Attention might not be the basis for every revenue model, but it clearly underpins most media businesses. It might underpin other businesses as well, including communications.
So note changes in how and where people in France are spending their "communications" time. Since 2000, attention and time spent have been shifting towards Web-based applications and pursuits, and away from telephone-based communications. To be more precise, 53 percent of "communications" or more might be said to originate in some Web related activity, not a classic "pick up the phone" activity.
Time isn't exactly money, so attention and usage do not translate immediately into revenue. But attention sooner or later will create the possibility of revenue. And if this sort of shift in how people communicate continues, revenue opportunities and potential inevitably will shift.
That doesn't mean revenue-generating endpoints such as mobile phones, other communicating devices or "access" services will stop proliferating. It simply is to point out that when so much communications activity originates in Web-based things, whether enterprise or consumer driven, something new will happen, revenue-wise. It has to.
Friday, September 28, 2007
Telcos and Web Communications: Who Wins?
Labels:
att,
business VoIP,
France Telecom,
IP communications,
Qwest,
Sprint,
TMobile,
Verizon,
Vodafone,
Voice 2.0
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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1 comment:
Hi Kim:
Just wondering what is stopping the operators from embracing the web integration. Most of the applications provided by operators can be integrated with the web. Instead of allowing third-party vendors to leverage on these apps, dont understand why operators are shying away from this model
Cheers,
Omfut
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