Customer Company Size
Large Corporate
Region
- Europe
Country
- Germany
Product
- Camunda BPM
- Camunda Modeler
Tech Stack
- Cloud-based infrastructure
- AWS
- BPMN
Implementation Scale
- Enterprise-wide Deployment
Impact Metrics
- Cost Savings
- Productivity Improvements
- Customer Satisfaction
Technology Category
- Platform as a Service (PaaS) - Application Development Platforms
Applicable Industries
- Telecommunications
Applicable Functions
- Sales & Marketing
- Business Operation
Use Cases
- Process Control & Optimization
- Supply Chain Visibility
- Predictive Maintenance
Services
- Cloud Planning, Design & Implementation Services
- System Integration
About The Customer
Vodafone Germany is the largest national company in the Vodafone Group – one of the largest telecommunications groups in the world. In fact, every second German is a Vodafone customer, with 49.6 million mobile phone cards, almost 11 million broadband and 14 million television customers. Vodafone employees 16,000 people in Germany and generates revenues of almost 13 billion euros. The company's OTELO and branded reseller IT system ran a vast number of different services, supporting an array of customer-facing channels – from campaigns and product offers to POS.
The Challenge
Vodafone Germany faced several issues with its OTELO and branded reseller IT system. The system ran a vast number of different services, supporting an array of customer-facing channels – from campaigns and product offers to POS. However, it was impossible to separate the channels and, without an effective API layer in the infrastructure, Vodafone couldn’t establish an important online partner channel that was urgently required within its branded reseller and second brand segments. This legacy services technology wasn’t just ineffective to use and difficult to maintain, it created high maintenance and operating costs, a slow time-to-market for new products and an inconsistent customer experience. Vodafone needed to develop a truly agile, transparent and scalable approach. But with processes distributed everywhere imaginable within its system landscape, Vodafone needed to discover where its processes were and how they were performing, before it could migrate to a modern cloud-based infrastructure.
The Solution
Vodafone used Camunda to transform from multiple monoliths to a cloud-based infrastructure. They built an intelligent proxy layer around its existing middleware and UI backend, quickly analyzed communications and identified and captured events. Each process was documented using the Camunda Modeler, creating a visual map of processes that was easily understood by both business and IT. Through this discovery phase, Vodafone identified many tasks within workflows that were completely hidden and left few or no communications traces within the existing processes. Using a combination of expert knowledge and available communications traces, Vodafone was able to reverse-engineer processes in areas where tasks were unclear. By bringing documentation to life through Camunda BPM, Vodafone gained instantaneous insight and transparency into its processes and was able to optimize and recreate processes entirely in a new cloud-based framework, that runs on AWS with Camunda orchestrating across all channels and backend services.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
Case Study missing?
Start adding your own!
Register with your work email and create a new case study profile for your business.
Related Case Studies.
Case Study
Vodafone Hosted On AWS
Vodafone found that traffic for the applications peak during the four-month period when the international cricket season is at its height in Australia. During the 2011/2012 cricket season, 700,000 consumers downloaded the Cricket Live Australia application. Vodafone needed to be able to meet customer demand, but didn’t want to invest in additional resources that would be underutilized during cricket’s off-season.
Case Study
SKT, Construction of Smart Office Environment
SK T-Tower is the headquarters of SK Telecom. Inside the building, different types of mobile devices, such as laptops, smartphones and tablets, are in use, and with the increase in WLAN traffic and the use of quality multimedia data, the volume of wireless data sees an explosive growth. Users want limitless Internet access in various places in addition to designated areas.