SlideShare a Scribd company logo
The Challenge
With 27 million customers, EE is the UK’s largest mobile operator and it is the first to offer
4G. EE was created following a merger between T-Mobile and Orange in the UK.
“One of the key drivers for the merger was the synergies and cost savings we could get from
removing duplication of our data centres,” said Matt Stagg, Senior Manager of Network
Strategy at EE. “This included looking at our Internet Points of Presence (PoP) – Orange
and T-Mobile each had two. We needed to consolidate these four existing PoPs into two
data centres with connectivity for Internet transit, private peering and public peering.”
EE was looking for a data centre that would support its 4G network and enable it to scale as
demand accelerated for mobile data, and video.
The Solution
EE undertook an extensive request for proposals (RFP) process over a period of several
months and analysed responses from the major UK data centres.
It chose two facilities, through which it now routes all mobile broadband traffic: Equinix’s
LD5 Internet Business Exchange (IBX) in Slough, to the west of London, and another site in
London’s Docklands. The traffic includes web browsing, video, file downloading and peer-to-peer.
Why Equinix
“We chose LD5 because it’s a state-of-the art data centre – which we needed to run our
state-of-the-art 4G network – with high resilience on,” said Stagg. “LD5 provides us with all
the connectivity and expansion potential we need at a suitable cost, and in a good location
outside London. Equinix can move at the same speed as EE as we roll out our 4G network.”
EE runs its two PoPs in a resilient 1+1 configuration, which means that the two data centres
are connected in an active-active arrangement. In the event of an outage at either data
centre, all of the traffic will failover and run through the other site – LD5 or Docklands.
“Resilience is important to EE. We want people to trust us with their digital lives and have
spent billions on our robust mobile network, so we need that same robustness from our
Internet connectivity,” said Stagg. “We can’t afford to be let down by our data centre – the
PoP is where we hand over our traffic, and we need our provider to treat the traffic with as
much importance as we do.”
Well connected
“As a 4G operator, we need to be able to connect directly with our most popular content
providers, either via direct peering or via the London Internet Exchange (LINX),” said
Stagg. “Direct connectivity is primarily needed to lower our latency - since connecting with
our content providers in LD5 we have saved a minimum of 20ms on the round trip - thus
maintaining the user experience.
Results
Equinix provides one of two UK data
centres that EE uses to support the
mobile internet. The highly resilient
configuration of both data centres
means one is able to handle all of EE’s
UK traffic if required
Equinix LD5 data centre’s ecosystem of
network carriers and content generators
enables lower latency and enhanced
performance to deliver a higher quality
4G user experience
Equinix delivers direct connectivity and
a dense cloud ecosystem to enable EE
to connect to its most popular content
providers, content delivery networks,
transit providers, the London Internet
Exchange and fibre routes in a location
outside of London
EQUINIX CUSTOMER
STORY - EE
Equinix LD5 Data Centre supports the delivery of
the UK’s first 4G Network on with EE
MOBILE
www.equinix.com
“The speed with which we’re rolling out 4G in the UK means we
needed a data centre provider capable of moving at the same
pace. We rely on Equinix to help us support the exponential
growth rate of mobile data and video.”
Matt Stagg, Senior Manager of Network Strategy, EE
“Equinix attracts content providers to its data centres. Our most important content providers
are either already in LD5, or we can access them via our transit providers, all of whom have
good connectivity with Equinix.”
The latency of 4G is so low that any additional latency in the PoP has a significant impact
on the customer experience, especially for real-time services like video calling. Stagg
commented: “The low latency of Equinix’s infrastructure – both within LD5 and on to content
providers – is extremely important so we can give customers the performance they expect
from 4G.”
“One of the reasons we chose Equinix was because it has strong relationships with the
content delivery networks (CDNs), the transit providers and the content generators that we
need,” said Stagg. “This gives us access to our top content providers, and enables us to
expand quickly.”
“As well as excellent direct connectivity to content providers and CDNs within the data centre,
LD5 has great connectivity with multiple dark fiber providers connecting to America, main
land Europe and the Docklands with independent, diverse fibre capacity.”
According to Stagg, being in LD5 also provides EE with more than 90 networks to route its
traffic outside of the UK, due to Equinix’s fibre connections in Slough – the network hub in
the west of London.
Video drives mobile growth
With mobile video predicted to be over 65 per cent of Internet traffic by 2017, EE is looking
for innovative ways to provide a high quality user experience and handle the massive
volumes of data required.
“In 2017, 4G will be predominately a video distribution network – globally, a billion gigabytes
will go across mobile networks each month,” said Stagg. “Strategically, we need to have
a data centre provider that can connect to the main video providers, that understands this
growth, and has a roadmap to support it – Equinix meets this need.”
“We see Equinix as a neutral venue for collaboration, in order to enable innovation and
ensure that the mobile video industry continues to thrive,” said Stagg. “Customer experience
on 4G is of paramount importance to EE, and Equinix understands and supports us in
maintaining the best quality.”
“As video traffic grows, the Mobile Video Alliance will help us to deliver the high quality
service, connectivity and products that users expect,” said Stagg. “Equinix is a long-term
strategic choice for EE that will help us to meet customers’ demand for mobile video.”
© 2013 Equinix, Inc. www.equinix.com
About EE
EE is the most advanced digital
communications company in
Britain, providing mobile and
fixed-line services to 27 million
customers, and is the first
company in the UK to provide 4G
mobile services alongside fixed-
line fibre. EE is the company that
runs the Orange, T-Mobile and
EE brands in the UK. For more
information see www.ee.co.uk.
About Equinix
Equinix, Inc. (Nasdaq: EQIX),
connects more than 4,000
companies directly to their
customers and partners inside
the world’s most networked
data centres. Today, enterprise,
cloud, networking, digital
media and financial services
companies leverage the Equinix
interconnection platform in 31
strategic markets across the
Americas, EMEA and Asia-Pacific.
By connecting directly to their
strategic partners and end users,
customers are forming dynamic
ecosystems inside Equinix. These
interconnected ecosystems
enable companies to optimize the
performance of their content and
applications and protect their vital
digital assets.
www.equinix.co.uk
info@eu.equinix.com
0845 373 2900

More Related Content

PPTX
Andrew Campling-Digital Gateway Seminar
PDF
faktortel_aquires_atpnet
PPTX
UKBroadband
PDF
Wenbing Yao - Director of Strategy & Marketing Huawei UK
DOCX
Ericsson
PPTX
Dr.peng Introduction
PDF
Intelsat 5 g rural broadband
PDF
Capacity planning
Andrew Campling-Digital Gateway Seminar
faktortel_aquires_atpnet
UKBroadband
Wenbing Yao - Director of Strategy & Marketing Huawei UK
Ericsson
Dr.peng Introduction
Intelsat 5 g rural broadband
Capacity planning

What's hot (20)

PDF
How Traffic Moves over The Internet
PDF
O2 business whg customer story
DOCX
Final hh - 14.6.20 blossom cleveland cow deployment
PDF
Telcos in the M-ICT Era
PPTX
James Enck presentation at NMHH conference Budapest, Dec. 2013
DOCX
Final hh - 15.6.16 - youngstown root metrics
PDF
Skinny IT VoLTE
PDF
DWS16 - Future networks forum - Harald Gruber, European Investment Bank
DOCX
Final webner hudson valley rootmetrics shared first release for 7-7-15
DOCX
Final hh - 13.10.15 - root metrics cleveland release
PPTX
BCS Practical Steps for Future Proof Networks
PDF
Irelands' Education Network - Case Study
PDF
Wireless Communications Technology - R&D
DOCX
Final hh - 14.8.25 - root metrics cincinnati shared first
PDF
A roadmap to deliver next generation critical communications
PDF
Facebook Africa Attractiveness
PDF
What is an Internet backbone
PDF
5 reasons why swift is crucial for regional development and rural innovation ...
PDF
FTTH APON ALVAREZ
DOCX
Final webner albany rootmetrics shared first news relase final - 2 for 6-15-15
How Traffic Moves over The Internet
O2 business whg customer story
Final hh - 14.6.20 blossom cleveland cow deployment
Telcos in the M-ICT Era
James Enck presentation at NMHH conference Budapest, Dec. 2013
Final hh - 15.6.16 - youngstown root metrics
Skinny IT VoLTE
DWS16 - Future networks forum - Harald Gruber, European Investment Bank
Final webner hudson valley rootmetrics shared first release for 7-7-15
Final hh - 13.10.15 - root metrics cleveland release
BCS Practical Steps for Future Proof Networks
Irelands' Education Network - Case Study
Wireless Communications Technology - R&D
Final hh - 14.8.25 - root metrics cincinnati shared first
A roadmap to deliver next generation critical communications
Facebook Africa Attractiveness
What is an Internet backbone
5 reasons why swift is crucial for regional development and rural innovation ...
FTTH APON ALVAREZ
Final webner albany rootmetrics shared first news relase final - 2 for 6-15-15
Ad

Similar to Equinix Customer Story - EE (20)

PDF
Broadband World Forum 2012 Highlights
DOC
Noticias TIC mar2011
PDF
LTE - the Other 4G - and Impact on Enterprise IT
PPTX
Optimizing User-Experience with Carrier-Neutral Colocation
DOC
Noticias Teleco Oct
PPT
Alastair Rickey - Stop@Nothing
PDF
Impacts of 5G on Broadcasters and CSPs
PPTX
ANGA COM 2017: Hanno Narjus at Teleste press event
PDF
The Drivers to LTE Solution Paper
PDF
4 G Latin America Carrier Strategies August 28, 2012
PPT
The evolving mobile network proposition…
PDF
LTE Asia 2012 Highlights from Alan Quayle
PPTX
Ngcn event info
PDF
Long Term Evolution
PPT
How Can the Telecom Industry Start Growing Again?
PPT
Long Term Evolution (LTE) -
PDF
Telco Global Connect 4
PDF
Get Telecoms Smart - 5G
PPT
Broadband
Broadband World Forum 2012 Highlights
Noticias TIC mar2011
LTE - the Other 4G - and Impact on Enterprise IT
Optimizing User-Experience with Carrier-Neutral Colocation
Noticias Teleco Oct
Alastair Rickey - Stop@Nothing
Impacts of 5G on Broadcasters and CSPs
ANGA COM 2017: Hanno Narjus at Teleste press event
The Drivers to LTE Solution Paper
4 G Latin America Carrier Strategies August 28, 2012
The evolving mobile network proposition…
LTE Asia 2012 Highlights from Alan Quayle
Ngcn event info
Long Term Evolution
How Can the Telecom Industry Start Growing Again?
Long Term Evolution (LTE) -
Telco Global Connect 4
Get Telecoms Smart - 5G
Broadband
Ad

More from EquinixUK (9)

PPTX
Equinix peering location matters 2016_feb_24
PDF
Case study: Equinix & Badgeville
PDF
Case study: Equinix & Foursquare
PDF
INFOGRAPHIC: The mobile landscape
PDF
Equinix Performance Hub & Cloud Exchange
PDF
Equinix LD6 Fact Sheet
PDF
Etsy case study
PDF
Box case study
PDF
Optimising Application Performance - infographic
Equinix peering location matters 2016_feb_24
Case study: Equinix & Badgeville
Case study: Equinix & Foursquare
INFOGRAPHIC: The mobile landscape
Equinix Performance Hub & Cloud Exchange
Equinix LD6 Fact Sheet
Etsy case study
Box case study
Optimising Application Performance - infographic

Equinix Customer Story - EE

  • 1. The Challenge With 27 million customers, EE is the UK’s largest mobile operator and it is the first to offer 4G. EE was created following a merger between T-Mobile and Orange in the UK. “One of the key drivers for the merger was the synergies and cost savings we could get from removing duplication of our data centres,” said Matt Stagg, Senior Manager of Network Strategy at EE. “This included looking at our Internet Points of Presence (PoP) – Orange and T-Mobile each had two. We needed to consolidate these four existing PoPs into two data centres with connectivity for Internet transit, private peering and public peering.” EE was looking for a data centre that would support its 4G network and enable it to scale as demand accelerated for mobile data, and video. The Solution EE undertook an extensive request for proposals (RFP) process over a period of several months and analysed responses from the major UK data centres. It chose two facilities, through which it now routes all mobile broadband traffic: Equinix’s LD5 Internet Business Exchange (IBX) in Slough, to the west of London, and another site in London’s Docklands. The traffic includes web browsing, video, file downloading and peer-to-peer. Why Equinix “We chose LD5 because it’s a state-of-the art data centre – which we needed to run our state-of-the-art 4G network – with high resilience on,” said Stagg. “LD5 provides us with all the connectivity and expansion potential we need at a suitable cost, and in a good location outside London. Equinix can move at the same speed as EE as we roll out our 4G network.” EE runs its two PoPs in a resilient 1+1 configuration, which means that the two data centres are connected in an active-active arrangement. In the event of an outage at either data centre, all of the traffic will failover and run through the other site – LD5 or Docklands. “Resilience is important to EE. We want people to trust us with their digital lives and have spent billions on our robust mobile network, so we need that same robustness from our Internet connectivity,” said Stagg. “We can’t afford to be let down by our data centre – the PoP is where we hand over our traffic, and we need our provider to treat the traffic with as much importance as we do.” Well connected “As a 4G operator, we need to be able to connect directly with our most popular content providers, either via direct peering or via the London Internet Exchange (LINX),” said Stagg. “Direct connectivity is primarily needed to lower our latency - since connecting with our content providers in LD5 we have saved a minimum of 20ms on the round trip - thus maintaining the user experience. Results Equinix provides one of two UK data centres that EE uses to support the mobile internet. The highly resilient configuration of both data centres means one is able to handle all of EE’s UK traffic if required Equinix LD5 data centre’s ecosystem of network carriers and content generators enables lower latency and enhanced performance to deliver a higher quality 4G user experience Equinix delivers direct connectivity and a dense cloud ecosystem to enable EE to connect to its most popular content providers, content delivery networks, transit providers, the London Internet Exchange and fibre routes in a location outside of London EQUINIX CUSTOMER STORY - EE Equinix LD5 Data Centre supports the delivery of the UK’s first 4G Network on with EE MOBILE www.equinix.com
  • 2. “The speed with which we’re rolling out 4G in the UK means we needed a data centre provider capable of moving at the same pace. We rely on Equinix to help us support the exponential growth rate of mobile data and video.” Matt Stagg, Senior Manager of Network Strategy, EE “Equinix attracts content providers to its data centres. Our most important content providers are either already in LD5, or we can access them via our transit providers, all of whom have good connectivity with Equinix.” The latency of 4G is so low that any additional latency in the PoP has a significant impact on the customer experience, especially for real-time services like video calling. Stagg commented: “The low latency of Equinix’s infrastructure – both within LD5 and on to content providers – is extremely important so we can give customers the performance they expect from 4G.” “One of the reasons we chose Equinix was because it has strong relationships with the content delivery networks (CDNs), the transit providers and the content generators that we need,” said Stagg. “This gives us access to our top content providers, and enables us to expand quickly.” “As well as excellent direct connectivity to content providers and CDNs within the data centre, LD5 has great connectivity with multiple dark fiber providers connecting to America, main land Europe and the Docklands with independent, diverse fibre capacity.” According to Stagg, being in LD5 also provides EE with more than 90 networks to route its traffic outside of the UK, due to Equinix’s fibre connections in Slough – the network hub in the west of London. Video drives mobile growth With mobile video predicted to be over 65 per cent of Internet traffic by 2017, EE is looking for innovative ways to provide a high quality user experience and handle the massive volumes of data required. “In 2017, 4G will be predominately a video distribution network – globally, a billion gigabytes will go across mobile networks each month,” said Stagg. “Strategically, we need to have a data centre provider that can connect to the main video providers, that understands this growth, and has a roadmap to support it – Equinix meets this need.” “We see Equinix as a neutral venue for collaboration, in order to enable innovation and ensure that the mobile video industry continues to thrive,” said Stagg. “Customer experience on 4G is of paramount importance to EE, and Equinix understands and supports us in maintaining the best quality.” “As video traffic grows, the Mobile Video Alliance will help us to deliver the high quality service, connectivity and products that users expect,” said Stagg. “Equinix is a long-term strategic choice for EE that will help us to meet customers’ demand for mobile video.” © 2013 Equinix, Inc. www.equinix.com About EE EE is the most advanced digital communications company in Britain, providing mobile and fixed-line services to 27 million customers, and is the first company in the UK to provide 4G mobile services alongside fixed- line fibre. EE is the company that runs the Orange, T-Mobile and EE brands in the UK. For more information see www.ee.co.uk. About Equinix Equinix, Inc. (Nasdaq: EQIX), connects more than 4,000 companies directly to their customers and partners inside the world’s most networked data centres. Today, enterprise, cloud, networking, digital media and financial services companies leverage the Equinix interconnection platform in 31 strategic markets across the Americas, EMEA and Asia-Pacific. By connecting directly to their strategic partners and end users, customers are forming dynamic ecosystems inside Equinix. These interconnected ecosystems enable companies to optimize the performance of their content and applications and protect their vital digital assets. www.equinix.co.uk info@eu.equinix.com 0845 373 2900