The success of any fiber deployment project relies on an accurate and robust feasibility and economic model, particularly when applying for the billions in federal grants and loans currently on the table for rural broadband connectivity.
When projecting costs associated with fiber deployment, working with the right partners to determine a model that accurately forecasts where costs occur, the downstream and upstream impact of these costs, and most importantly how best to drive efficiencies is critical.
Render’s digital approach to network deployment enables utility owners, engineers, ISPs and construction teams to achieve significant time to revenue and cost savings. Here we provide an overview of how Render’s Digital Network Construction calculator [available here] can help forecast the costs and potential efficiencies of your network deployment.
Navigating network design and build costs
Informed by our leadership team’s decades of experience as both utility owner and construction vendor, we have developed a simple yet reliable framework to determine the cost breakdown for your project.
Fiber deployment investment can be classified into the following core components:
A series of assumptions around the breakdown of the overall project cost is then be applied to each component:
These numbers are industry-standard and consistent with our experience deploying fiber in a variety of rural and urban environments, however, costs do vary with technology and other factors so adjust these as necessary for your project.
How did we land on the savings?
Based on a project budget of $50 million, here is how potential savings over a traditional approach are calculated:
How is the project budget impacted?
When these approaches are utilized and savings are applied, projects benefits of X-X% are realised which all flow to the bottom line and result in dramatic improvements to contingency, margin or cost-to-serve.
Financial savings are one thing, however, what’s most appealing to our community-focussed partners is how these efficiencies improve their business case for funding. They can enable more customers to be connected with a given level of investment, and cost-to-serve benefits that increase the probability of winning grants and investment needed to build larger and more impactful networks.