Thursday, July 23, 2009

Broadband Adoption is Not Just about Availability


Some observers think broadband adoption is primarily a matter of availability. It is important, but it is not the only important factor.

Even if every home and business in every OECD country were wired with a broadband connection, the United States "per capita" rank would actually fall to 20th, because of differences in the size of households in each of the countries.

In other words, "America would be 100 percent broadband saturated and yet our standing would plummet because the OECD ranks on a per capita basis rather than per household," says Federal Communications Commission Commissioner Robert McDowell.

In Spain, for example, 28 percent of people flatly say they "do not want" broadband. About 15 percent of homes do not own a computer.

About 13 percent of surveyed consumers say they do not find the Internet "useful."

S0me 12 percent say they do not have time to use the Internet and 10 percent say they do not know what the Internet is. Only four percent of non-users say it is "too expensive."

So the main reason non-users are not buying broadband access services is that they do not see the Internet's usefulness and value.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Questions about Zer01, Buzzirk

Nancy Gohring , a reporter fror IDG News Service, has raised some uncomfortable and so far unanswered questions about Zer01, the new prepaid mobile service launched by United Technologies Group and sold by channel partners including Buzzirk. The service promises unlimited voice and data for $70 a month, with no contract.

But Gohring says "what little information is available about the services is vague, technically inconsistent, and doesn't match up with public records."

And that's the least of the issues. Anybody thinking about becoming a distributor probably should read this as part of their due diligence. It's a heck of a piece of reporting and research.

Ad Market Recovery in 2010?

Perhaps we all are anticipating too much "normalcy" from the current recession and recovery. But PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) expects a 2010 recovery.

PwC says worldwide advertising spending will reach $421 billion 2009.

The bad news is that figure is down 12.1% from 2008, which saw $479 billion in spending.

Fortunately, PwC expects the online and mobile (which it treats as one category) and video game ad spaces to rebound in 2010 with five-year compound annual growth rates of 7.7% and 13.8%, respectively.

PwC expects all global media markets to see a rise in spending by 2012. Recovery will not be evenly spread around the world, however. Total ad spending in North America compounded annually will decrease by 1.6% from 2009 to 2013.

Online, mobile and video game advertising will see 6.4% and 13% compound annual growth rates, respectively, over the five-year period.

Online and mobile advertising spending, down in 2009, will rebound in 2010. North America will see overall advertising spending rise in 2011.

Ninety-four percent of North American advertising spending will come from the United States.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

No Inflection Point for Interactive Media, Yet

Nothing is going to replace search advertising as the top interactive category, just as nothing appears able to dislodge display advertising, between now and 2014 or so.

And though interactive advertising is growing, it will not displace offline alternatives, either.

By 2014, all interactive channels together will account for about 21 percent of total ad spend.

That is not to say greater changes are unlikely. One of the enduring lessons of "disruptive" change is that there is a sometimes long gestation period before an inflection point is hit. Then the change goes non-linear and vast changes can occur very quickly.

Nobody knows yet if that is what lies ahead for advertising. But it bears watching, as 2009 seems to have marked something of a watershed for print media, for example.

U.S. Internet Growth 3% to 2013

The total number of people online will grow by over 45 percent to 2.2 billion users — with much of that growth occurring in Asia — over the next five years, according to Forrester Research.

Asia remains the biggest global Internet growth engine: 43 percent of the world's online population will reside in Asia by 2013, with 17 percent of the global online population in China.
Growth rates in the US, Western Europe, and the major industrialized nations in Asia Pacific such as Australia, Japan, and South Korea will slow to between one percent and three percent.

That is a significant finding, as it suggests most people who want to use the Internet already do so.

Online penetration in the United States will rise from 73 percent to 82 percent over the next five years, representing about a three percent annual growth rate.

By 2013, U.S. online penetration will be on par with the most highly penetrated markets of Europe and Asia, such as the Netherlands, the UK, Japan, and South Korea.

By about 2013, if not before, there also will not be any material difference between people using the Internet and people using broadband, other analysts project. That should lead policymakers to take a harder look at the costs and benefits of any programs designed to "increase" use of broadband access.

The United States is about at the point where non-use of broadband is directly linked to non-use of broadband.

Mobile Marketing Second Only to Web Among Top Ad Agency Execs

Though mobile marketing spending lags far behind combined Web advertising, mobile marketing has become quite interesting to many advertising excutives recently.

Where a third of executives say Web channels are most popular, mobile campaigns are second, at 15 percent.

That is interesting as mobile campaign spending is perhaps one percent the size of search advertising, for example.

Traditional methods, including TV, print and direct mail, are in single digits.

To the extent that spending ultimately follows interest, mobile campaigns should skyrocket, despite the currently limited amount of spending in the category.

Search Still Will Lead 2014 Interactive Marketing Channels

Search will remain the single largest interactive marketing channel in 2014, and online display will keep its second-place status among marketers.

But social media marketing will show the highest growth rate, passing email marketing.

Mobile marketing also will grow by an order of magnitude.

Will Generative AI Follow Development Path of the Internet?

In many ways, the development of the internet provides a model for understanding how artificial intelligence will develop and create value. ...