Sunday, August 22, 2010

"Places," Either from Google or Facebook, is About Local Advertising

Now that Google and Facebook both have launched initiatives called "Places" that add geo-location capabilities, it is safe to say both firms now recognize the potential for grabbing a share of the local advertising market.

Overall, small and medium-sized businesses with 100 or fewer employees spent $35 billion to $40 billion in all forms of local advertising in the U.S. in 2009, estimates BIA/Kelsey, a local-media advisory firm.

AdSense is one way businesses have tried to target local advertising, but there is nothing like "current location" in that regard.

Title II, Net Neutrality: Fixing What Isn't Broken or Breaking What is Already Broken?


Unexamined or unstated assumptions sometimes are not part of policy debates, but are nevertheless important. Consider, for example, the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the most-significant attempt to update in a major ay U.S. communications policy since 1934, by one measure, and since 1984 by a second measure. On the first score, the basic framework for communications regulation had last been set in 1934, with the passage of the Communiations Act of 1934, which codified most of the rules communications had operated under, for most of the 20th century. 

One way of illustrating the challenges of 1934, and the subsequent implicit issues in 1996, is to look at what issues needed to be regulated. In 1934 it was radio licensing and telephone service. In 1996 the issue was really competition in voice communications. One might point out that the historical peak of phone line usage by Americans appears to have occurred sometime between 2000 and 2001, and that usage has been declining, rather steadily, ever since.

On the second score, 1984 represented the voluntary breakup of the old AT&T monopoly, creating separate local telephone and long distance segments of the business. The Bell system breakup also introduced competition in long distance services on a wide basis, for the first time. 

The explicit assumption in every policy effort aimed at introding competition into a market is that too much market power exists. The implicit assumption is that newly-competitive policies will have been proven to work when the former incumbents lose market share. Sometimes, the unexamined assumption is that the markets being considered are stable; that end user demand for the product will remain strong, for example. 

All of those assumptions ultimately proved incorrect in these cases. The U.S. over-the-air radio market no longer is dominant enough to warrant much concern about market power, within the broader media business. All U.S. radio revenue in the first three quarters of 2009 was a bit shy of $10 billion, for example, and overall industry revenue has been displaced by a shift to television since the 1950s. 

The introduction of competition into long distance did provide lower prices and greater options for consumers. But long distance has gone from being the highest profit margin service in communications, able to subsidize telephone service for most consumers, to not being a distinct industry segment, and is among the lowest-margin parts of the entire communications business, if not the worst-margin product in the entire catalog. 

The Telecommunications Act of 1996 was designed around the assumption that the voice market was stable. With the rise of all manner of Internet-based applications and businesses, plus mobile services, fixed-line voice has begun a long process of decline as a principal revenue driver for the industry, in the United States and globally. 

To use but the most-recent example, voice communications deregulation, there is a difference between applying more competitive measures to a declining market than to a growing or stable market. Adding pressure to a shrinking business likely only enhances its decline. 

In the case of the Telecom Act of 1996, regulators essentially proposed "more competition" for a market that was about to begin a decline. People also forget that the dynamics of competition essentially pitted the legacy long distance providers against the local telcos. Between them, AT&T and MCI garnered a majority (60 percent or more) of all customers ever gained by the entire competitive communications industry. 

That effort ultimately failed, and most of the U.S. "retail long distance" industry no longer exists. 

One can surely debate whether, and when, it ever is useful to prop up a declining industry. The perhaps more-important point is that it doesn't make much sense to apply new constraints to industries or services that are in decline, as "voice" communications surely is. 

The unintended danger for virtually all proposals aimed at applying more constraints on large ISPs is precisely that it is the wrong time to do so. The unexamined assumption is that the industry is fundamentally healthy, and can handle a significant new dose of rate, conditions and terms regulation. That might not be the case. 

There always is great danger when any single industry faces technology or market displacement. The analogies might be moves to impose more regulation on steel, auto, newspaper or airline industries after it became clear they were in some state of decline. The other temptation is to apply subsidies in an attempt to stave off decline or consolidation, but that typically doesn't work, either. 

To be sure, you will not find service provider executives talking about such dangers in public. No executive at a public company can do so. They will talk about how well they are managing the transition to a new business model. They will talk about how well all their new services are doing. They will start reporting revenue in new categories to make the point. They will talk about all the new ways they can make money using new business models. None of that is unexpected, or wrong. 

But none of it is certain, either. Communications these days is a fundamentally unstable business facing a wholesale replacement of its legacy revenues. By any measure, that would be destabilizing. So service providers must replace lost revenues, grow new lines of business and also cope with changes to the business ecosystem that put pressure on them in new ways, chiefly by severing the historic relationship between applications and pipes (separation of access from application). 

In the past, virtually all networks have been application specific. Networks were built to support a key "killer app," and app provisioning and network services were simply parts of that process. 

These days, IP networks are open, intended to support all sorts of applications, irrespective of network ownership and operation. No matter what apps develop in the future, access networks will be needed. The difference is that the ability of an access provider to profit from those apps is unclear. That doesn't mean "access" or "transport" are not essential parts of the ecosystem: they remain essential. What is not clear is the economic value those parts of the ecosystem can drive. And that is the issue. 

Prudence might dictate that we not place additional burden on businesses that depend on "voice" revenues, any more than we should unnecessarily burden steel, autos, airlines or newspapers. There are problems aplenty. 

Perhaps you cannot imagine a world where telcos and cable companies are smaller, relatively more unimportant parts of the application ecosystem. But it has happened frequently in the past, and has happened in the communications business itself. Retail long distance used to be the cash cow that drove profits and subsidized service for the rest of the business. Voice used to be the killer app whose revenues drove the rest of the business. Fixed-line services used to drive the whole business. Obviously, all those conditions have changed, or are changing. 

Under such conditions, it might not be prudent to spend too much time or effort intervening in a business that itself already is changing. Intervention inadvertently could accelerate decline and instability. Right now that's the last thing America needs, especially when it appears another round of capital investment is needed. 


Google Test Updates Search Results as Characters as Entered

This apparently experimental feature of Google Search updates search results as characters are entered in the search term stream. Nobody outside Google can tell whether this might be be applied as a standard feature for all Google searches, but it certainly indicates an advance in algorithms, caching or processing, possibly all three to some degrees.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

LG Promises a Tablet "Better than the iPad"

LG Electronics is working on an Android-powered tablet device that will be "better than the iPad," says Chang Ma, LG vice president of marketing for LG's mobile-devices unit. If LG is deliver on that promise, it might ultimately be because it will be designed for content creation, not simply consumption.

The tablet will include content focused on creation such as writing documents, editing video and creating programs, the Wall Street Journal reports. It will also have "high-end features and new benefits," many of which will focus on productivity, Ma adds.

Get Your Netbook at the Drugstore

CVS will be offering a Sylvania netbook for $99.99 as well as Sylvania’s new LookBook e-reader for $179.

The $99.99 net book, which weighs under two pounds, has a seven-inch screen and comes loaded with Windows CE, will allow users to access e-mail, surf the Internet and visit social networking and video streaming sites (although one wonders how successful streaming will be on such a basic unit). CVS will be selling the netbook for about $5 less than Amazon. a

Facebook a New 800-Pound Gorilla in Location Services?


A rational observer would have to conclude that Facebook's "Places" will have repercussions on independent providers of social location solutions.

Ditto for Skype.

Facebook Places: Who Loses?

Most observers think Facebook's move into the location services space will have competitive impact on independent providers. Here's a discussion about potential losers.

Cloud Computing: When to Use it; When Not To

There's an old set of tradeoffs between buying services or "doing it yourself," where it comes to computing or communications infrastructure. Hosted VoIP virtually always makes more sense than buying systems for a smaller business. But premises-based solutions typically are more economical for large enterprises.

Something of the same argument can be when companies or people choose between cloud computing services and building their own data centers. Obviously, large enterprises often justify building their own data centers. Others might be able to justify renting space in somebody else's data center. Smaller organizations might well find that renting computing cycles is the better choice.

Google Sr. Manager, Production Network Engineering and Architecture at Google argues that the decision is highly dependent on duty cycle. Steady, predictable loads, especially at a high rate of utilization, will tip economics in favor of self-operated or co-located facilities. Highly-variable demand, and low volume, will tend to tip the economics in favor of a cloud computing solution.

"Think of it as taking a taxi vs. buying a car to make a trip between San Francisco and Palo Alto," says Gill. "If you only make the trip once a quarter, it is cheaper to take a taxi." But "if you make the trip every day, then you are better off buying a car."

"The difference is the duty cycle. If you are running infrastructure with a duty cycle of 100 percent, it may make sense to run in-house," says Gill. The detailed assumptions and analysis are here: https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0AgWfa8v6EGzjdElXQVFzU1plSXdEQmVHZ3M5YjlsNVE&hl=en&authkey=CM_RzL0E#gid=0

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Smartphone Application Market Bigger than Mobile Ad Market?

The worldwide smartphone applications market grew more than $2.2 billion dollars within the first six months of 2010. At that rate, mobile app store sales volume is bigger than all mobile advertising revenues.

Mobile application download numbers reached a total of 3.8 billion in only 6 months, compared to 3.1 billion in 2009.

Get Double Battery Life On Any HTC Smartphone

There are lots of practical things one can do to reduce battery demand on any smartphone, such as turning off radios that aren't being used (Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, for example) or reducing the frequency of updates and notifications for any service with update processes.

This is the most interesting tip I've run into: a cycling process that appears to condition the battery. I'm running it now and it takes 10 hours. Some say it will double battery life.

1) Turn your device on and charge the device for 8 hours or more
2) Unplug the device and Turn the phone off and charge for 1 hour
3) Unplug the device Turn on, wait 2 minutes and turn off and charge for another hour.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Top 5 Mobile Advertising Trends To Watch

If you look at the base of mobile users, text messaging will still be the channel that reaches the most people.
For that reason, mobile marketing remains anchored by use of text messaging. The texting audience is large and still growing, and text messaging remains the "lowest common denominator." Virtually all mobile phones can receive and send text messages.

The global market for ad support of mobile messaging will reach nearly $12 billion in 2011, up from about $1.5 billion in 2006, according to eMarketer.

But it is video and rich media which is the more-glamorous of the channels at the moment.

The number of mobile video viewers in the United States will grow nearly 30 percent in 2010 to reach 23.9 million, according to eMarketer, representing a reach of about 7.7 percent of the total U.S. population and just under 10 percent of mobile phone users. Those numbers are set to double by 2013 and increase still further in 2014.

By 2013, some even believe that video will be so widely adopted that it will be a significant driver of mobile data usage, representing an estimated 66 percent of mobile traffic, Cisco forecasts.

Marketing and advertising always follows end user engagement, so it is a safe bet video-based and rich media mobile advertising and marketing will continue to grow.

With video taking an increasingly important role in the mobile market, advertisers should keep their eyes open for opportunities to try out new advertising options.

Top 5 Mobile Commerce Trends for 2010

Comparison shopping, mobile ticketing, banking, shopping and marketing are the five trends most in evidence in the mobile commerce business, Samsung suggests.

By 2015, it’s estimated that shoppers from around the world will spend about $119 billion on goods and services bought using their mobile phones, according to a study by ABI Research.

In the United States alone, mobile shopping rose from $396 million in 2008 to $1.2 billion in 2009, and mobile campaign spending also increased by 25 percent to 30 percent over the past year, with companies spending about $313 million.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

People Text All Day Long, U.K. Survey Finds



New research from Ofcom, the U.K. regulator, shows that people use text communications throughout the day.
Text communications and voice communications both made up a fair proportion of media activity during the daytime, but both were less popular in the evenings. However, after the end of television peak time, text communications accounted for a similar proportion of media activity as in daytime.

What U.K. Consumers Do With Their Time

Not that U.S. consumers and U.K. consumers have behavior patterns that are identical, but new research from Ofcom, the U.K. regulator, indicates that media usage in highest in the evening. No surprise there. The findings also suggest that multitasking falls off during the primetime TV viewing hours.

Top 10 Location-Based Social Networks


That's a lot of competitors in the location-based social connections space, and an awful lot of competitors focused on friends finding each other around town.

CheckPoints will plot a different course, selling mobile access and connections with potential customers when those users are physically in stores.

If most check-in services today are aimed at younger users who most likely are single, CheckPoints is aimed at most other people who shop, including mothers who might be at Target or Wal-Mart.


Todd DiPaola, CheckPoints CEO, is pretty sure there are lots of practical things check-in services can provide, other than young people meeting each other.

Consider the $100 billion or so large consumer packaged goods companies spend to promote their brands and products using coupons and other activities. CheckPoints believes there is a major business for a “check in” app that actually can be used by major CPG brands to interact with consumers while those consumers are inside retail locations where their goods are sold.

Launching in mid-to-late September, CheckPoints will offer a campagin-based service that allows brands to connect in various ways with consumers inside retail outlets, using an application that includes a bar code reader. Swiping the reader automatically creates a check-in and then can trigger an immersive rich media session, a Facebook or Twitter connection or any other connection a CPG company can envision that includes a web address.

CheckPoints appears to be among the very-first firms to use social connections and location in a way that is directly of benefit to most large consumer products brands.

If a user goes to the grocery store, a check in occurs and CheckPoints alerts the user to participaing products in the store. Users don’t need to buy the product, and just need to scan the barcode of featured products.

Users get points or coupons that can be used to get goods ranging from airline miles to electronics.
The CheckPoints app awards points to consumers who check in at retail locations, scan product barcodes and play interactive games. Points can be redeemed in the CheckPoints Reward Store.

The system might be likened to a combinatiion loyalty program and point-of-presence marketing tool, with game or entertainment aspects.

For brands, the opportunity is to target and reach potential prospects while they are actually inside retail locations, in real time. From the CheckPoints perspective, what is attractive is that there is no need to strike deals with actual retailers, but only the brands themselves.

DiPaola says users can download the app and start using it right away, without creating more-detailed profiles. After users redeem rewards, they can share with friends to win additional points.

The company is self-financed at a level DiPaola says will allow it to reach critical mass without additional outside funding.

Where is Generative AI Being Used Most?

Generative AI usage at the moment centers overwhelmingly on information work such as creating, processing, and communicating information, a...