Some believe the way forward for mobile service providers in the next era is to embrace and own over the top apps and services. There is little doubt that there is risk.
The logic is simple enough: in the future most apps will be used by consumers in an "over the top" manner. It also is not surprising that at least some providers of over the top, particularly those with a "partner" business strategy, make that argument.
But "over the top" parallels existing industry practices in crucial respects. First, assume that it is the carrier which "owns" the application. In principle, that is no different than a carrier owning voice, video entertainment or messaging services. Quite often, carriers are resistant to OTT apps in large part because they are not "carrier owned," an therefore generate no revenue.
But there are some strategic issues. If you look at the mobile industry as having been through three distinct waves of revenue leadership, it was voice, then messaging, then data access.
But it already is clear that, at some point, the era of revenue driven by data access is going to end, as well. That leaves open what the next era will feature as a lead revenue driver.
Aside from that, there are profit margin issues. Voice and messaging have had high profit margins, but that is changing with the increasing competition from over the top services. Broadband access margins still are reasonable, but the concern is what happens as customers start to consume more data, if retail packaging does not shift from "unlimited" plans, something that largely already is characteristic of most mobile service plans in the U.S. market.
Consider telco IPTV. Gross margin of 30 percent would not be unreasonable. But that is not "net" revenue, as the service provider has to share those proceeds with the content suppliers.
For the sake of argument, assume that programming costs represent as much as 50 percent of distributor revenue. That means net profit margin for a distributor could be as little as 15 percent. Some might make 20 percent margins, while the largest U.S. cable operators, with the greatest volume could earn more.
It still is not clear what particular apps and services will arise, after mobile data has reached saturation.
But it is possible that many such services will not have profit margins as high as carrier-originated services have had in the past, if only because some of the margin and revenue has to be shared with partners. The entertainment video example shows why.
Sunday, November 11, 2012
"Fourth Wave" of Mobile Industry Revenue Models Will be Challenging
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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