human capital and technical competencies required to fully bring the company to viability in the shortest possible time.
The Chairman of Intercellular Nigeria Plc, Mallam Ibrahim Aliyu, stated that he counts on their capability to bring the company to profitability by a full turnaround because they are a private sector company. The Chairman appreciated the efforts of Sudatel who have been able to take the new state-of-art Network to 80% completion with full prelaunch testing that already took place in Lagos and Abuja.
In 2007, Sudatel, telecommunications and Internet service provider based in Sudan, bought 70 per cent of Intercellular Nigeria Limited for $50 million following inactivity in the company months after the Sudanese telco, sealed the deal. Sudatel was hoping to use the acquisition of Intercellular to launch itself into the now legendary Nigerian lucrative telecom market. Although the promise of fund and expertise injection by Sudatel was never met nine months after the deal was struck.
Apart from $50 million for 70 per cent of Intercellular, Sudatel agreed to inject 500 million dollars into the Nigerian teleco within the next five years in order to beef up operations. This never happened and Intercellular, once a leading fixed wireless operator in Nigeria, never recovered from it and it led to a massive exit of some of its best hands. Though not much is know about  Lari Com Investments, telecom stakeholders in Nigeria are hopeful that with this new deal in place, it is hoped that Intercellular will experience a new lease of life.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

HP Helps T-Mobile Save Time, Money With Converged Infrastructure and Services...lose IRS case


HP has announced it has delivered an HP AppSystem for the SAP HANA® database and related services to T-Mobile USA, Inc., helping the wireless provider shorten the time required to analyze information from more than one week to less than a day.
T-Mobile, the U.S. wireless operation of Deutsche Telekom AG, provides more than 33 million mobile customers with customized wireless plans, depending on smartphone and data needs. It conducts highly targeted customer communications about mobile phone services and offers, but its previous analytics solution was too complex and could not track customer offers in a timely way.
The solution -- built on HP Converged Infrastructure in collaboration with SAP AG and deployed in just two weeks -- enhances T-Mobile's ability to deliver targeted marketing campaigns to customers by transforming the way it delivers, manages and measures its wireless plan offers.
HP AppSystems for SAP HANA is a portfolio of solutions that are preconfigured with HP Services to address the varying needs of customer-database environments. The portfolio includes HP ProLiant servers, HP Storage and HP Networking. Together, HP and SAP offer customers high availability and storage capacity for mission-critical workloads running SAP application software.
"T-Mobile wanted to accelerate the timing and precision of our marketing campaigns to increase customer and shareholder value," said Erez Yarkoni, chief information officer, T-Mobile US, Inc. "We selected SAP HANA running on HP Converged Infrastructure to achieve this result."
To assist T-Mobile in the implementation and configuration of an HP AppSystem for SAP HANA, HP provided services to preintegrate the hardware and software, on-site startup for quick integration into T-Mobile's environment, and support services.
"T-Mobile needed faster and better customer insight from its varied data systems," said Paul Miller, vice president, Converged Systems, HP. "HP and SAP quickly delivered a turnkey solution that provides simplicity, performance and faster time to value."
"SAP, in cooperation with HP, worked to support the creation and delivery of a unique and differentiated customer-tracking solution for T-Mobile," said Steve Lucas, executive vice president and general manager, Global Database and Technology, SAP. "With SAP HANA, T-Mobile can more effectively track its marketing campaigns' success."
In a related development, HP on Monday lost a battle with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service for more than $190 million in tax refunds tied to a Dutch tax shelter designed by the derivatives arm of American International Group. The ruling turns a spotlight on an aggressive tax-cutting strategy created last decade by AIG Financial Products and bankrolled by several European banks.
The strategy involved trading derivatives with the aim of generating capital losses and foreign tax credits for large corporations, like HP, which then used them to try to lower their U.S. tax bills. Judge Joseph Goeke of United States Tax Court in Washington, D.C., ruled against HP, which had sued the IRS in 2009 seeking the refunds.
The strategy, broadly known as a foreign tax credit generator, involves complex investments by large U.S. companies in foreign entities, typically in low-tax jurisdictions. The companies claim on their U.S. tax returns offsetting, or tax-lowering, credits for payments they make or owe to foreign tax authorities on the investments.
The IRS contends that many foreign tax credit generators lack economic substance and are engineered to create artificial financial benefits that are not valid for IRS deductions. The IRS outlawed many foreign tax credit generators around 2007. An IRS spokeswoman declined to comment on the HP ruling. The AIG-FP strategy used by HP involved a Dutch entity, called Foppingadreef that was created by AIG-FP in 1996 and funded by Dutch bank ABN-Amro. 

Thursday, May 10, 2012

How not to run a telco: An Autopsy of the ZoomMobile Brand


It’s no longer news that one of the most innovative telecommunications services operators in the late 90s, albeit on the CDMA platform, ZoomMobile has officially wound up. Neither is it still news that of all the CDMA operators that held sway in Nigeria in the same period, only Starcomms (even if barely) is still in operations.

Coming on the heels of such other crashed telcos like Mobitel, Intercellular and Multilinks, the demise of ZoomMobile, formerly known as Reliance Telecommunications or RelTel, didn’t come to the industry as a huge surprise. Exactly in 1999, the then young and vibrant telco came into the market that was then dominated by the likes of Intercellular, Multilinks, Mobitel and EMIS, with eye-catching services hitherto unknown in the high-cost and high-end telecom market of that era.
With the able and dynamic leadership of Mr. Bekele Tadesse (the Ethiopian telecoms expert that is now the country manager of back-haul solution provider – Ceragon), and a smattering of other sales egg-heads from Starcomms including the sales genius called Rakesh Kaul, Reltel practically took the market by storm in the limited mobility and fixed wireless scene. Some the innovations brought into the market by the company included value-added services like voicemail, sms and call barring, even automated IVR and recharge platform…all of which were unheard of in the industry then.
With the coming of the GSM platform in 2001, stakeholders in the sector already knew that the business practice of majority of the players in the sector at that time, coupled with the restrictions and advantages given to the newly licensed GSM operators, that the fate of the private telecom operators - PTOs (as they were then known) were all but sealed. Relying more on huge margins and limited penetration, the PTOs of yore were no match for the aggressive GSM operators. One by one the death knell began to sound for most of them. Though most watchers had attributed the collapse of the PTOs to all manner of reasons, there are also some reasons beyond what is commonly touted by most people.
A certain commentator listed the reasons below:
1. CDMA Operators were mostly small players with limited reach
2. Initial business model was small reach and high margins, resulting in expensive products and services
3. Infrastructure problems – lack of power supply, high taxes, etc
4. The latest mobile phones and devices are mostly available on GSM networks, while CDMA operators largely sold outdated gear
5. The flexibility that being able to swap SIMs between GSM devices offered was largely unavailable to CDMA users
6. CDMA devices often were more expensive than equivalent GSM devices

Generally these reasons are acceptable as the major reasons why early PTOs that used CDMA took the dive. But the other reasons which most people are silent about actually separates the dead PTOs from the living ones at the moment. This is an account of what made ZoomMobile aka Reltel bite the dust.
In 2007, after a protracted leadership tussle with the unceremonious exit of Bekele Tadesse, the news around town was that Reltel was shopping for core investors to help bring the glory days back to the Iganmu-based telco. After appointing Mr Kenneth Aigbinode to head the company, the chairman and owner of the company a former Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Annie Okonkwo was also quoted as saying that Reltel will list on the Nigerian Stock Exchange after going through a private placement the following year.
According to media reports attributed to Okonkwo and Aigbinode, the company would not go the way of other CDMA operators that have been acquired by some core investors. “It is not time yet to sell out to core investors. We want Nigerians first to be part of the good things happening in the telecom sector. Later, core investors can come in”, he said. He promised that the private placement this time round would not be like the previous experience as 100 per cent of the funds realized through it would be invested in the network. Sure enough there was a private placement and funding was realized, though the identity of the investors was always shrouded in secrecy.
After promising the investors that RelTel will become publicly quoted by the end of 2008, so that they can trade their shares on the floor of the exchange, Senator Okonkwo was said to have diverted the proceeds from the private placement to his personal account and for his Senatorial bid in 2007. After squandering the funds in the elections of 2007 together with his brother Donatus Okonkwo (which he eventually won and his brother failed in his bid), the chairman fell out with his management on issues bothering on financial impropriety which also included his siblings who were directors in the company.
Enter Edwin Momife, a veteran telecoms man to head the company after the exit of Aigbinode. The first signal that Reltel would not survive actually came with the change of marketing/services direction of the company. By changing its name to ZoomMobile in 2009, Mr. Momife claimed that “in the telecommunications business, the voice business had become saturated, affecting revenue of operators and making data services next growth opportunity for Telcos”.
According to him, “with network coverage in over 17 states in the country and over 124 base stations in Lagos alone, Zoom Mobile had been off the telecoms scene for some time because “they did not pay attention to the fundamentals when it succeeded at first. So when problems came in the CDMA space, it hit Zoom the hardest. “We have, nevertheless, fixed the company and in six or seven months, we’ll start playing aggressively in the telecoms space. A lot of people expected that by now, there’ll be no Zoom Mobile. But we are up and ready for quality data services provisioning”. By procuring the unified license from NCC that allowed them unlimited mobility, ZoomMobile went on the offensive shipping handsets and modems in the thousands and selling at under-cutting prices.
Without regard to network capacity, the company which was now fully running on the ideology of the renowned rice merchant Annie Okonkwo’s logic that all that is needed in the sector is massive importation of phones, the network suffered massive crashes between 2009 and 2010. This resulted in several missed settlements of interconnect fees to most of the GSM companies, leading to termination of connection between ZoomMobile and GLO as well as MTN in 2010. With the 2011 elections due, Senator Okonkwo still desirous of returning to the senate even if it was to stall the collapse of ZoomMobile, threw caution to the winds again and decimated the finances of the telco. After a disastrous outing in the elections, it was all a matter of time before the dirge would start.
But with some privileged (though unverified) information filtering in, it has been suggested that a preferred investor from China may be interested in entering the Nigerian telecom market through the acquisition of the spectrum licenses in the hands of the dead and dying PTOs in the country. These unconfirmed sources claim to know that Intercellular, Multilinks and now ZoomMobile may likely be bought in a clean sweep that will take the existing GSM operators by surprise. It was also speculated that the near frenzy with which NCC is trying to commence the number portability regime is meant to clear the way for this investor to make an impact in the Nigerian market.
With a population in excess of 150 million, with majority in the rural areas still lacking basic telecom services, a telco with deep pockets and long-term interest will still surely make it in Nigeria. But for the dead ZoomMobile, closing shop last week was said to be a strategic move to halt overhead in a business that is more or less insolvent. So the real reason for the death of ZoomMobile is more about lack of financial discipline and transparency as well as poor corporate governance and outright deceit. As weird as that may sound, this same practice of using private placement to hoodwink investors and diverting the proceeds to personal usage is now playing out in another company where the Okonkwo’s have controlling interest. The case of Tetrazzini Foods Plc is still a case reminiscence of what happened to ZoomMobile. 

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Airwave to present at TWC 2012 in Dubai

Airwave, the leading provider of critical voice and data communications to public service organisations in Great Britain, has been invited to give two presentations and participate in panel discussions at the TETRA World Congress (TWC) 2012 taking place in Dubai between 14 and 17 May 2012.
Euros Evans, Airwave CTO will present: ‘Delivering greater capacity to support unplanned major events and incidents while balancing the impact on Airwave spectral efficiency’ on day one of the congress, which will explore the potentials of the future technologies and the benefits they could bring for the various needs of the public safety sector.
Euros is also participating in the panel discussion on day two of the congress entitled: ‘TETRA – ‘Short Term and Long Term Opportunities and Threats’. The panel will evaluate the prospects for the size of the TETRA market over the next five years and discuss what the impact will be of mobile broadband, particularly LTE in mission/ business critical communications.
Airwave’s CEO, Richard Bobbett is also participating in a panel discussion on day one entitled: ‘TETRA Network Investment & Development Roadmap’. This session will allow delegates to hear from the leaders of major TETRA operators on how investment in networks and services is evolving. It will also examine the roadmap for long-term critical communications network planning to meet the requirements of users.
On day three of the congress Martin Benke, Airwave Network Services Director and Peter Goulding of Motorola Solutions will present: ‘The UK summer riots – A report on phases of the incident’. The presentation explores the challenges experienced during the summer riots, which saw an increase in the number of users on the Airwave Network in London increase from 6,000 to 16,000.
The 14th annual TETRA World Congress 2012 takes place from 14-17 May 2012 at the Dubai International Convention and Exhibition Centre. Some 2,500+ TETRA users, manufacturers, network operators, application developers and system integrators from around the world are expected to attend.

Monday, May 7, 2012

NITDA geers up to Standardize IT Products in Nigeria

The National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), a parastatal of the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Communication Technology has concluded plans to host an IT stakeholder workshop for the purpose of fine-tuning draft standards and guidelines for made- in- Nigeria IT hardware products. The workshop which is scheduled for May 15 and 16, 2012 shall hold at the Westown hotel Ikeja  Lagos.
The IT standards retreat is being coordinated on the platform of the National Technical Committee (NTC) on IT Standards. The NTC was established by NITDA as a specialized organ for IT standards development in the country. The Hon Minister for Communication Technology inaugurated the Committee in November last year. The prescription of minimum standards for Nigerian IT products is intended to:
·         Ensure that made-in-Nigeria IT products meet global standards
·         Ensure that Nigerians would have no more excuse not to patronize made-in Nigeria
·         Consolidate the  NITDA campaign for Nigerians to buy made-in-Nigeria products in IT
·         Provide the enabling framework for the development of the indigenous IT sector
The Director-General of NITDA, Prof Cleopas Angaye, is expected to use the occasion of the workshop to remind Government MDAs that the Federal Government mandatory policy which requires the public sector to procure low end Nigerian IT products is still in force.
The Agency has created an Online Public Complaints Platform to track any disregard for the policy and to monitor compliance to minimum standards by product manufacturers in accordance with section 6 of the NITDA Act of 2007.

MTN’s Potential Exit from Nigeria: Examining the Impact of the Proposed 5% Telecom Tax

MTN Nigeria, the largest telecom provider in the country, has hinted at the possibility of exiting the Nigerian market should a proposed 5% ...