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Billing and Customer Care System (BCCS). ٭ Provisioning ٭ Billing ٭ Customer Care. Functions of BCCS. WAP. CSR. OM. Connect VU. MSC. WAN TCP/IP. CSR. IN. UMS. OM Database. CSR. IN. TCP/IP. Mediation. MSCs. FTAM. BP. TCP/IP. WAP. TCP/IP. TCP/IP. Customer DATABASE.
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٭Provisioning ٭ Billing ٭ Customer Care Functions of BCCS
WAP CSR OM Connect VU MSC WAN TCP/IP CSR IN UMS OM Database CSR IN TCP/IP Mediation MSCs FTAM BP TCP/IP WAP TCP/IP TCP/IP Customer DATABASE CDR Storage UMS SMSC BCCS BLOCK DIAGRAM
CSR CONNECTIVITY SCHEMATIC Connectivity to Level 1 router Central Switch E1 Converter Ethernet port Serial port Level 2 Router Cisco 2621 LAN cable LAN Switch Cisco 2950 Servers located at Pune HP Printer E1 at each location Is backed up with ISDN BRI PC/Terminal
Ring network for CSR connectivity 50 CSR Node connected Ahmedabad 50 CSR Node connected Bhopal 50 CSR Node connected Pune Nagpur Raipur 50 CSR Node connected 50 CSR Node connected
250 CSR sites are connecting centrally at Pune via level1 routers connected in ring. The level1 routers are connected between Pune, Nagpur, Ahmedabad, Bhopal & Raipur. • All the CSR locations are connected to level1 router via 1 E1 link, depending on their region. • Activities done at CSR locations are: • Provisioning. • Billing information for the customers. • Duplicate billing. • Booking. • Allocation of Plan. • Prepaid & Postpaid. • Collections.
MSC Network diagram X25 Router MSC Router Central Router 7206 Billing servers MSC Locations: Pune Aurangabad Nagpur Ahmedabad Rajkot Surat Bhopal Raipur 5505 S/W
MSC Network is connected to 8 locations within the west zone. • Pune, Aurangabad, Nagpur, Ahmedabad, Rajkot, Surat, Bhopal & Raipur. • The connectivity diagram for the same is given below: • Each MSC location is connected with 1 E1 link & ISDN as a backup. • The E1 link is connected to the MSC router & then connected to X25 router. • The X25 router is connected to the switch where all the CDR’s are collected. • All the locations are connected at Pune to the Central Router. • The Central Router is connected to the Billing Servers via Cisco switch. • All the CDR’s are further send to Billing Servers for processing.
An order Management System which supports order handling. It supports workflow management activities for products and services. It is used in tandem with arbor/BP. ARBOR/OM
Every order is associated with a master Account. Master Account may be an existing account from BP as a new or pending account in OM. An order consists of one or more items. A single order can contain any combination of new, modified or disconnected service. Examples of order a. Create new Accounts b. Add products & services c. Change products & services. d. Discontinue products or services. ORDER(Central Concept of OM)
OM system architecture routes all communications between the user interface (GUI) and the database through a middle layer. OM is built around a RDBMS (relational database management system) that contains all orders and account information as well as system configuration information. System Architecture
OM servers and databases are logical entities and they need not be uniquely associated with physical database. System Architecture Contd…..
The network provisioning process begins when the CSR commits an “order” comprised of one of more products associated with network provisioning related workflow items. The sequence of state transitions occurring for each of the product level workflow items associated with the new order. Network provisioning workflow
ORDER FLOW BP 5 10 3 CONNECT VU SWITCH OM 1 CSR 7 8 2. Order gets inserted into a table in OM Database 3. Provmgr picks up the order and sends it to connect VU 9. Provupdater updates the status of order as completed. 10. Arbor updated then updates the order in the BP database. 4. The order is queued in the connectVU for respective GW 5. Order is sent to the NE(Switch) for provisioning. 8. CVU completes the order and sends acknowledgement to OM. 6. The order gets executed in the switch. 7. Switch sends an ack back to CVU. • ICC gives an order
Role of Mediation • Collects CDRs from various NEs • Filters the CDRs (Allowing all & only billable CDRs to the Billing System) • Formats the CDRs as required by the Billing System • Can store CDRs for a certain time period
Flow of CDRs MSC BPL MSC AHM MSC Pune WAP IN FTAM FTAM FTAM TCP/IP Mediation System BILLDATS TCP/IP UMS SMSC TCP/IP TCP/IP TCP/IP ARBOR BILLING SYSTEM
Size of CDRs • In MSC - 120 – 200 Bytes • There are various modules according to the type of Call (IN,VPN etc) • IN BP size of CDR is fixed 472 Bytes • No attached modules
Analysis of CDRs • Basic Call records - 55 % • Supplementary CDRs - 12 % • Auxillary CDRs - 33 %
CDRs in BP • Only 25-20 % of the CDRs are able to make it to the Billing System • If we block MTC at the mediation this further gets reduced to 12-15 %
The CDRs in BP • MTC - 48 - 52 % • MOC - 20 - 25 % • RMR - 4-5 % • VPN - 0-2 % • REST - 0-2 % • SMS - 18 – 20 %
Salient Configurations • All the voice call details (Both prepaid and postpaid) are collected from MSC • The CDRs from IN are not used by the billing for any purpose ( Although they are not required for bill generation purpose)
Salient Configuration (Contd ..) • All the SMS CDRs are collected from SMSC except the MT-SMS of Inroamers • The call detail records of DATA calls are being collected from MSC.
Problems in Mediation Logic The problems arises when mediation is unable to do its job of sending all the billable CDRs and only the billable CDRs to the billing sytem. The latter results in the CDRs ending up in MIU
Problems in Mediation Logic .. 1. Mediation has been unable to properly distinguish between prepaid and postpaid CDRs. Which results in non billable CDRs going into Billing systems and are rejected by the MPS going into MIU.
Problems in Mediation Logic .. 2. Since all the SMS CDRs are collected from SMSC, mediation doesn’t find enough information in these CDRs to distinguish between postpaid and prepaid , resulting in all prepaid SMS CDRs ending into MIU.
Retrieve records of usage events from network mediation layers. Calculate usage charges for each usage event. Route usge records for roaming clients to clearing house. Store usage records for local customers in the local database. Usage Processing Tasks
Calculate customer balances based on charges and credits (e.g. service charges, monthly fees, usage charges, taxes, late fees, adjustments, discounts and payments). Arrange charges and credits on formatted customer bills. Dispatch customer bills. Bill Processing Tasks
Roaming subscriber becomes a part of visited network. Based on foreign IMSI, CDRs are grouped in TAP files. TAP files are rated as per defined plans. TAP files are sent to Home Network through clearing Houses. Clearing House validates the TAP files. Co-ordinates for missing and error files. Generates high usage report & fraud reports. For MTNL Delhi & Mumbai, TAP files are exchanged through MACH Bangalore. For BSNL Networks TAP files are exchanged directly between zonal billing centres. Roaming CDR Management
Check for all promotional schemes discount e.g. a. Ganesh Festival discount scheme effective b. Dassehra Postpaid scheme c. Rs.100/- discount upto 6 months Discount for unlimited SMS only for Plan 525. Check for more than one packages attached to a service instant. Check for nil packages attached. Check for discount for friends & family Pre-Bill Checks Carried out at BCCS Before Issue of Bills
Check for non charging of activation fee for change of plan cases. Updation of all batch payments Extra charges due to attachment of itemized bill more than once. Filtering of duplicate CDRs Non charging of Online calls for VPN accounts. Pre-bill checks Contd………..