British Telecom’s Partnership with Juniper Networks
Why British Telecom sticks with Juniper Networks
British Telecom’s Neil McRae understands how much customers depend on their phones, whether at a baseball game or in the office. Here, McRae explains how Juniper helps BT create a reliable network experience and seamless digital journey for customers.
You’ll learn
Why British Telecom chose to work with Juniper Networks above all others
How Juniper technology platforms help improve the user experience for BT customers
How BT architects the network to reduce complexity in the face of changing customer expectations
Who is this for?
Host
Guest speakers
Transcript
00:05 today we have with us neil mcrae
00:08 managing director of architecture and
00:10 strategy for british telecom group he's
00:12 the chief architect
00:14 neil welcome how are you doing today
00:16 i'm great blake very inspired by your uh
00:19 presentation and and i
00:21 you know i used to thought i think i was
00:23 customer focused but i've learned a lot
00:25 in 20 minutes
00:28 wow thank you so much for that um you've
00:30 had a really long standing partnership
00:32 with juniper
00:34 um it's helped british telecom quite a
00:36 bit i've heard can you talk about the
00:38 background of the partnership and why
00:40 you chose to work with juniper networks
00:44 look yeah i mean pt's been working with
00:46 uh juniper networks i mean literally
00:48 since juniper started as a
00:51 a as a as a company
00:53 that set out to change the network in
00:56 business and be much more customer
00:58 focused
01:00 um you know the back back when juniper
01:02 started there wasn't a lot of choice
01:04 there wasn't
01:05 um there wasn't the choices that we have
01:07 today and and frankly there was a an
01:10 incumbent that wasn't doing as great a
01:11 job as as actually the network needed
01:14 um and for us to work with juniper was
01:17 was really easy because they were
01:20 focused on customer outcomes and
01:22 customer experiences
01:23 and improving the the offer that we as
01:26 telecommunication
01:28 operators make
01:30 and made it very easy for us to work
01:32 with them and not only that
01:34 and back to your point about listening
01:36 to your customers
01:37 having worked with juniper over over
01:40 you know 10 15 years now juniper are
01:43 huge listeners and will take ideas from
01:46 customers even even ideas that are maybe
01:48 perhaps a little bit borderline
01:51 and you know take a risk and
01:53 and co-collaborate with with with our
01:55 customers to build something that makes
01:57 a big difference to our customers and as
02:00 and you're right to say blake well our
02:02 relationship with juniper is b2b
02:05 but my customers are all b2c
02:09 awesome so you've got a little elon musk
02:11 and you know taking those taking that
02:13 those customer ideas and really actually
02:15 doing something with them
02:17 yeah i mean i think customers are the
02:19 experts of using our service and and you
02:23 know quite often we're focused in
02:25 particular in telco land of you know how
02:27 do we sell it and then how do we build
02:29 it
02:30 actually the biggest part of the service
02:32 we offer blake is how do customers use
02:34 our service you know how do they take
02:36 their smartphone out how what experience
02:38 are they getting wherever they are
02:41 be it at home be it on the move be it at
02:44 work and we want to understand
02:47 every detail of what they're doing
02:49 understand how we can improve that
02:51 experience and all manners of
02:54 of what our customers are doing and and
02:57 you know the platform that juniper
02:59 announcing today
03:00 really allows us to do that and get much
03:02 more insight and actually go a step
03:04 further blake which is actually how do
03:07 we predict what our customers are going
03:09 to ask us for
03:10 before before they ask it and and turn
03:13 that into a actually customer here's
03:15 something you didn't think you need but
03:17 now you've got it
03:18 you'll never be able to live without it
03:20 and that's that's the kind of customer
03:22 experience journey at bt we're trying to
03:24 deliver and with the platform juniper
03:26 announced today that really helps us on
03:29 that journey
03:31 right because it's really about
03:32 anticipating the need of the customer
03:34 and personalizing it because
03:36 neil you and i know that feels amazing
03:39 when a company has done the extra
03:41 legwork to think
03:42 what might we need next where are we
03:45 going um let's talk about customer
03:47 experience in telco and telecom
03:50 we know when our networks don't work
03:52 well you know this is a very tough
03:54 industry from what i hear
03:56 can you talk about what a great customer
03:58 experience in telecom looks like and how
04:00 has that changed over the years
04:03 yeah i mean i think a great question
04:05 blake i mean
04:06 the way i look at it is you know
04:09 and the way i picture service in my head
04:12 is
04:13 you know when you go to a kind of a
04:14 really top hotel
04:16 and you ask for a cup of coffee
04:19 and then mysteriously the cup of coffee
04:21 appears you just you know it's almost
04:23 like it it's almost like it was beamed
04:25 in from somewhere versus you know a not
04:28 so great place where you hear 15 people
04:31 shouting fred wants a coffee jake once
04:33 you know and you hear all this kind of
04:35 noise and and they spill it as as
04:37 they're walking out what the experience
04:39 that we're trying to build in in telco
04:41 and mbt
04:42 is very much that when you when you need
04:44 something it's there it's available you
04:47 know how to use it and and and the
04:50 expectation that that you need we've
04:53 already anticipated now we've got a long
04:55 way to go
04:56 we've you know we've we've
04:58 we've made telco too complex
05:01 we've given you too much choice we've
05:03 tried to be
05:04 smart and giving too many choices when
05:06 actually keeping it simple and focusing
05:09 on the areas of value that customers
05:11 want you know most customers want to
05:14 know how much data can i use or actually
05:16 can i use my phone without worrying
05:18 about build shock you know we've we've
05:20 worked to
05:21 to in that direction hugely but also we
05:25 actually want to extend
05:27 what we do into
05:29 your daily life even more so you know
05:31 many people think what's you know what
05:33 is a partner is a telco play if i buy a
05:36 a ticket to a baseball game
05:38 and and actually what we want to do is
05:41 from the minute we know that you've
05:42 bought a ticket to that game to when
05:44 you're seated in this in the baseball
05:46 stadium watching the game and you've got
05:49 a beer in one hand and a hot dog in the
05:51 other hand we want to optimize the
05:53 network and optimize that whole
05:55 experience
05:56 from the minute you leave your home to
05:58 the minute the game ends and and again
06:00 the platform that juniper's building
06:02 gives us that insight as to how do
06:04 people behave in in a baseball stadium
06:07 how do people
06:08 want to get
06:09 information delivered to them how do
06:12 they want to actually get to the stadium
06:13 how do they want to leave and we've got
06:15 a huge amount of data on insight blake
06:18 that we can use
06:19 to to not just improve the service for
06:21 us but to partner with that stadium that
06:24 improves that whole experience of going
06:26 to a baseball game
06:28 yeah because now neil the the phone is
06:30 part of the experience of the game like
06:32 if you left your phone at home and
06:34 you're at a baseball game i would think
06:37 that would be a huge tragedy
06:39 yeah you you probably your tickets are
06:41 probably on it your your you know uber
06:43 app to get there and backs probably on
06:45 it or you know you're if you're meeting
06:48 friends how do they know where to meet
06:49 you
06:50 you know there is and you you know if
06:52 you're using a payment scheme that's on
06:54 your phone you know you we've become
06:56 so dependent upon these devices that you
06:59 know and
07:01 that when we don't have them it's very
07:03 challenging but you know we're all about
07:06 trying to understand what the behaviors
07:08 are and using that knowledge to make the
07:10 next step of every customer or every
07:13 every end user's journey a much easier
07:16 step and and you know we've we've had
07:18 some great successes but you know i talk
07:20 about baseball as an example here in the
07:22 uk you know soccer's the big sport here
07:25 at wembley stadium the the the scenario
07:28 that i just envisioned we've actually
07:29 deployed that we optimize our network
07:31 from when people get off the train
07:34 at wembley station
07:36 all the way into the stadium and all the
07:37 way back out and yes it does require you
07:40 you need you need your handset um but i
07:42 think you know the the
07:44 that's that's one part of where we're
07:47 headed in customer experience the other
07:49 part of customer experience is actually
07:51 using the network in these venues in a
07:53 much more in-depth way to improve every
07:57 aspect of that experience as as a whole
07:59 be it be how you buy your beer to the
08:03 information that's displayed you know if
08:05 if if if you know we've been even
08:08 talking with you if you know that you've
08:09 got a relative or a special guest in in
08:12 the in the stadium put some messages up
08:15 on the displays to to recognize that
08:17 that people are there and it's really
08:19 easy for us to do that
08:21 if we've got the insight and if we get
08:23 that data from a platform
08:25 um like the insight platform that
08:27 juniper are talking about today
08:29 yeah because you know a kisscam moment
08:31 that could make the whole experience for
08:33 everyone in the stadium 20 000 people
08:36 in all honesty i'm thinking about soccer
08:39 in europe because i've been watching a
08:41 lot of ted lasso along with every other
08:43 american so i'm glad we're talking about
08:46 sports right now and let's talk about
08:48 automation
08:50 automation is a really hot topic right
08:52 now but
08:53 it's so important as we think as i.t
08:55 professionals and about technology how
08:57 to balance
08:59 the human element which is so important
09:01 and incorporate that into how we build
09:03 experiences so how are you balancing
09:06 automation and ai and how are you
09:09 maintaining that human element in
09:11 everything that you build
09:14 yeah i mean
09:15 i think your your
09:16 your point about listening to your
09:18 customers is really important here that
09:20 you know we have customers that never
09:21 want to talk to our machine and we and
09:23 we can identify them and we can we can
09:25 build journeys for them but we have
09:27 other customers as you say that never
09:29 want to talk to a human they just want
09:31 to be able to press a button or make
09:33 something happen and we build journeys
09:35 you know
09:36 multi-directional journeys through our
09:38 through our it
09:40 and and and understand and personalize
09:42 that so our own you know our mye app on
09:45 our on that you get with a phone when
09:47 you buy it from us can help you decide
09:49 that journey
09:50 automation for us though
09:52 is is how do we
09:54 how do we run and maintain the network
09:56 whilst and give no interruption to to
09:59 customers so through the pandemic you
10:01 know more of us became much more reliant
10:03 on the network and it was all about how
10:05 do we build and grow and change the
10:08 network in a way that customers never
10:11 ever
10:11 feel that we've that we've done it and
10:13 and that was crucially important during
10:16 the pandemic and we learned the huge um
10:18 about automation and the ways to deploy
10:21 it but also a different mindset about
10:23 how do you build for automation how do
10:25 you build for the experience where in a
10:28 world where everyone was dependent upon
10:30 network it just can't not be there so
10:32 that really changed our thinking and
10:34 actually in some respects the pandemic
10:36 made us think differently than what we
10:39 would have done and brought things
10:40 forward and because because people were
10:43 relying upon us in a bigger way than
10:45 than we ever imagined
10:47 absolutely i think during covet
10:49 i think it's a silver lining for
10:52 customer experience and for the whole
10:54 business world that we had to be more
10:56 digital we had to think about the
10:59 digital customer using our network
11:01 focusing more on online communication
11:04 and we had to really beef up what we
11:06 were doing and i think that it's for me
11:08 the one positive because of course you
11:10 and i have been advocates for customer
11:12 experience in digital for many many
11:13 years
11:14 and now we've learned okay we can
11:16 provide so many more experiences
11:18 digitally than we thought we could
11:20 let's talk about
11:22 keeping things easy for customers and
11:25 simple
11:26 you've talked about the fact that
11:28 customers don't really like complication
11:31 how do you architect the network to make
11:34 sure that you're reducing complexity
11:37 even though customer expectations are
11:39 constantly changing so we're in a very
11:41 complex world but we have to keep things
11:43 simple so how would you recommend others
11:46 do that
11:47 and yeah i mean that's a great question
11:50 i think
11:51 in my mind you know i always try and put
11:53 myself into customer shoes you know
11:56 what type of customer what type of
11:58 persona is this customer can we what
12:00 data do we know about this customer what
12:03 you know who in our organization is like
12:05 this customer that we're trying to we're
12:07 trying to work with and then and then
12:09 from that build um the kind of
12:12 here here is what we predict around this
12:14 customer here's what we've seen before
12:16 here's what you know and and in covert
12:18 we went back to previous um data to know
12:22 how is the network going to perform as
12:24 as effectively the traffic doubled and
12:27 the busy period of our network moved
12:28 from the evening to the day because
12:31 everybody was at home uh whilst lockdown
12:33 was on so it was all about using data
12:36 and insight about how our customers
12:39 behave how the network behaves and
12:41 actually reaching out to our partners
12:42 like juniper and some of our other
12:44 partners on the content side people like
12:46 netflix and saying hey we think we're
12:48 going to see this what do you think and
12:50 and and actually i think customers
12:52 appreciate it when you understand who
12:55 they
12:56 use in their ecosystem each customer has
12:58 its own individual ecosystem and the
13:00 more that you can predict around that
13:01 ecosystem and the more that you can
13:03 they'll build your own bridge in that
13:05 ecosystem then so much the better and
13:07 and you know one one simple thing that
13:09 we did that was huge
13:11 um during the pandemic we connected all
13:14 of the alexas that are on our network to
13:16 be able to use our phone system so you
13:18 could dial from alexa um and and it and
13:21 that for some some of our customers was
13:23 massive because it was an easy way for
13:25 people to to chat and communicate and if
13:28 you had the alexa with screen you could
13:29 you could do video conferencing as well
13:31 and and we recognized that that was
13:33 valuable because we could see those
13:34 relationships and and what people were
13:36 doing in the network
13:38 yeah alexa on video actually babysat my
13:42 daughter because my daughter i was
13:43 pregnant my daughter was home from
13:45 preschool because they were closed and
13:46 so and we had no family around so
13:48 grandma would
13:50 and grandpa would entertain my daughter
13:52 through the alexa echo on video and
13:54 honestly it really helped a lot one hour
13:57 a day i knew that i had that help for my
13:59 daughter to teach her how to read um
14:01 let's talk about the evolving role of
14:03 telco companies i mean telecom is a
14:06 tough space customers demand these
14:09 seamless zero for
14:11 zero friction customer experiences how
14:13 has telecom
14:15 how has it evolved changed what are your
14:17 predictions
14:19 yeah predictions i mean i've i think how
14:21 has it changed i think we've realized
14:23 that
14:24 you know telecoms was very much our
14:27 milk the cow business you know you had a
14:29 cash cow
14:30 and you and you milked it for you could
14:32 get i think what we've realized
14:34 certainly over the last three or four
14:36 years and and certainly being
14:37 accelerated by the pandemic that
14:39 actually we've got to innovate and work
14:41 with our customers be it business or
14:43 consumers we've got to do much about
14:46 being there for them and in some
14:48 respects we've allowed competing
14:50 companies you could argue you know a lot
14:52 of people argue that the hyperscalers
14:53 are big telecommunication um you know
14:56 competitors i actually think they're
14:58 partners um but you know people say that
15:01 well you've you know you've kind of been
15:03 milking your car whilst these guys have
15:05 been going out you know building huge
15:07 huge platforms to take your customers
15:10 away so you know we've learned that you
15:12 know you've got to move with customers
15:14 and actually to some extent you you
15:16 might also have to push customers along
15:18 a little bit because for their own good
15:21 and understanding what technology and
15:23 what the power of telecommunications can
15:24 do for them both individually but also
15:27 as businesses and and that
15:29 co-collaboration and building um
15:32 solutions with customers has become
15:34 hugely important and my prediction is
15:38 you know i i see us i see the network
15:40 becoming more and more part of our daily
15:42 lives uh we talk about clarify i talk
15:44 about networkify which is
15:47 the network enabling new experiences for
15:49 people that just wouldn't have been
15:50 possible before one of my proudest
15:52 moments was um a group of buskers and
15:56 and artists during the pandemic
15:58 came together to put a song
16:00 about 100 of them to put a song together
16:03 over the network to raise money for for
16:06 covered research and charity and that
16:08 would never have happened without the
16:10 network um and it's a phenomenal thing
16:12 and and you know those sort of
16:14 experiences i want to see more and more
16:16 of them i want that to be a daily norm
16:18 that we see people like that coming
16:19 together to really um provide
16:22 experiences that only the network can
16:25 provide and and then and then taking
16:27 that forward i think we'll see
16:29 the network becoming more important in
16:30 healthcare i see we'll
16:33 we'll see the network becoming more and
16:34 more important in transportation
16:36 and actually everything that we do i
16:38 think the network will become more
16:39 important and i'm i'm super excited
16:41 about that but it means that we need
16:42 that insight we need to know what's
16:44 happening in the network so that we can
16:46 build it scale it grow it run it and
16:49 give it customers that excellent
16:50 experience so actually blake
16:53 they're not thinking about the
16:54 telecommunication provider because
16:56 everything's running really smoothly
16:58 that's that's kind of my my vision
17:02 neil i think that the things you're
17:04 saying today will resonate with
17:05 everybody watching because we're all
17:07 dealing with increased complexity while
17:10 customers have more expectations from us
17:12 and we have to deliver on the
17:13 expectation and almost be like a
17:15 magician like i talked about working in
17:17 the background where customers don't
17:19 really think about us but everything is
17:21 just magically working and that's all
17:23 they care about neil i want to thank you
17:25 for being with us today to share some of
17:27 your insights about your work and your
17:29 partnership with
17:30 juniper you're welcome thanks blake
17:34 actually um neil if you have a couple
17:36 minutes uh we do have some questions
17:38 from the from the analysts um so let me
17:40 uh just kind of fire a few at you um you
17:43 know first of all the first question is
17:46 delivering a differentiated experience
17:47 is certainly a priority for operators
17:49 like bt but also a challenge and you
17:51 talked a little bit about about that why
17:53 is it a challenge and what what is bt
17:55 doing about it to change that challenge
17:58 yeah i mean it's a challenge for for
18:00 many reasons it can be as simple as i
18:02 don't have coverage where i'm going or
18:04 where i need to be and and you know we
18:06 continually uh build out coverage and
18:08 capability but it can also be around how
18:11 their
18:12 device works i you know in the network
18:15 you know some people are super technical
18:17 some people aren't and and one of the
18:19 things we're doing you know we stood up
18:21 um again
18:23 we did this just ahead of the pandemic
18:25 so in some respects perhaps lucky but we
18:26 stood up and a bunch of tech areas that
18:30 allow our customers to understand and be
18:33 educated on how they get the most out of
18:35 the network for us our biggest challenge
18:37 is you know and and i'll
18:40 this won't surprise anybody but it's
18:42 about skill sets and and hiring people
18:45 have got great technical knowledge think
18:47 customer first think security first and
18:50 and and think
18:52 you know how they can build stuff that
18:54 innovates and makes a difference and
18:55 uses the network to do it so
18:57 from from my perspective the the biggest
19:00 challenge is
19:01 is is getting those skills in and on
19:04 board and being active to build what our
19:07 customers are demanding from us
19:09 that makes a lot of sense and certainly
19:10 it's a it's a major shift for for a lot
19:12 of us that are moving in this direction
19:14 another question and you heard a little
19:16 bit this morning about our focus around
19:19 ai how aggressive is bt with ai and how
19:21 do you balance that with possibly
19:24 disrupting customer experience
19:26 yeah luca i think um
19:29 you've got to experiment i mean if
19:30 you're not experimenting you might as
19:31 well just i don't know do something
19:33 different
19:34 is experimentation is key and actually
19:37 that's the other thing that i think we
19:39 as we as telcos have had to learn to do
19:41 more of we've always been slightly
19:43 slightly nervous about breaking things
19:45 um actually with new cloud technology
19:48 it's easier to test stuff
19:49 um than it's ever been before and it's
19:51 easier to run things without having a
19:53 big impact and and and that's one of the
19:56 big benefits of of
19:58 our bt network cloud that juniper is a
20:00 huge partner of i think the second part
20:02 to that is bt has more patents and ai
20:05 than any other company in the uk
20:08 um
20:09 we are leading at the front of ai we've
20:11 developed many ai based solutions in our
20:13 for our contact centers
20:15 for traveling and logistics
20:19 and we partner with
20:20 with people to test
20:22 that ai and ensure it's making the
20:25 outcome that we think it's making
20:27 one of the biggest challenges with ai is
20:29 when you build it the only test that
20:32 you've got for it is the expert that
20:33 you've got to say well is the ai doing
20:35 it right or not and so you still need to
20:38 have strong skills you still need to
20:39 have strong capabilities but if you're
20:41 building ai to service customers you
20:43 need to go out there and listen to
20:45 customers and take feedback on how
20:46 that's performing and a lot and again
20:49 we've built ai to do that so
20:51 it's it's a never-ending um journey but
20:54 but i think
20:55 you know
20:56 again one of the other skill benefits is
20:59 you know if if you're doing ai don't
21:01 have an ai department and democratize ai
21:04 build it into all the all the
21:05 curriculums of your engineers and the
21:07 people that are working in marketing
21:09 give them the power to use ai and and
21:12 and then use their own expertise and
21:14 intelligence to put two and two together
21:16 but for us you know the the one of the
21:18 biggest um aspects of the pandemic day
21:22 one are prime minister boris johnson on
21:24 tv and rai changed a whole chunk of
21:27 traffic
21:28 paths throughout the network because we
21:30 had a whole lot of people wanting to
21:32 watch him to understand what was going
21:34 on we couldn't have done that humans
21:36 could not have done it and we would have
21:38 provided a bad experience had it not
21:40 been for ai so for us
21:43 as they as the network gets more
21:44 complicated because of the demands that
21:46 our customers are putting on it ai is in
21:49 our future we haven't we really don't
21:50 have a choice because humans aren't fast
21:53 enough and and i've talked to juniper um
21:56 i've talked to juniper teams about this
21:57 before what triggered this for us was
22:00 the olympics in 20 2012 when we hosted
22:02 him in london
22:03 usain bolt took 10 seconds to run 100
22:06 meters and we didn't know
22:09 in that 10 second period
22:11 whether anyone had seen it because the
22:14 tooling in the systems back then just
22:16 couldn't cope with a quantum of 10
22:18 seconds
22:20 customer satisfaction quantum is less
22:23 than a second
22:24 and if you're not building a platform
22:26 that can cope second by second even
22:29 millisecond by millisecond to understand
22:31 what's going on for your customers
22:33 you're in trouble and that's very much
22:35 the mindset that we've had in bt and
22:38 jointly with juniper i may have to steal
22:40 that quote neil that was really wise
22:41 about the about the customer kind of
22:43 satisfaction uh quantum okay last
22:46 question it's a big question and
22:47 unfortunately i need a short answer um
22:49 so the question is about service
22:51 provider revenues you know i've been
22:52 challenged to grow
22:54 but we know there are many opportunities
22:55 so from your perspective what can
22:57 operators like bt do to better monetize
22:59 their network investment and or find new
23:01 sources of revenue
23:03 look i mentioned some of that in the
23:05 discussion with blake how do we take the
23:07 network beyond where we've taken it
23:09 before and how do we enable it in ways
23:11 that people haven't thought about so i
23:13 use my wembley stadium um you know
23:17 um use case where from the minute you
23:19 get off a train to the minute you're
23:20 sitting in the seat we're using the
23:22 network to make your whole experience
23:23 better using video using sensors using
23:26 the fact that you know how what you paid
23:29 with where your phone is taking all of
23:31 that data working with the stadium as a
23:33 partner working with the transportation
23:35 customer sorry transportation systems as
23:37 a partner and building the easiest
23:40 solution so that you're never worried
23:42 you know you're never thinking about
23:44 when's that train going to turn up or am
23:46 i going to get to the to the bar and get
23:48 my hot dog quickly am i going to miss
23:50 some of the game
23:51 using all of that and symphony and
23:53 orchestrating in a way that provides an
23:55 outstanding customer experience
23:57 customers will you know you heard it
23:59 from blake customers will pay for that
24:01 and we believe we can grab on to a big
24:03 chunk of that cash
24:05 well thank you so much neil and blake
24:06 i'll turn it back over to you to kind of
24:08 transition to our next guest
24:10 thank you neil i've really enjoyed
24:12 hearing from you and i think all of us
24:14 can imagine what that 10 seconds with
24:17 hussein bolt look like and you were
24:19 probably sweating a little bit
24:22 worried that things weren't working out
24:24 but that's the job of running the
24:26 network is it's very high pressure
24:28 almost as high pressure as being hussein
24:30 volt sprinting in front of you know
24:33 5 billion people