Thursday, June 12, 2008
Execs Know Change is Coming; Just 30% Claim Insight
There's no question global telecom service provider executives know big changes are coming. There's universal agreement that new revenue sources will displace voice as the industry mainstay.
There's wide agreement that traditional voice revenues will shrink for a variety of reasons. A shift of some usage to Web-mediated or IM-mediated providers and applications is one factor. But so are other IP-based and enhanced versions of voice communications that will substitute for legacy voice. Higher-fidelity voice is one example, say researchers at Telco 2.0.
What also remains clear is that just 30 percent of executives claim to know "quite well" the additional needs users may have for new voice and messaging products. At this point, that's refreshing. The industry has been surprised by the biggest innovations in demand on a fairly regular basis.
Mobile wasn't thought to be such a big deal. But mobile accounts now surpass landlines in many countries. Text messaging emerged from nowhere. So executives thought multimedia messaging would be big as well. It hasn't worked out that way.
Global executives were certain 3G would create huge new revenue streams. So far it hasn't. So there's nothing wrong with an attitude of openness to innovations that might develop, for demand that could exist, and for applications with revenue potential one might not suspect.
If history teaches us anything, it is to anticipate the unexpected.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Comcast Upgrades Sacramento, Davis, Roseville and Placerville Calif. Cable Modem Speeds
Comcast is doubling its highest Internet speeds for residential customers in the Sacramento, Davis, Roseville and Placerville areas to download speeds of 16 megabits per second and upload speeds of 2 Mbps.
Customers who already get Comcast's highest-speed service, which offers 8 Mbps downloads and 1 Mbps uploads, will be automatically upgraded to the faster service at no charge. The automatic upgrade to the new higher-speed service begins June 31.
Comcast offers two other, lower-tier services of 4 and 6 Mbps. Those customers would need to sign up for Blast! to receive the higher speeds.
Comcast and other cable operators typically conduct such market-by-market upgrades when competing against higher-speed telephone company offers. AT&T is a factor, but in Roseville, SureWest Communications offers a 10 Mbps Ethernet access service broadly to consumer customers.Mobile Transaction Processing: $1.9 Billion
Digital commerce service providers process the financial transactions that monetize premium content from music, video and gaming companies over the mobile operator's network.
By 2012, the market for mobile digital commerce services will grow to $1.9 billion.
Operators are seeing data revenue exceed 30 percent of total service revenue as the ring tone market shifts from a primary to a partial revenue stream in a premium content mix that includes ringback tones, games, full track downloads and mobile video, S2 says.
Tolerance for Email Outages?
Most organizations put up with periodic outages and most seem to tolerate that state of affairs.
But email seems to benefit from different expectations, in particular the store and forward use model.
The fact that voice mail is the same sort of experience doesn't seem to detract from the possibility of a synchronous session at least part of the time.
Curious, don't you think?
WiMAX Threatens 3G, Fixed Wireless
features and pricing to appeal to consumers, though business users will provide more of a challenge, say researchers at In-Stat.
The commercial user frequently requires ubiquitous coverage, which will be an issue initially.
"While early WiMAX network coverage will not be as large as 3G cellular, it will be adequate to appeal to consumers," says Daryl Schoolar, In-Stat analyst.
"When respondents were presented with
service examples and picked the one they most preferred, the one representing WiMAX was picked more than two-to-one over the one representing 3G cellular data, he says
Respondents are very interested in a wireless broadband service that
will allow them to connect multiple devices under a single service
plan, Schoolar notes.
Respondents also say they want a service that can meet both their at home and away Internet needs.
For this reason, fixed broadband operators are vulnerable to losing subscribers to WiMAX.
Survey respondents reported increased usage of public wireless broadband between 2006 and 2007, with expectations for further increases in 2008.
Belgacom Eyes Cable
In a statement the incumbent telco said that its offer was €70m more than had been made by its rival Telenet and 40 percent more than the upfront payment offered to the municipalities.
In this case there is the additional tactical consideration of buying customer base and revenue that is denied a key in-region competitor.
But make no mistake: organic growth is slow, tedious work these days. Leaps occur mostly through acquisition.
Sprint Churn Bottoming?
Sprint Nextel has lost one million customers since the end of 2007, a fact mirrored in surveys of ChangeWave Research members.
The more important news, though, may be a possible bottoming. It is possible Sprint finally has stabilized its churn problem.
In March 2008, for example, a survey of 3,597 consumers found 11 percent reporting they are Sprint Nextel customers.
Some 31 percent said they use Verizon while 28 percent reported using and AT&T. To be sure, that indication of market share among survey respondents does not track very well with other measurements of market share, such as the carriers own quarterly and annual reports of subscribership.
No surprise: Sprint customers are least satisfied of all of the major provider customers. When asked how likely they were to change service providers in the next 6 months, a relatively high percentage of Sprint customers (21 percent) said they're likely to switch, compared to just 10 percent of Verizon customers and 11 percent for AT&T' users.
When people do change cellular service providers, very few are switching to Sprint (three percent ). The good news is that the number of switchers looking to join Sprint actually turned up one percentage point since the last ChangeWave survey.
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