Numbers Point to Policy Management as Game Changer

March 10, 2010 Comments
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Double-digit growth in any software sector these days is an eye opener. New projections by Analysys Mason on policy management and deep-packet inspection will open eyes even wider.

Everyone knows smartphones and bandwidth intensive applications such as peer-to-peer, video and gaming are driving change and investment in the industry in order to grapple with the bandwidth demands. But the latest report on the topic from Analysys Mason’s Patrick Kelly and Glen Ragoonanan shows that while much of that investment is going into single-function policy management systems and deep-packet inspection technology that provides more effective traffic prioritization and network enforcement capabilities, policy management software systems will evolve into a multi-function solution that supports subscriber management as well as policy and charging control.

Policy management also will evolve into a much bigger market – and fast. Analysys Mason said the overall policy management market will grow from the $876 million it was in 2008 to $2.62 billion in 2013. That’s a compound annual growth rate of 27 percent.

Kelly said Analysys Mason divides Policy Management into three categories: DPI, next-gen subscriber management and real-time charging systems. Subscriber management will experience the largest growth, expanding from $321 million last year to $1.1 billion in 2013.

In pulling the report together, Kelly said he was hoping to achieve a little debunking. “Everything you read in the press about policy management seems to be focused on DPI,” Kelly said. “I want to take a broader view and say that there is a lot more going on.”

Much of what’s going on deals with the issues beyond bandwidth management and the emergence of solutions around the other two segments while traditional DPI appliances, built primarily for traffic management, get subsumed into the core switching and routing infrastructure as embedded technology.

“Black box DPI suppliers have tackled this specific problem around traffic management and how to identify traffic types and types of users and the kinds of applications consuming the bandwidth,” Kelly said. “But you need to have policy management systems that tie into the billing and charging systems so that different types of services can be provided to different types of customers.”

If you’re a supplier doing plain DPI only, you won’t be around long, Kelly said. “The DPI guys just go away,” he said. “They are in a lifecycle where the importance of their [standalone] solution eventually diminishes and they are either acquired so their technology can get rolled in or their business dries up.”

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