Network effectiveness ratio

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In telecommunications, the network effectiveness ratio (NER) measures the ability of a network to deliver a call to the called terminal. Busy signals and other call failure due to user behaviour are counted as "successful call delivery" for NER calculation purposes. Unlike ASR, NER excludes the effects of customer and terminal behaviour. NER is a measure of network quality defined by the ITU.[1] NER=100Answeredcalls+UserBusy+RingNoAnswer+TerminalRejectTotalCalls In general, the NER is used to calculate the effectiveness of the internal interconnect routes.

See also

  • ASR : Answer/Nb address complete message
  • ABR : Answer/Nb of initial address message

References

  1. ITU-T Recommendation E.425