Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Global Telecom Revenue to Grow 6% or More, Annually

According to International Telecommunications Union forecasts, global communications revenue will grow at least six percent annually through 2015. 

Nearly 80 percent of that revenue will be generated by mobile services in 2015. In 2012, perhaps a third of total revenue will be generated by fixed network services. 

In other words, as some of us are fond of saying, communications now is a mobile business with a fixed component. 

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Mobile Data Will Reach 22% of Total Mobile Service Revenue by 2016

Mobile broadband is the biggest single revenue opportunity in Africa in the immediate and longer term, according to the results of a recent Industry Outlook survey commissioned by Informa Telecoms &Media. By way of contrast, data service revenues represent about 43 percent of service provider revenue in the North American markets.

Informa forecasts that annual mobile data revenues in Africa will reach $18.5 billion by 2016. In 2011 mobile data represented 12 percent of service provider revenue. 

Legacy Regulation a Barrier to Network Modernization?

Nothing is more normal in the communications business than contestants lobbying for regulations that support their own business interests, whatever the "public policy" implications might be. Equally normal is the "lag" between regulatory frameworks that represent a technology neutral approach to getting citizens and consumers the "best" services at the lowest possible price.

It might be tempting to blame regulators for being "behind the curve," but that isn't quite fair. Regulators work in a highly political environment where substantial political pressures have to be accommodated. Many competitive communications providers simply acknowledge that larger enterprises in the communications business have more employees, hence voters, hence influence.

Likewise, small rural telcos have incumbency in their favor: they are the established providers of "last resort" communications services in isolated or rural communities, and regulators are loathe to upset them. None of that has prevented upstart competitors, including satellite, fixed wireless and even "dominant" mobile service providers from making the argument that the best way to provide advanced services in rural areas is to support efficient providers that can deliver services the fastest, at the lowest cost. 

But there always are political issues. Economic issues are a factor as well. Though the Federal Communications Commission has in past years given subsidies to mobile and fixed network providers, few argue that such disbursements, supporting two or more providers in an area, make as much sense as choosing one provider and targeting resources.

State regulators increasingly agree, and are regularly granting wireless providers status as carriers of last resort, meaning mobile service providers are eligible for subsidies that in past years have gone exclusively to landline telcos. 

Beyond that, competing providers are governed by industry-unique rules. Satellite, cable TV, competitive local exchange carriers and fixed wireless providers, for example, operate under distinct regulatory frameworks, though providing the same services. 

In a world without politics, that might not happen. But we do not live in a world without politics. And for that reason, virtually all competitors will complain, from time to time, that the rules are unfair. They are. 

Mobile Data Now 43% of Total U.S. Mobile Revenue

The U.S. mobile data market grew three percent quarter over quarter and 17 percent year over year to reach $19.9 billion worth of revenue in the third quarter of 2012, according to mobile analyst Chetan Sharma. 

That’s the good news: mobile data continues to drive revenue growth as messaging and voice revenue matures.

Data is now almost 43 percent of U.S. mobile industry service revenue. But the possibly troubling implication is that the industry is about half way to saturating the mobile data market.

If you want to know why mobile service providers are launching mobile payments, mobile wallet, mobile banking or mobile commerce initiatives, or machine-to-machine services, that is the reason. Another wave of revenue growth, big enough to displace voice, messaging and even mobile broadband, is necessary.

Most western markets have seen messaging revenue decline, though up to this point the U.S. market has resisted the trend. But in the third quarter, for the first time, there was a decline in both the total number of messages sent and received, as well as total messaging revenue.

Voice traffic will dip below 10 percent of the overall traffic in 2012 (revenue is another matter).

For much of the last three decades, voice has dominated the revenue streams for almost all operators, Sharma argues.


In 2013, global voice revenues will fall below 60 percent. So far, the drop in voice revenues has been matched by the rise of messaging revenues and mobile data. But mobile data also will reach saturation at some point, raising the question of what comes next.

The answer to that question is not yet clear. But most observers believe some combination of new applications, using network resources as an input, must be a large part of the answer.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Technology Shifts Can Take 10 to 20 Years

Being late to get into a market can be dangerous, but being too early might be the more prevalent mistake.

Though the tablet might be the fastest-growing consumer appliance of all time, most devices and appliances take quite a long time to reach ubiquity. Consider smart phones, which many rightly consider to be among the faster-growing devices of all time.

BellSouth launched the IBM Simon, with its rudimentary touch screen, in 1993. It didn’t catch on. About 2002, personal digital assistants started to have the ability to make and receive phone calls. RIM shipped its first BlackBerry about that time.

In late 2006 only 715,000 smart phones were sold, though, representing just six percent of U.S. mobile phone sales. Up to that point, the smart phone was spreading not much faster than personal computers had done, according to Technology Review.

Still, keep in mind that It took landline telephones about 45 years to get from five percent to 50 percent penetration among U.S. households, and mobile phones took around seven years to reach a similar proportion of consumers. Smart phones have gone from five percent to 40 percent in about four years.

But it likewise took about 11 years for use of mobile phones to reach 10 percent penetration, so it took about 18 years for use of mobile phones to reach about half of people in the United States.

Since it took about eight years for smart phone penetration to reach 10 percent of people, and then another seven years to reach half of users, it took about 13 years for smart phones to reach half of U.S. consumers. And that has been about the fastest adoption rate of any appliance, in the U.S. market.

Global adoption of mobile phones in the developing world has been stunningly rapid, as well.

In 1982, there were 4.6 billion people in the world, and not a single mobile-phone subscriber.

Today, there are seven billion people in the world and six billion mobile cellular-phone subscriptions. In other words, the world has gone to about 86 percent penetration in about 30 years.

From the standpoint of human progress, that is fast. From the standpoint of any single company, that is a long time. And that is worth keeping in mind. Most truly important consumer technologies take time to reach ubiquity. Would-be market leaders have plenty of time to misjudge market progress, and fail before “ubiquity” is reached.



U.S. LTE Arms Race Heats Up

U.S. mobile service providers are in the midst of a major “arms race” aimed at getting new Long Term Evolution fourth generation networks up and running, as customer adoption shows strong growth.

Verizon Wireless, the market leader, says it will complete its national network by mid-2013.

AT&T recently reiterated a timetable that some might call accelerated. T-Mobile USA likewise has stepped up its own efforts to build a nationwide LTE network. And Sprint likewise has purchased significant new assets in the U.S. midwest to support its planned LTE network.

LTE is not a commercial reality many other places in the world, in 2012, though, TeleGeography says.


Oddly Enough, Some Think Apple's Relationship With Consumers is "Not" Sticky

Most people likely think Apple has a very sticky relationship with its customers. 

But Alec Ellison, chairman of technology investment banking at Jefferies & Company, thinks Apple is more vulnerable to changing consumer tastes than Amazon, Facebook or Google.

Ellison says that although Jeffries is “bullish” on all four companies, Apple has the least “stickiness” with consumers. What he means is that Apple has to continue rolling out hot new products if it wants to keep its lead. It would be much harder for a competitor to unseat Amazon, Facebook, or Google, even if they don’t offer any new innovations.

U.K. 4G Auctions Might Cost Order of Magnitude Less than 3G

The U.K.’s 3G auction raised £22.5 billion ($35.7 billion) in 2000, amounts that nearly bankrupted most of the firms that won the bids

Long Term Evolution 4G auctions are expected to cost a lot less, despite more spectrum being auctioned in 2013 in the United Kingdom, at least in part because Ofcom has set relatively low minimum purchase prices. But carrier reluctance to overpay again also is key. 

The minimum reserve prices for the 4G auction suggest the licenses will cost far less than was the case for 3G spectrum, which has been called a winner's curse

Professional services firm PwC expects the auction to raise between £2 billion and £4 billion, TechCrunch reports.

Who Wins From Big Data?

History often offers useful lessons about the development of new markets. Ask yourself what happened in the enterprise software business for a glimpse of what is going to happen in the "big data" business.

A couple of decades ago, there were perhaps 200 companies creating and marketing enterprise resources planning software to automate business processes.

What were the odds an investor would have picked SAP or Oracle as the eventual market leaders? Less than half a percent. Similarly, what are the odds an investor can pick the eventual leaders of the "Big Data" business?

However, if an investor had purchased stock in the 30 components of the Dow in 1990 that were all deploying ERP, that investor would have benefited from a 35 percent decline in overhead costs as a percentage of revenues, a 500-percent increase in revenues as automation enabled massive scale, and an almost 800-percent increase in market cap, say analysts Peter Goldmacher and Joe del Callar of the Cowen Group. 

"We believe the biggest winners in the Big Data world aren’t the Big Data technology vendors, but rather the companies that will leverage Big Data technology to create entirely new businesses or disrupt legacy businesses," they say. 

Big Data, in that sense, is a bit like broadband access. Investors probably will make more money betting on the enhanced fortunes of businesses that use broadband, rather than the suppliers of broadband. That isn't a criticism of the fortunes of broadband access suppliers; just a recognition that the value of all businesses supported by electricity is far greater than the value of firms that produce and deliver energy. 

Sunday, November 11, 2012

"Fourth Wave" of Mobile Industry Revenue Models Will be Challenging

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. 

2/3 of Kenyans Use Mobile Money, So Government will Tax It


Some estimate that in Kenya, more than 66 percent of all people send money to each other using their mobile devices.

By such standards, mobile Internet access, though growing, is not as life changing as the simple ability to use a mobile phone as a way to send and receive money, in a nation where banking is not so easy as elsewhere. 

Unfortunately, it now appears that the Kenyan government is going to institute a 10-percent tax on the mobile money transaction fees, a move that logically will slow use of the innovation, as the imposition of a tax normally raises the cost of a product, and therefore leads to less consumption. 

It's a good thing that Kenyans can use mobiles to send and receive money: it makes banking services a reality for them. But governments had get in the way. Making such transactions 10 percent more expensive is one such way. 

Over the past couple of decades, government policies have helped, in part, by "getting out of the way" (deregulating) and "enabling competition." It worked. 

Many are too young to remember a time when policy makers and advocates had to grapple with the question of how to enable voice services for a third to a half of humans who had "never made a phone call."

These days, it is question with an answer. By International Telecommunications Union estimates, at least 87 percent of all people used mobile phones in 2011. 

Some might argue, with reason, that the actual number is lower, since some users have multiple phone identities (subscriber information modules).

Adjusting for that fact, the GSM Association estimates that mobile penetration actually is closer to 68 percent in 2012. 

The urge to levy new taxes is everywhere understandable. But lawmakers often seem to forget that a vibrant economy typically is a better way to increase tax revenue than essentially penalizing a growth driver. 


"Zero Sum" is Not a Viable Long Term Strategy

A threatened French law that would require Google and other search engine providers to pay content owners for snippets of content shown in search engines actually illustrates a growing issue in many new and changing industries, namely that new revenue relationships have to be built n something other than a "zero sum" basis.

In other words, when legacy suppliers see their revenue threatened by new contestants, the natural tendency is to fight back by getting the new applications, devices or services barred by legal means, when possible. 

If you think about the ways some countries have banned the use of VoIP, cable companies were barred from importing distant TV signals or the way the media deals with search engine, streaming or downloaded versions of their products, you get the idea. 


But that sort of zero sum approach winds up harming both legacy and new contestants. 

In this case, Google would likely stop indexing French media properties. How that is beneficial to the affected media is unclear. But Google's business also suffers, as it loses completeness, and is exposed to rivals who might be willing to pay such fees. 

Media economics have changed since the Internet arrived, as have the economics of communications and retailing. It's disruptive, to be sure. But the shift from physical to online consumption changes more than distribution, as disruptive as that is for "distributors."

In the shift from physical or legacy to online, overall consumption often can fall. That means less volume. But unit prices also tend to fall, and that dramatically changes profit margins for every unit sold, as total sales can fall. 

But zero sum approaches to industry revenue will fail, over time. The rational assumption has to be that products have life cycles.


Like it or not, fixed network voice, mobile voice, messaging, video entertainment services, newspapers and music on compact discs are products with a life cycle. Fighting over what is going to decline is understandable, but destined to fail. 
A common problem is that what once was scarce becomes abundant, with predictable effect on unit prices and profit margin for suppliers. 

So everything hinges on creating new products, revenue sources and industries. 

Sparring over revenue streams is understandable. But a zero sum approach is going to fail. 

Friday, November 9, 2012

How Much Does Rural Fiber Really Cost?

George L. Fendler, owner of Central Coast Internet in Hollister, Calif., has a problem. He wants to illustrate the “cost differences between fixed wireless and fiber installations in a rural environment.”

The problem is that “I don't really know what the cost per mile is for a fiber installation,” says Fendler. Lots of people would say that’s a very good question. 

How much does it really cost a local telco to build fiber to home plant in rural areas? The answer, of course, is “it depends.” But a 2011 study of rural telco costs for fiber to home build shows that cost is directly related to potential customer density, measured as “locations per plant mile.”

Broadly speaking, when a telco can pass five to 65 locations for every mile of outside plant, the cost per home cost per home  ranges between $4,000 and $5,000 per location. When the number of locations drops below five passings per plant mile, costs escalate quickly, up to $19,000 a location. 

How Much Substitution Will LTE Drive?

Long Term Evolution might be a "future" strategy in most markets. But it is starting to look as though LTE already has become a marketing platform in the U.S. market. Every major mobile operator already is deploying, or trying to figure out how to deploy LTE.

Beyond that, some have been waiting for evidence that fourth generation mobile networks are fast enough to displace some amount of fixed broadband access. Up to this point, the actual amount of such product substitution has been fairly limited, though consumers in Austria have been enthusiastic about relying only on mobile for broadband access. 

In Austria, 19 percent of households say they use only mobile broadband, and have no fixed broadband access. In Italy, about 14 percent say they have "cut the cord."

In the United Kingdom, about five percent say they now use only mobile broadband, while six percent report using only mobile broadband in the U.S. market. But those figures probably will jump as fourth generation LTE networks reach ubiquity in some markets. 

The reason is that LTE should should in some cases offer users about an order of magnitude faster access than 3G. 

And that will entice at least some users to evaluate LTE as a reasonable substitute for fixed broadband, especially lighter users who do not watch lots of streaming video, that do not share a single fixed connection for more than one or two light users, and who might conclude that the cost of a single mobile subscription with LTE offers a reasonable savings compared to buying both mobile service and a fixed network connection.


Verizon Wireless, for example,  now plans to complete its LTE rollout by the middle of 2013, two quarters ahead of its previous goal to blanket its 3G footprint with LTE by the end of 2013. 

AT&T now appears to be accelerating its own LTE build as well. AT&T and Verizon both have indicated they believe LTE can be a viable "next generation" broadband access network for many users in rural areas, for example. 

In that sense, both AT&T and Verizon will themselves try to drive LTE cannibalization of fixed broadband access. So watch for new signs LTE is driving more substitution for fixed broadband service. 



Mobile Revenue Still Start Declining In Central, Eastern Europe in 2015


Mobile service providers in Central and Eastern Europe will hit a peak sometime about 2015, and then start declining, according to analysts at Analysys Mason

Between 2007 and 2011, operators in Central and Eastern Europe had seen revenue growth of about 4.7 percent on a compound annual basis. 

But Analysys Mason now projects that growth has slowed to about a one percent compound annual growth rate. Starting in 2015, revenue will slow at about a negative 0.6 percent CAGR.  

Mobile service revenue at constant (2011) exchange rate  [Source: Analysys Mason, 2012]
Figure 1: Mobile service revenue at constant (2011) exchange rate, and index of mobile service revenue by region and Central and Eastern European sub-group, 2009–2017 [Source: Analysys Mason, 2012]
In Western Europe, revenue has been declining for some time. 


U.S. Consumers Still Buy "Good Enough" Internet Access, Not "Best"

Optical fiber always is pitched as the “best” or “permanent” solution for fixed network internet access, and if the economics of a specific...