CFSs are difficult to understand
and have caused a huge amount of debate in the TMForum Community and
beyond, but RFSs that lurk beneath CFSs are even less well understood.
A recent training and consulting
assignment to a telco in Canada revealed a number of issues that they
had with RFSs and I suspect many other people have similar problems.
The first issue was the name -
Resource Facing Services. "Resource Facing" makes it sound as if the
RFSs provide services to the Resources in the same way as the "Customer
Facing" services provide services to the "customer" (or rather User, so
perhaps CFS should be renamed UFS, but that's another story). But RFS
providing services to Resources doesn't make a lot of sense! If we have
a set of services made up of CFSs on one side and RFSs on the other each servicing
its own community and the RFS are supporting the CFSs - what provides
the Services themselves? The problem lies in the name Resource Facing
Service and in particular the word "Facing"; it is the wrong word. A
better name would be "Resource Exposed Service" or "Resource Hosted Service" or
"Resource Provided Services" or "Resource Fronted Services" (to preserve
the acronym) as these types of service don't "Face" the Resources, rather they are exposed or provided by the Resources.
My view is that the RFSs are
services that run "in the network" (or perhaps in the end user device,
if you are talking about a smart phone or advanced set-top-box). I think
of them (and they used to be defined in SID) as interfaces or Services
implemented by software running on hardware.
A second issue, that took me a
little while to understand when talking to this group of enthusiastic
Canadians, was that they were erroneously assuming that the RFSs (at
least, if not CFSs as well) were objects involved with the provisioning
of a Product on the network. This I assured them was not correct. The
Service is the service used when using the Product, not the provisioning
process used to create a Product in the network.
A third issue was how to
describe the provisioning process for RFSs. Logically you provision a
Product by breaking it down into its components - Resources that the Product
delivers (i.e. CPE - so we provision by Logistics delivering (and
optionally Workforce management installing the
resource) or by giving the
resource to the customer in the shop) and CFSs which we provision
decomposing the CFSs into RFSs and provision those on the network...
But, I hold that you don't
usually directly provision RFSs. With intelligent Network Elements you
pass commands (Resource Orders?) to the NE and it internally does some magic in
its "black box" to provision the RFS, and therefore from a provisioning
perspective we can (usually) ignore RFSs.
So, RFSs are as tricky as CFSs - someone recently asked me why we bother with these Services and I replied that before them things were even trickier. The SID has really helped Communications Service Providers describe their products in very generic manner using CFSs and RFSs.