Nearly four years ago, Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone hailed the arrival of Tata Communications as an official partner of the sport as the most important development since satellite.
Ecclestone said satellite was good for broadcasting, but was simply not interactive enough for the modern demands of Formula One Management (FOM), which needed to provide data to teams, broadcasters and fans in real time.
“For a technologically advanced sport as F1, you would be surprised that before they came in with speeds lower than your home broadband,” Mehul Kapadia, managing director of Tata’s F1 Business told TechWeekEurope at the British Grand Prix at Silverstone earlier this year.
“For them one of the biggest challenges is to get content out in real-time, globally,” added Claude Sassoulas, managing director for Europe at Tata Communications.
Read More: How communications are turbo boosting F1 teams
For Tata Communications, the deal was seen was an important exercise in brand awareness but also a demonstration to big businesses that its network could be trusted. The Tata Group is hugely famous in India and has acquired major brands like Tetley tea and Jaguar Land Rover, but is conscious it isn’t a household name elsewhere.
“We’re still an unknown in the US. What we thought was needed was a platform to demonstrate our capability – That we could deliver anywhere in the world,” added Kapadia. “This is truly a global sport. Except for Africa, it’s on every continent. Every year it goes to new markets, so it’s a new challenge.”
Each track provides its own challenges. Some, such as Monaco are in a city, others like Melbourne are in a park and Bahrain is in the extreme heat of the desert.
“Monaco tends to be one of the most difficult ones,” he continued. “We run our operations underground in a car park because there’s no space.
“It’s not about getting it right once. It’s getting it right every time.”
Having such a demanding customer like FOM and the ability to set up complex networks in short spaces of time is seen as a big deal for Tata Communications, especially in emerging markets where many multi-national companies are looking to expand, in a sector with intense competition.
Tata says it shows a willingness to work under pressure and cooperate with local partners to deliver fibre.
“Formula One don’t care who we use, they just want it to work,” said Kapadia.
“This is a global showcase for us. If you can do it for Formula One, we can do it for anyone.”
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