
Monday, June 18, 2007
WiFi Will Supplement, Not Replace...

Labels:
muni Wi-Fi

Saturday, June 16, 2007
Not Convinced, Eh?

Labels:
hosted VoIP,
managed services,
SME

Friday, June 15, 2007
telx|vision:IP Business's Gary Kim TMC's Conference Topic #1
enterprise peering

telx|vision:IP Business's Gary Kim TMC's Conference Topic #2
Is voice a commodity?

Ad-Supported Calling?

They will point users to their own Web pages, which will have a co-branded Jajah service from which people can make calls. Essentially, the media companies will subsidize voice to build traffic on their sites. Deutsche Telekom, Germany’s large phone company, is part owner of Bild. So, in a sense, DT is kicking the tires to see what's there.
Jajah will keep 50 percent of any advertising revenue that it sells on the pages it shows people while they make calls. It will sell a banner and a skyscraper on each page.
Separately, Globe7 offers a softphone-based approach integrated with video streaming. The play seems to be that the content downloading creates an ad potential. Ad viewing then earns calling credits. The angle here is possibly more interesting than the old "listen to a short ad and then I will connect your call" approach. PC-based or Web-activated sites can show ads on a home page, without disrupting a call.
Labels:
DT,
Internet advertising,
Jajah,
mobile VoIP

Thursday, June 14, 2007
Duh! at&t Should Have Talked to Some Cable Guys

at&t is promoting U-Verse IPTV services in Connecticut from an Ice Cream truck outfitted with a flat panel HDTV showing off the service. at&t also is holding U-Verse block parties and free concert or movie nights. It sounds as though the new tack is being taken because mass media advertising is a mixed blessing when a company is in the middle of a network build. Apparently at&t has finally discovered that it creates problems for itself when it advertises new services that only are available in a portion of a service territory reached by the mass media where the ads run.
Potential customers call in to get it and then have to be told service isn't available in their neighborhood. That's why cablers used to send out people with door hangers block by block as networks were built out. They tended to use the same "micro" targeting as their networks successively were upgraded. at&t couldn't ask anybody who had ever done this before what the pitfalls would be? It's not like it would have cost any money to get the insight. It's a one-sentence question and a one-sentence answer.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Healthy SME Communications Spending Forecast

(By the way, you can just click on any image in any post on this site and the larger version of the graphic will appear...just in case you are reaching for your magnifying glass to read the numbers!)
Labels:
communications spending,
Compass Intelligence,
SME

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