Oddly enough, mobile service providers and device manufacturers are being forced to redefine their value and roles in the mobile ecosystem they long have shaped and dominated. The reasons are not hard to fathom.
The mobile industry's center of gravity is shifting from hardware to software, from voice to data and services, and from traditional telecom stakeholders to new entrants, says Thomas Husson, Forrester Research analyst.
But it is more than that. The mobile industry is reinventing itself, and the biggest changes are the addition of new providers in the value chain. The new and independent role of handset suppliers is one example, but so are software and content providers now parts of the value chain.
In fact, "the mobile environment as we knew it at the end of the 20th century is disappearing," says Husson. Firms such as Apple and Google now are playing huge roles in the business, for example.
That creates new tension as value--and revenue--shares now also are rearranged. In fact, access providers must contend with rapidly-changing shifts in value creation. That does not necessarily mean ISPs are destined to become low-value suppliers of commodity access, though that could happen.
It does mean all the contestants now are in an extended and crucial race to secure their own roles within the value and revenue chains.
Service providers face a limited window of opportunity to reinvent their business models and become smart enablers, says Husson. In part that is because software innovation, rather than hardware, is driving the business. Increasingly, that innovation is coming from new participants in the business, not the legacy participants.
Global growth also will center on China, India, and emerging markets, as has been the case over the last several years.
In developed markets, the issue will be selling more services and applications to a relatively fixed number of users, as children, seniors, and technology pessimists, the remaining untapped user segments, largely have been tapped. Broadband and data services are the clear focus.
The big question is how well service providers will compete with new value chain participants to create and maintain direct relationships with end users, which traditionally has been the province of service providers. These days, application and device suppliers increasingly are poised to create direct retail relationships on their own.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Mobile Service Providers Jockey to Maintain Relevance in Value Chain
Labels:
business model,
mobile
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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