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Kevin Taylor MBE – Indigo Telecom Group Chairman

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Kevin Taylor MBE

This year has been a rollercoaster ride for industries far and wide, the most notable being the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on economies, governments, and companies alike.

For many, financial numbers and results dipped, projects were cancelled, and investments stopped dead in their tracks as the world’s population took refuge in their homes.

While most of the world were hitting the breaks, the telecom industry went into overdrive, as they took to the frontlines to maintain networks and connectivity streams, enabling the world to remain connected.

It wasn’t an easy feat, but telcos were able to steer the ship in the right direction by realigning their capex investment, focusing on immediate network expansion and managing their frontline engineering capability.

Inside Telecom sat down with the Chairman of Indigo Telecom Group, Kevin Taylor MBE, to find out more about the inner workings of the business and how Indigo remains steadfast despite the challenges ahead.

Indigo has been providing network and infrastructure to clients since 2009, currently operating in over 90 countries. Tell us more about your global expansion plan? 

Obviously, we have a strong presence within the UK and throughout the EU; our acquisition of a incredible design company called 4site, last December, has given us a number of positives such as strengthening our design capabilities across the mobile and network spaces, and that has given us two things:

  • It gave us a huge boost within Ireland by winning the national broadband to roll out fibre across the rural communities.
  • It gave us the capability to have a stronger fibre and wireless design rollout within the UK, which so far, has proven to be very successful.

The 4site acquisition gave us the ability to focus on an end to end design, build and support capability across mobile/5G, optical/fixed and broadband networks and data centres. This new three by three model allows us to offer end to end solutions across all the hottest and most current technologies in our industry.

So, our ability to meet our Customer demands are moving in the right direction…as an example, customers might ask for the following…5G design and build? YES, Broadband build? YES, Mobile Data centres/IOT? YES, Optical and Fixed Line Support? YES, our three by three model covers all the basis in the industry which means we are very busy.

In addition, we will be looking to strengthen our presence across Germany, the Netherlands, France, and Austria. The next expansion on our list in Europe will be Spain, Italy, and Denmark.

Away from Europe, although we have a presence in Hong Kong and Singapore, however expansion has been delayed due to travel limitations, which has been difficult amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

In parallel, we plan on opening in the United States sometime early next year and expanding with our Customer demand. It is exciting times but as a company we are passionate about moving at pace despite Covid-19.

How do you plan on accelerating business growth?

I’m a big believer that momentum in a business is essential for success, our customer demand is up 6X, our portfolio is expanding, our strategy is working, and our customers are supporting us.  It has allowed us to build on the positives we’ve garnered, hire new people and continue as a business making a difference.

The reasons why people like to buy from Indigo Telecom Group is widely due to our genuine desire to make a real success of what we’re doing for our customers, by exceeding customer service and delivery expectations.

Operationally, we focus our efforts toward offering a strong customer experience, by putting a high level of priority to improve their value streams within their very own businesses.

Guaranteeing the service model is of great importance to us, and that’s been reflected in our work, as our service levels have been 99.99 to 100 percent efficient for a long time now, even with the challenges presented to us since the pandemic began.

Other things that we’re looking to improve are expanding our three-by-three services model, reinvigorating our data centers to extend their capabilities to become more proactive, bringing in some digitization to allow more automation in the business, and creating an end-to-end service catalogue across all of our portfolio to make sure we are ticking all the right boxes.

Thus, our primary aim is to ensure we have excellent tightening operational principles within the business, increasing customer engagement, measuring customer response, strengthening our partner management, and lastly, making acquisitions where appropriate to accelerate our business.

I’m a person that believes in bottom-up strategies, rather than top-down strategies. Companies should involve the talent of their employees across the business to help define the strategy. This in our case has enabled them to feel part of the change within the company.

The 2019 acquisition of 4site in Ireland allowed Indigo to roll out new design capabilities across the UK and Europe. What gains have you made from the acquisition?

Our acquisition of 4site, in real and measured terms, has helped us add the wireless and fibre design aspect to our build and support capabilities, while enhancing our go-to market strategy as well as expanding the scope of services to our customers.

In parallel, our pipeline has gone up 6x from an acquisition perspective, while securing higher win rates than where we started, so in less than a year, the transformation to our business has been fantastic.

Indigo’s services portfolio is constantly evolving to meet the needs of your growing customer base. What areas of operations interest you most right now?

Here we must look at our most compelling areas, while looking at our engineering talent and capabilities in order for us to hit the sweet spot for us and our customers.

Although funds in the industry that are coming in are both on the telco and investment side, each investment needs implementation talent and it’s our job to provide this as well as deliver our capabilities on time while moving incredibly fast in many key aspects such as broadband, fixed, optical networks and next generation data centres.

There’s also the rise of the Internet of Things (IoT) and everything that comes along with it, which will rapidly develop with the rollout of 5G; in addition, there’s also edge computing, tower companies expansion and technology manufacturers launching better and faster infrastructure.

How does Indigo set itself apart from other telecom engineering companies?

Well you must consider that every major company in this business has a history within it, we have an engineering one, and I think our effective sales channel and the quality of engineering  is what sets us apart from the competition.

And to maintain that edge, we really need to understand the need to do everything right and effectively first time and every time; this is our company culture, and we are also keen to offer the younger generation an opportunity they deserve within this industry, which is a massive thing for me personally, and now we’ve done just that by filling some of these roles in the 100 positions we have hired over the last five months.

We provide full training support; we have just launched an apprenticeship scheme and on-the-job training is provided across our organisation.

With all of this bundled together, it allows us to offer quality, opportunity, and experience to these engineers, noting that some of them have become redundant or have struggled elsewhere during the COVID-19 era.

What projects are you working on and how is the prospect of 5G shaping the future of your operations?

5G is going to be very interesting going forward, especially from both B2B and B2C perspectives. Thus, the most integral part in moving forward is connecting with the right partners.

For a few years we have been supporting our customers by designing and upgrading our customers’ infrastructure to be ready for 5G.

We have also put a large focus on enhancing our build capabilities, which is a huge positive for us to be able to offer support to our customers. We’re aiming toward staying at the leading edge of technology and enhancing and growing our knowledge.

Will 5G rollout be prioritized toward businesses and enterprises first? Or will the rollout happen for both businesses and consumers equally?

I think there’s going to be a massive upside on the B2B transaction applications front, and segmentation of those applications. However, consumers will always want and seek the latest technology especially the younger demographic; we’re already seeing this via the increasing demand of 5G-powered smartphones.

Businesses will be looking at the benefits of 5G for enterprise, so I think the demand and priorities are going to be met equally. Especially since it’s going to support remote connectivity, like IoT, AI, VR, AR etc.

How can telecoms manage the mobile data explosion?

The most important thing is keeping our knowledge as up to date as possible and doing this by maintaining our engineering focus and depth. As I previously mentioned, we just hired 100 engineers, and pretty soon we’re going to be looking for another 100, and then another 100, training them all effectively to have the right skills necessary for what’s to come will be key to our success.

How have you coped with the changing demands brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic? What measures have you put in place to ensure the efficient running of network infrastructure at this time?

The whole world went into shock the first few months. I think when we went into lockdown, nobody really understood what Covid-19 meant, and projects were cancelled left, right, and center.

However, the support of critical industry must keep going regardless of all the problems associated with Covid-19, especially with the massive importance of connectivity, for hospitals, businesses and, consumers alike.

We must keep the communications world operational.

At the beginning – apart from the critical projects – things slowed down for months or so, and then suddenly investments started again; telecommunications companies needed to scale up their networks due to people’s heavy usage of video conferencing technology, gaming,  multimedia and many other applications.

Usage has been going through the roof… we have all played a part in keeping everyone connected.  The increased usage of data around the globe has meant the telecoms industry has been rushing to invest in increasing the size of their networks.

In parallel, since the beginning of the summer, the pandemic has accelerated new technologies, which is why there are big amounts of investments going into our industry, and from that, we as a company, have grown tremendously, and hopefully we will continue to build on that growth.

On the ground, our engineers haven’t stopped, they have been on the frontlines with the right PPE and support, and I think they’ve done an absolutely brilliant and amazing job at keeping all of our customers happy. They together with all other key workers across many industries are my heroes.

Initially, in the back office, our employees have worked from home, and now we’ve implemented a rotation schedule for them that’s been in place for the past 4 to 5 months, which has kept morale strong.

One point of interest, our millennial staff are desperate to get back to the office, wanting to work from the office and work within a space that puts them in the right mindset to reach their full potential; thus, with the new rotation model, they’re happy to be back.

Is your business strategy keeping pace with the market? What challenges are you facing now?

First and foremost is keeping the momentum in the business, being aware of that and finding the right strategy to keep moving forward. In addition, one of our main challenges is hiring the right talent, continuing putting our customers first.

All while having fun within this strange new reality.

You have over 25 years of experience in telecoms. What excites and perturbs you about the industry today?

Every spring and autumn, there’s a new fashion in the world of telecoms and technology, and what excites me the most is keeping up with that fashion. An example of this can be seen when the first contactless solution in the transportation industry first surfaced in Hong Kong in 1997. I was a part of that – it was new and fashionable.

Whatever the next generation of fashion may be, I want to be part of it, and I think the most current one is 5G.

There are more changes that are happening today in technology than I’ve witnessed in my entire career, and I started back when we had shared mainframes, but to me, it’s all about what’s coming next.

Secondly, I’m very big on diversity; during my tenure in Asia-Middle East-Africa, I was the first in placing woman CEOs to lead businesses both in China and Japan. The selection was done because they were the best candidates at the time of interview by a country mile, but it culturally turned heads. I enjoyed that.

I also want to ensure that everyone has an equal opportunity within this industry. For example, when I was Chairman of the British Chamber in Hong Kong, I worked with six big companies – among them banks, technology companies and utility companies – where we brought together youngsters who were on vocational training, they had fantastic ability but lacked the personal financial circumstances to go to university.

We rotated a number of individuals around each of the six companies to give them work experience while enacting a “if you like them, you hire them” policy, it was a tremendous success. People who would have never had the chance to work for companies due to a lack of qualifications, were offered the opportunity because of their capabilities.

It’s the human element as well as the need to give future generations every opportunity, that really excites me the most. I believe we all have a moral obligation in life, this keeps me energized every day.

We’re a diverse group of industry professionals from all corners of the world. Our desire is to provide a high-quality telecoms publication that caters to an international market, offering the latest and most relevant telecoms information to businesses, entrepreneurs and enthusiasts.

Interviews

Exclusive – Global Health Tech Platform, Proximie Digitizes Operating Rooms

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Digitizing operations and diagnostic rooms have become necessary as the world accelerates its pace to accommodate the global shift towards digitalization. Digital transformation in healthcare has become one of the main pillars driving innovation in the health sector. It creates a robust foundation that will positively impact technology on human lives.

Proximie, the global health technology platform digitizing operating rooms (OR) from all around the world, provides clinicians with the proper means to virtually interact with each other in a way that mirrors the same experience of collaborating under one roof. With the incorporation of live-virtual alliance with mixed-reality (MR) technologies by using artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), and augmented reality (AR), Proximie is delivering a reinforced approach to remotely interacting in a live protocol to furnish a solution tailored to accustom to the needs of high-end hospitals.

Inside Telecom sat with Proximie for in-depth analysis with founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Dr. Nadine Hachach-Haram to highlight the company’s inception, the role of the COVID-19 pandemic in accelerating the healthcare sector’s needs of its technology, collaborations, and the role of the rising fifth-generation network (5G) will have its futuristic growth.

INSIDE TELECOM: Could you please introduce yourself, Proximie, and the Eureka moment that led up to the company’s inception? 

Dr. Hachach-Haram: My name is Dr. Nadine Hachach-Haram, and I’m the CEO and Founder of Proximie. I am also a Consultant Plastic Surgeon and Head of Clinical Innovation at Guy’s and St. Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust in London. 

There were two Eureka moments for me really; the first one came when I decided I wanted to become a surgeon. The second came when the idea for Proximie was born.

Growing up in postwar Lebanon in the early 1990s definitely shaped my desire to become a surgeon. Seeing the human impact conflict exacted on my homeland had a profound influence. You would see a lot of deformities, people with arms and legs injured and missing. Things that perhaps you shouldn’t see as a teenager. I look back at devastating events such as the Qana Massacre in 1996 as a pivotal moment. My Mum’s family is from Qana, and we used to spend our weekends and summers there. At that point, I started to get interested in the ability to help patients and to look for opportunities. Soon afterward, when I was 14, a family friend who was a plastic surgeon was going down to Sidon (a city 40km south of Beirut on Lebanon’s Mediterranean Coast) to do some reconstruction for some young trauma patients who had deformities in their legs from burns, contractures, and blast injuries. He was probably a bit surprised I wanted to go with him! But he was willing to take me, which was great; I owe him everything for that. I still remember the day. I saw him operating on these children, and I think at that point, I just knew that this was what I wanted to do. I was mesmerized. After that, I wanted to see what was going on any time I could get into an operating room. Even now, I still love it. It’s very humbling when you are in an operating room, the patient is asleep, and you have a team around you trying to make a positive difference in a patient’s life.

Once I became a surgeon, I spent ten years working on global health initiatives around the world. During that period, I definitely found myself feeling like I simply wasn’t doing enough. You start to look back and see what impact you’ve had and how much you’ve actually been able to scale expertise or support independent delivery of care locally. When I looked at the Lancet Commission that revealed five billion people in the world lack access to safe surgery, I realized that we were only scratching the surface. That it was really about building scalable, sustainable models of support and delivery, so I started to look at technology, and the idea for Proximie was born.

I founded Proximie based on the ethos that shared knowledge leads to accelerated learning and better patient care. Proximie was built to allow experts to virtually scrub into operating rooms and cath labs around the world, to support, coach and mentor each other, and to really look at the continuum of expertise throughout a surgeon’s career. I had been exposed to early-stage telecommunications platforms, but all of them are anchored to one moment in time. One meeting, one call, one conference, but then it’s gone. The options available did not enable a continuum of sharing knowledge and expertise, and they were too passive. You can’t do remote surgery in 2D. It has to be more immersive than that. What we wanted to do with Proximie was to create a multi-sensory experience that was a catalyst for collaboration and could digitize a surgeon’s footprint.

We wanted to extend the geographical reach of a surgeon and create the effect of a borderless operating room that could empower physicians to remotely share knowledge that could ultimately reduce variation in care and help save lives.

INSIDE TELECOM: Not many people, companies, and industries can say that the pandemic was an accelerating force in their development; based on that, you could give us some highlights of how the global health crisis affected Proximie? What were some of the challenges faced during the pandemic? 

Dr. Hachach-Haram: There is little doubt that the complexities posed by COVID-19 have been unprecedented and that the pandemic has had a profound impact on the way healthcare is and will be provided. It has tested the capabilities of healthcare systems all over the world, which has compelled pragmatism, collaboration, and innovation in order to try and meet the varied challenges presented by this viral pandemic.

Necessity is the mother of invention, and we have seen how COVID-19 has forced innovation at a pace that was previously unthinkable. The urgency that was needed to try and combat COVID-19 has been a catalyst for incredible collaboration. We have seen the blurring of lines between the private and public sectors for the greater good. This has certainly been the case at Proximie, where we have been deployed around the world to remotely connect surgeons and healthcare workers in the battle against COVID-19. As a frontline NHS surgeon, myself, I’m immensely proud that we have been able to help in the acute phase of the pandemic.

One of the key facets of why our platform has been used all around the world to battle COVID-19 is due to the way we designed Proximie. It was designed from the outset so that it would never be a siloed product. It has now been used in every surgical specialty and can extend across the whole surgical industry or ecosystem within a hospital. That software-first approach has enabled us to quickly layer on really exciting new technologies, and to the broadest user base possible, at a time when people have desperately needed to work efficiently, remotely. The key is accessibility. Proximie needs to function in a wide variety of geographical areas, social contexts, and environments, but also be malleable to innovative ideas, technologies, people, or hardware companies.

The pace of innovation tends to be quicker in software than hardware. It’s important to remember that a software-first approach means that we can continue to innovate and adapt quickly to the needs of our customers, delivering value on a continual basis. This doesn’t preclude us from integrating into existing hardware in the operating room, and this is no mean feat to be able to integrate with older pieces in some parts of the world and the latest machines like robots in others.

That software-first approach means we have been able to form the basis of a responsive approach to some of the challenges being posed by COVID-19. Due to the virus, there has been an urgent need to incorporate integrated technologies into routine or complex practices because of the requirement to find ways to seamlessly maximize healthcare resources, scale the delivery of expertise and reduce the transmission of the virus.

In many respects, Proximie was built for a pandemic of this nature. From enabling self-isolating clinicians to remotely support colleagues on the front line to virtually connecting MDTs for hand trauma and cancer management so that every clinician can connect and collaborate off-site during COVID-19. We are finding new ways to apply our technology to amplify the skills of frontline clinicians. For example, at the tail end of last year, at the height of the Omicron variant, a globally respected interventional radiologist from the University Hospital of Strasbourg virtually scrubbed into proctor a series of Cryoablation procedures that took place at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust. Was it not for Proximie, and these important cancer procedures would have been postponed? To read about some of the innovative ways clinicians have harnessed Proximie, read here.

Proximie has also been used extensively for training purposes, to democratize surgical skills and techniques remotely, while access to travel and operating rooms has been restricted.

A recent paper, published by Dr. Albert Hajj in The Journal of Urology, concluded that Proximie “allowed more flexibility in patient scheduling and reduced travel costs with similar outcomes” compared to face-to-face, and I think we’re increasingly seeing this during the current pandemic. Proximie is being used to enable surgeons to stay connected, stay safe and collaborate from a distance. This is obviously critical as we continue to try and stop the spread of COVID-19. Surgeons have been looking at ways they can limit physical numbers in operating rooms yet increase clinical expertise.

I think COVID-19 was a catalyst for the rapid adoption of Proximie and many other technologies, but what’s most exciting for us is that our platform is now being hardwired into clinical pathways all over the world, and that is only going to benefit the patient.

It’s certainly not going to dissipate once the world has successfully battled COVID. If anything, their use will become more habitual as we layer on new technologies.

INSIDE TELECOM: 2021 has surely been a positive hectic year for the company, as Proximie partnered with Vodafone UK on a 5G remotely assisted surgery trial with Cardiff and Vale University Health Board. Could you tell us about the benefits of this partnership? 

Dr. Hachach-Haram: Having the best connectivity is imperative for delivering digital health services at scale. This was one of the main motivations for partnering with Vodafone – Europe’s leading mobile network provider. 

Building on our existing partnerships with digital infrastructure providers in the operating room, the Vodafone partnership has increased our access and allowed us to provide complete, connected surgical care to a wider audience.

INSIDE TELECOM: How will 5G continue to impact the company’s core technologies positively? 

Dr. Hachach-Haram: In this space, we know we can’t be static, and we’re always looking at new and innovative ways to serve our surgical community better. One area of perpetual focus is connectivity, which is a central theme to everything we do at Proximie. Today people die unnecessarily without access to simple surgery, in both the Global North and the Global South. If you can solve the global connectivity issue, we know we can redress the inequities in healthcare that exist all over the world. We know that today people die unnecessarily without access to simple surgery; in both developing and developed nations. By solving the issues that can compromise a surgery in any area of the world, such as not being able to access the right clinical skills or the right equipment, we can help to ensure that the 300 million-plus surgeries that happen each year can be delivered in a consistent way, and in a way that helps to save lives.

We need to increase our capacity to deliver better, quicker care and further than ever before. It’s incumbent on us to continue to push the boundaries of what is possible in an operating room and harnessing the power of 5G will certainly help us do this. For example, our recent partnership with Vodafone Business enables us to layer on the best of their innovative technologies – from 5G, IoT, and Edge Computing – onto our software, allowing us to play an even more proactive role in democratizing access to safe surgery.

We believe Proximie is perfectly positioned to harness the powers of new technologies, from 5G to SpaceTech, and channel them directly into operating rooms all over the world. To empower physicians with real-time insights and data and enable them to create better patient experiences. The ingredients for better-connected healthcare systems are right in front of us.

5G undoubtedly has a huge role to play in creating better-connected healthcare systems. It has the power to ensure the best technologies and innovations are made more freely accessible to patients all over the world, eradicate low latency, and continually improve patient outcomes.

By integrating connectivity technologies such as 5G and Space Technology, we can revolutionize healthcare and make it more efficient, effective, affordable, and, most importantly, accessible. Proximie is ideally positioned to harness the power of 5G and direct it into operating rooms all over the world to do just this.

INSIDE TELECOM: How many countries is Proximie dispatched in? Is there a specific market in which you’re looking to grow other than the U.S. and EU? 

Dr. Hachach-Haram: Proximie has conducted tens of thousands of surgical interactions and is deployed in 500 hospitals in 50 countries on five continents. We have also continued developing partnerships and contracts with over 40 major medical device companies and have access to 90 percent of operating rooms and diagnostic suites in the UK, US, and EU.

INSIDE TELECOM: According to your company, the software is provided free of charge to charities. How are you looking down on these efforts and spreading the use of Proximie’s technology to countries with a weak medical landscape? 

Dr. Hachach-Haram: The important thing for me is that access to safe surgery is not the reserve of a specific region in the world. Variation in care happens in high-end hospitals in the US, as it does in rural, one-bed hospitals in the middle of the desert; I think sometimes people think this is a Global South problem. It really isn’t. The Lancet Commission revealed that five billion people in the world lack access to safe surgery, so everything we do at Proximie is about accessibility. What we’re really talking about is building scalable, sustainable models of support and delivery and getting our platform into the hands of as many people as possible. We want Proximie to be as ubiquitous as a scalpel, with the ultimate goal being the Operating System of the Operating room. That means in every single healthcare system on the plant.

Leveraging private-public partnerships bring together powerful innovations and well-designed delivery models that are critical to addressing gaps with inequitable access to safe surgical care; we are incredibly proactive about trying to find the right partners to collaborate with in order to help provide better access to our platform. In addition to working with the NHS in the UK, in December 2021, we were proud to announce a new partnership to transform Kenya’s safety and quality of surgical care. We teamed up with Jhpiego, a global health non-profit and Johns Hopkins University affiliate working in +40 countries, to implement the Johnson & Johnson-funded Obstetric Safe Surgery Project in Kenya.

The aim of the project is to support the Kenyan government’s commitment to reduce maternal and newborn deaths and obstetric-related injuries by improving the quality of caesarean sections. In Kenya, 71 percent of facility-based maternal deaths are associated with caesarean sections, and 90 percent of maternal deaths are linked to poor standardized care.

Our technology is helping to expand and enhance the learning by obstetric surgical teams and provide mentorship in Jhpiego’s project, which is now underway in five hospitals in Makueni County. By helping to virtually train and mentor surgical teams in Kenya via real-time, remote consultation, we are feeding best practices into Kenya’s health ecosystem and providing better patient outcomes.

INSIDE TELECOM: Earlier in September, Proximie partnered up with Teladoc Health to connect operating rooms globally; what was the incentive that led to this collaboration? And are there more partnerships on the horizon? 

Dr. Hachach-Haram: Teladoc Health is the global leader in whole-person virtual care, so we were delighted to announce our partnership in September 2021. It forms part of our wider partnership program to strengthen the health ecosystem and further our ambition to connect operating rooms globally.

It is a global agreement, focused initially on the US market, which sees our software integrated into Teladoc Health’s Solo platform for hospitals and health systems, enabling an integrated experience for surgeons.

By layering our software into Teladoc’s platform, we are delivering a connected surgical care experience where operating room devices can communicate effectively with each other and capture valuable insights that will provide feedback to both surgeons and the broader health ecosystem.

We are continuing to explore and develop partnerships and trial new technologies. Collaboration is central to driving meaningful and impactful change. From the outset, we wanted to ensure Proximie was not static or a siloed product. We are keen to involve the best thinking from other sectors to support our mission and expect to announce some exciting partnerships throughout 2022 – which we kicked off with our partnership announcement with Vodafone’s Centre for Health with Deloitte. 

INSIDE TELECOM: As Big Tech companies look to continuously invest into virtual reality (VR), Augmented Reality (AR), Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Machine Learning (ML) capabilities to foster a metaverse. What can Proximie take from these endeavors to further develop your offering? 

Dr. Hachach-Haram: I think Proximie is at the epicenter of some fascinating developments, specifically how technology is being harnessed in order to provide better care. Surgery is adapting and evolving before our eyes, and Proximie is playing a central role in its evolution, both now and in the future. As a practicing surgeon myself, that’s hugely exciting. We wrote the commission on The Future of Surgery a couple of years ago, which looked at what it is going to look like in the next 5–10–15 years, and we’re already seeing how it is becoming more connected, more data-driven, and increasingly amplified through different technologies and mechanisms that exist. The patient surgeon interface is changing so quickly, and as we layer on AI into different applications, having access to real-time insights will improve patient care.

I’m really passionate about innovation in healthcare and how we can leverage technology to improve the care our patients receive all over the world, so I would always encourage anyone with a good idea to follow their instinct and go for it. But the key thing for me is the purpose behind the technology. What are you trying to achieve, and what problem are you solving?

Disruption in healthcare has many challenges, but I can say with experience that if it is really solving a problem, then adoption can be swift and decisive.

I think there are a number of ways the technologies you mentioned can have a positive impact, but equally, I’m always quite wary of new technologies that can be overhyped and fall into that ‘tech for tech’s sake’ category. I think we need to ensure that any of these new digital health technologies have a clearly defined role and purpose in relation to the patient.

To be honest, I’m really not that interested in imagining a dystopian future that has been visualized in science fiction books, particularly if it’s going to replace real-world experience, patient experience, and patient-centric care. This is one of the reasons that from the very beginning, we wanted everything we do to be evidence-based. Proximie has been clinically and scientifically validated in 20-odd independent research papers.

We have moved past the novelty phase of a lot of these technologies, so now is the time for any existing or new entrants to the market to show genuine, real-world usefulness. Not a gimmick or fad, but tangible evidence that the technology can help us create more efficient and scalable models of healthcare delivery.

It’s one thing to have a great piece of technology, and it’s another thing to have the necessary skills to implement and integrate them into complex healthcare settings, which can be incredibly varied worldwide. Proximie was born out of a need, and my ambition as a surgeon was to find a solution and scale it is using technology. I wanted to try and create a solution that could empower surgeons to collaborate in real-time in a very visual and engaging way. We talk a lot about “by surgeons, for surgeons.” So, we designed the platform to be used in austere environments, which is why we are currently used in developing nations and by the UK military, connecting field hospitals with NHS surgeons to provide better care for front-line military personnel. Accessibility, affordability, working at low bandwidth with existing or easy to resource hardware, all of these elements were factored in with the end environment in mind, which is crucial. Proximie can secure approval for use in a new hospital within three weeks because we know and understand the environment. I’m not sure that is the case with every mover and shaker in the VR, AR, and MR space. I think having our mission and purpose at our core has been integral to our subsequent growth.

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Interviews

Exclusive: How Will MontyPay Facilitate Global Payment Collection?

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As the digital world evolves, companies all over the globe strive to make their way into the digital realm. Although payment gateways have been present for years, they keep upgrading their operational ways and features to remain at the top of the industry. MontyPay, a digital payment gateway, provides a seamless and global payment experience, giving it an edge over the competition. 

Inside Telecom has met with Noel Moukheiber, MontyPay’s General Manager, to discuss the latest product features and benefits.        

What is MontyPay, and when was it launched?        

MontyPay, a subsidiary of Monty Finance UK, is a digital payment gateway launched in 2021.  

We offer a smart platform that helps merchants collect their payments effortlessly and securely. Our team is focused on helping our clients run and grow their businesses by enhancing the user experience and resolving their pain points.         

Being an innovative payment service provider, we aim to position MontyPay as one of the Fintech leaders in the world.         

What are the vision and goals of the company?       

Our vision is to become a payment hub for all merchants worldwide, providing the most advanced platform with the latest features and various payment methods. We develop our solution based on our customers’ needs, and we constantly strive to exceed their expectations.         

Most of all, we believe in building long-term relationships with our acquirers and merchants, in order to keep growing.         

What are the different services and products MontyPay provides?    

    At MontyPay, we combine the online shopping experiences with the digital world by connecting payments to our gateway platform.     

We offer a wide range of features, including but not limited to: 

Smart Routing and Cascading: We boost our merchants’ transactions approval rate. We support our international merchants in their different countries, and we route their transactions through foreign acquirers based on many factors such as currency transaction amount, payment scheme, etc.       

This feature helps minimize the transaction costs and increase the acceptance rate.     

Online and mobile checkout: We provide a consolidated platform that supports numerous plugins and SDKs for both online stores and mobile apps, allowing merchants to manage all their online payments with a single login.      

Pay by link and QR Code: Merchants can now generate more revenue by collecting their money quickly and immediately. They create an invoice in just a few seconds and send a payment link or QR code by email, WhatsApp, or social media platforms.      

Recurring Billing: Our platform supports tokenization, which helps merchants to create recurring billing such as membership or subscription simply once and then collect payments seamlessly and securely.   

Installments:  We offer easy payments facilities to our merchants’ clients by providing a win-win solution. Customers can convert their purchases into installments without going through a bank, which will allow the merchants to sell even more.         

Crypto Payments: Our merchants can now accept crypto payments and get paid in Euro. We allow merchants to accept payments in Bitcoin and 30+ other cryptocurrencies. This can save a business up to 80 percent in payment costs.       

On top of that, we are building a Merchant Mobile App providing our customers with a seamless experience. They can access their dashboard, analytics, and transactions details directly from their mobile. The app will be launched in the second quarter (Q2) of 2022.              

In which countries does MontyPay operate? Do you have any expansion plans soon?        

In a brief period, MontyPay gained the trust of leading banks and financial institutions. We are currently live in the European Union (EU) countries, UK, Australia, Lebanon, Jordan, and Nigeria.        

Our business development team is working aggressively to cover more countries in the Middle East, Africa, Asia, and North/South America.        

Our strategic acquiring partners are selected carefully to provide merchants with a broader selection of payment solutions. We build relationships based on trust and professionalism.       

Given that the Payment Gateway is an already existing business, how do you plan to differentiate yourself from the competition?        

Our strengths are our TEAM, our TECHNOLOGY, and our TRANSPARENCY.    

    We differentiate ourselves from the competition through the tailored services that we provide to our merchants, a dedicated account manager and a one-to-one technical and operation support. Moreover, we offer a live chat feature to our merchants so they can communicate with our team directly from their platform.        

On the other hand, our technology is both advanced and user-friendly. It’s built to be intelligent. Our research and development (R&D) team is keen on implementing the latest payment trends and features to improve our platform.        

Transparency is one of our core values. Not just on the pricing level but also in terms of integrity and trust which are the foundation of our relations with our customers, employees, partners, and investors.            

What customer base is MontyPay aiming to target?        

We are open to working with all kinds of businesses, from startups to large enterprises, and we treat them all equally. Our focus is on online stores, education, travel agencies, insurance companies, and other merchants looking to accept cards or any other alternative payments.        

International businesses and companies pertaining to same group will have one platform and integration for their different entities, which is why we will be their preferred partner. In other words, they will be able to manage all their payments through MontyPay.     

How is the market responding to this industry? Where do you see the payment services industry heading?        

With the pandemic and global lockdowns, businesses and consumers increasingly went digital, providing and purchasing more goods and services online. We are observing growth as we move towards less cash to more digital and contactless payments.        

Cross-border transactions are increasing. E-commerce broke the traditional local shopping habits and exposed SMEs to global markets.       

We also enable the acceptance of new alternative payment types such as digital wallets, crypto, etc.        

Countries worldwide are moving towards adopting the Alternative Payment Methods (APM), which will soon be the norm.        

How are monetary transactions secured through MontyPay?        

MontyPay’s platform is fully compatible with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard   (PCI DSS) security standards (version 3.2.1) to ensure the safety of the cardholder’s data.         

The platform’s advanced risk management system utilizes a premium fraud management tool to detect, analyze, and prevent potential fraudulent transactions.        

Apart from the in-house security team, we work with the best risk scoring services to identify suspicious transactions. Our operation team immediately informs the merchant of any red flags.         

Our platform also supports 3D Secure 2.0 to deliver a smoother and more integrated user experience.        

What are MontyPay’s strengths and the main challenges that it is facing?        

MontyPay is part of Monty Group, which paved a very successful path with Monty Mobile, established in 1998. We are leveraging this success to gain our partners’ confidence and trust.        

The platform focuses on the merchant. We are a lifetime business partner that stands by our clients by facilitating the process and providing a fast onboarding, settlement, and installment option to their users.        

Our challenges are to keep up with the local market regulations and introduce solutions that enable merchants to meet these regulations and accept different types of payments that are most secure. The key for businesses is to understand the payment preferences of each country, as they vary widely.        

Define MontyPay’s relation with financial institutions like Banks, as well as the company’s current runway and future funding plans?    

MontyPay has secured the required seed funding from its sponsor, Monty Mobile Group. From now on and in line with its product roadmap and expansion plan, we are planning to go for its Pre-Serie A fundraising round by Q2-Q3 2022.    

The early-stage financing will be mainly deployed to gain organic clients through marketing campaigns, hire staff in key positions, and enhance its technology to offer new advanced features.    

As the General Manager of a startup, what makes you believe that MontyPay will turn out to be a success story?     

MontyPay will succeed because of our visionary Chairman, Mr. Mountasser Hachem, who’s seeking to build the most advanced digital payment gateway, and because of our dedicated and strong team who’s working hard to make this happen.    

Our objective is to empower our customers with a solid omnichannel experience. We know that there will be many challenges, but we look forward to working with our partners and clients to achieve great success.    

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Cisco VP highlights need for inclusivity when entering the 4IR

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As the global health crisis slowly subsides, one cannot ignore the fact that the pandemic forced a brave new world onto all of us. Pandemic-infused conundrums have evolved from mere debates between both people and companies, are now being actionably championed by those looking to thrive within the fourth industrial revolution.

The future of work, digital transformation, cybersecurity, smart cities, privacy, and everything in between have been thrown into the limelight, as the decisions and regulations taken today will affect our relationship with tech for generations to come.

To everyone, it’s considered a whole new world of opportunity where organizations of all walks of life have been forced to convert to digital, not only to remain adaptable to the winds of change of technology, but to merely survive the data explosion to come.

A 2018 McKinsey survey showed that well before the pandemic, 92 percent of company leaders believed “their business model would not remain economically viable through digitization.”

While companies across the globe have invested their resources into future-proofing their organizations, not many have championed the 4IR as notable as California-based tech giant, Cisco, who has been pushing for a more digital future from the get-go.

Inside Telecom sat down with Reem Asaad, Cisco’s Vice President for Middle East Africa, to better understand the company’s focus and efforts for what’s ahead.

INSIDE TELECOM: Cisco has been a driving force in a number of technological avenues, most notably by championing both remote and hybrid working models; accordingly, how does the company view the future of work? And how will Cisco look to double down on this view?

Asaad: At Cisco we believe work is not where you go, it’s what you do. That’s why we’re flexible on the numbers of days in — or out — of the office. In fact, pre-pandemic only a third of our employees were in the office full time, so we’ve long been a hybrid-first company.

This puts Cisco, and our technologies, in a unique position to help other organizations advance their hybrid work strategies. We view powering hybrid work in two distinct ways: enabling a Hybrid Workforce and transforming Hybrid Workspaces.

Enabling a Hybrid Workforce means providing secure access and collaboration from anywhere, anytime. Transforming your Hybrid Workspace only happens when networking, security, and collaboration tools come together to enhance health and well-being, safety, and efficiencies.

INSIDE TELECOM: Remote working is considered as an important aspect of digital transformation with some calling it “a main pillar of the fourth industrial revolution,” with that in mind, how is Cisco looking to bolster digitization on enterprise-level with its offering?

Asaad: We’ve been taking significant steps forward in helping the industries unlock the potential of their hybrid workforces – providing with unique insights and studies, while enabling them to collaborate in new ways and drive inclusive experience.

Since the pandemic started, Cisco has launched more than 1,000 Webex innovations. At WebexOne 2021 that was held recently, we announced significant new innovations across Webex ecosystem, the industry’s first and most comprehensive end-to-end hybrid work solution.

Webex Suite’s new meetings and messaging capabilities help our customers empower equal participation, from everywhere. Similarly, our new collaboration devices enhance effective collaboration, and the new Webex Events portfolio powers hybrid events at scale. Additionally, Webex interoperability with Zoom, Microsoft and Google video communications platforms ensures seamless collaboration with customers’ preferred platforms and devices.

INSIDE TELECOM: As all aspects of life are quickly and fully transitioning into digital, the importance of cybersecurity grows along with it, how is Cisco applying a security-by-design approach to its products within its core industries of focus?

Asaad: We believe that security has to be at the heart of everything. Cisco is major player in the cybersecurity market, and we’ve been building security into all of our technology, including user and email access, device and endpoint protection, network security, and locking down apps and data.

We also made several product announcements recently, including SecureX enhancements that address integrating IT and security inventory and visibility, endpoint detection and response (EDR) to XDR transition functions, new cloud security features via its SASE offering, updates to its Umbrella cloud-based firewall, and a new cloud-native firewall for Kubernetes development environments.

INSIDE TELECOM: Companies, as well as people, are bombarded every day with a plea to become more secure online, yet cyber-attacks and breaches are dominating the news cycle week-in and week-out, giving the impression that these tips and pleas are not sticking. Since cybersecurity is considered one of Cisco’s fortes, what advice can the company give both groups to bolster their cybersecurity efforts?

Asaad: Whether we like it or not, cybersecurity is a topic that affects society as a whole. Security is the most important investment that a company can ever make. While it may be true that an investment in security is unlikely to generate new business, it cannot be denied that investing in security will prevent a company from experiencing serious resources losses and seeing its reputation compromised, perhaps irremediably. The damage can be so significant that even established companies have gone out of business after a cybersecurity attack.

Therefore, companies must secure every single component of the system: hardware, software, and network.

INSIDE TELECOM: As we’ve previously touched up, remote working, digital transformation, and cybersecurity are all intertwined in the development and transition into smart cities and communities; accordingly, could you briefly walk us through Cisco’s role within this transition?

Asaad: Digital technologies are the key driver to achieving social and economic good and powering an inclusive future for all. We at Cisco work closely with all public and private sector partners to develop an integrated vision, which reflects the leadership’s efforts to create community and aspiration-driven cities of the future, with flexible infrastructure that is capable to manage and deliver connected urban services.

From inclusive access to smart water systems, Cisco is a trusted partner in enabling cities to operate sustainably and meet the needs of their citizens.

INSIDE TELECOM: In your opinion, what have been the main obstacles within this transition?

Asaad: Many cities today have ambitions of becoming the smart cities of tomorrow. But to achieve this, they need to overcome the challenges associated with mapping out a complex strategy that involves public and private participants, direct and indirect stakeholders, integrators, network and managed service providers, product vendors and IT infrastructure providers.

Smart city planning is a balancing act that involves citizens, public organizations, state and local government and private enterprises. Once this balance is achieved, it creates huge opportunities for business, sustainability, disaster prevention, public safety, and quality of life improvements.

Investment must come not only in terms of infrastructure, but also in upskilling and developing digital competencies in the people who will operate and oversee various aspects of the smart city. With little margin for error, a smart city can only be enabled if the people bringing it to life are forward-thinking and fully knowledgeable of the tasks at hand. At Cisco, our Networking Academy (NetAcad) program is designed to do exactly that – build digital skills to futureproof careers and help nations advance their digital agendas. Since the program was introduced to the MEA region, we have trained in excess of 1.6 million students. Today, we have well over 1,600 active academies, in countries ranging from the UAE and Saudi Arabia, to Egypt, South Africa and Kenya to name but a few.

INSIDE TELECOM: How can Cisco, and other major tech companies offer assistance to governments to hasten the progression into smart cities in an efficient and secure way for all?

Asaad: At Cisco, we believe that technology is the ultimate enabler and unifying link which makes people’s ambitions a reality. However, in the context of a smart city, a city can only be classed as ‘smart’ if it truly works for its people. Top-down approaches to smart city planning often do not consider the idiosyncrasies which may occur on a more granular, grassroots level. This is a mistake. A smart city requires constant iteration between its leadership, technology providers, end users and the wider public to create improved outcomes which can benefit the masses.

To address this, at Cisco, we are proud to be running an initiative known as our Country Digital Acceleration (CDA program). The program is a long-term partnership through which we work alongside national leadership, industry, and academia to achieve a country’s vision for a smarter and more sustainable future.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia are local examples of nations we work closely with in the region, via our CDA program. Sectors which we continue to work alongside local stakeholders to transform range from education and healthcare, to trade, tourism and energy. In each case, it is digitization which is key to developing a particular industry, and we think not only about how the city can be reimagined to for the benefit of the economy, but also to improve quality of life for all.

INSIDE TELECOM: Smart city development comes hand-in-hand with greener initiatives that are meant to foster a fiercer fight against climate; earlier in September, Cisco committed itself to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2040, could you briefly walk us through the company’s roadmap?

Asaad: For more than 15 years, Cisco has worked toward a sustainable future by reducing emissions, reducing waste, building more efficient products, and setting and achieving ambitious goals.

We recently announced our commitment to reaching net zero for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions across all scopes by 2040, 10 years ahead of when climate scientists say the planet must reach net zero to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. Cisco’s net zero goal will be supported by ambitious near-term targets, including to reach net zero for all global Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions by 2025.

To reach net zero include:

  • Continuing to increase the energy efficiency of our products through innovative product design
  • Accelerating use of renewable energy
  • Embracing hybrid work
  • Investing in carbon removal solutions
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