Your
telecom audit will be much easier to understand (and complete!)
when information is organized. By organizing information
properly, you will define and focus your audit so the
task seems much less overwhelming.
The
following seven step checklist is what we at TelCon have
used for over 30 years when preparing for a client telecom
audit and cost-reduction study. Print this newsletter
and when you've completed a step, check it off!
Step # 1: List Hypotheses
Savings
opportunities and ideas for them will come to mind thoughout
the audit and analysis process. Chances are you had a
few in mind when you decided on embarking on a full-blown
audit of your telecom department. These ideas are the
"hypotheses" to be tested, rejected as invalid,
or seriously considered for recommendation/adoption portion
of the audit that comes later.
Hypotheses
will begin to emerge from the moment you look at a telecom
bill. Write down your initial hypotheses now and continue
adding to them as you progress through the audit process.
Step # 2: Define the Size and Scope of Your Audit
There
will be numerous directions your audit may take you, so
it is extremely important that you now establish a project
scope and focus your efforts to make them more manageable.
You simply cannot audit everything at once.
Ask
questions to determine you goals. Examples are: Are you
concerned with telecom services at the corporate headquarters?
Field locations? Both? Will you be delving into just interstate
long-distance, or will you include intrastate and intralata
calling as well? Are you concerned with voice only, or
will you be auditing data services too? Will you be auditing
only local services, only wireless - or both?
Before
you continue, decide now and put in writing exactly what
the size and scope of your audit will encompass.
Step # 3: Prioritize and Organize
Now
you need to prioritize and organize the segments of your
project. We have found that most projects are too big
to handle all at once, so they must be divided into manageable
segments for effective study and completion.
The
most common method, at least initially, is to organize
by location - geographical or organizational. Many segments
will be defined by location - simply analyze and sub-optimize
all services at each location.
Complete
the organization of your project by assigning priorities;
define the sequence in which each will be studied, then
assign responsibilities to each staff member or person
involved in the audit.
Step # 4: Gather Customer Information
The
next step is to gather information contained on two main
sources: bills and contracts. Some situations may require
examination of more specialized information. For now,
we will focus on these two items.
All
relavent bills must be obtained, whether monthly, quarterly,
annual or intermittent. It is advised that 2-3 months
of the most recent bills be collected. Be sure to collect
ALL bills that you have defined in the "size and
scope" step above. These may include bills and contracts
from: