Sunday, September 13, 2009

Mobile Users Less Likely to Click on Ads?


Mobile users are approximately half as likely to click on an advertisement as non-mobile users, a new study by Chitika, a Massachusetts-based online advertising network, suggests. The contrarian findings are based on a sample of 92 million impressions.

The Chitika study shows that 1.3 million impressions(1.5 percent) came from mobile browsing.

Non-mobile clickthrough rates held steady at 0.83 percent, while mobile clickthroughs averaged 0.48 percent.

While the recent growth in smart phones has sparked greater interest in mobile advertising, it appears given the numbers that mobile users are not receptive to advertising, a phenomenon that Chitika says is not surprising, given the mobile users’ propensity to be searching for quick answers or directions.

Of the five major smartphone operating systems--Google’s Android, Apple’s iPhone, Microsoft’s Windows CE, Palm OS, and Research In Motion’s BlackBerry--iPhone ranked the worst for clickthrough rate at a 0.30 percent.

But the iPhone also accounted for the bulk of mobile hits, at 66 percent. The highest clickthrough rates were observed for phones using "other" operating systems, including group BlackBerry users and a small handful of other phone operating systems including Symbian, Nokia, and HTC.

The clickthrough rates are certainly lower than expected, given the industry’s general consensus that mobile users are more likely to click ads, Chitika says.

So how does one account for the findings, which are contrary to what most would expect? Perhaps rendering is the issue. Chitika notes that the study compares the same ads delivered both to PCs and mobiles.

That likely means inability to render PC-formatted ads on smaller mobile screens reduces clicks, as the ads are unreadable, unviewable or unwieldy.

Still, Chitika suggests that mobile Internet users are disinterested in advertising, and iPhone users are the least interested.

So far, there have been few other studies on mobile clickthrough rates, compared to PC user rates. Given the obvious importance mobile advertising and marketing holds for funding new applications, the matter needs further study.

The study does confirm a couple of observations, however. Many studies have shown that iPhone user behavior is noticeably, sometimes even dramatically different from that of users of other smart phones. The Chitika study confirms that difference in behavior.

Friday, September 11, 2009

MetroPCS, Leap Wireless in Play?

The on-again, off-again potential merger between MetroPCS Communications and Leap Wireless might be on again, Reuters suggests. But both companies might be in play, with rumored buyers including the likes of America Movil , Deutsche Telekom (owner of T-Mobile USA or AT&T.

As often is the case, intense competitive conditions that are good for consumers are not so good for providers. A brutal and ongoing price war in the prepaid wireless business is depressing profit margins at MetroPCS and Leap Wireless, many note.

And while prepaid specialists long have toiled in the shadow of the larger post-paid market segment, growth now is higher in prepaid, which is attracting new interest. Sprint Nextel already has acquired Virgin Mobile, and most market watchers have expected more consolidation for some time.

For America Movil, which operates theTracfone prepaid business, the advantage of acquiring a facilities-based competitor would allow Tracfone to boost its profit margins, as at least some of its traffic could be carried and terminated on owned facilities.

Such a merger also would provide heft in a market where scale economies are important, and allow America Movil to expand in the postpaid market as well as the broadband access market.

MetroPCS might be interesting for T-Mobile USA, which would acquire a facilities-based prepaid brand, a move that would allow T-Mobile to expand in the prepaid market while protecting post-paid profit margins and retail pricing.

Others say it could make sense for AT&T, again as a way to expand in the prepaid segment with a distinctly different brand.

Sprint Any Mobile, Anytime: Serious Data Mining

With the release of Sprint's new "Any Mobile, Anytime," a new feature of Sprint "Everything Data" plans that allows calling to any U.S. wireless number, on any carrier's network, at any time, without additional charge, as well as the coming AT&T "A-List," which allows unlimited calling to any five to 10 numbers, it is getting even harder to figure out what a "minute of voice use" actually costs.

T-Mobile USA has had "myFaves" for some time, allowing unlimited calling to any five phone numbers, while Verizon has had a "Friends and Family" calling circle feature for years, as well. Both of those plans, like the new AT&T plan, allow the service providers to tout an enhanced feature that makes calling to some phone numbers free.

The Sprint plan moves beyond existing "friends and family" or "calling circle" plans that typically include only mobiles on a single carrier network, or only a limited number of phone numbers on any network. The issue is that the new Sprint plan, like existing plans available from AT&T and Verizon, which make all calls to other AT&T or Verizon mobile customers free calls, also introduces an element of uncertainty into user thinking about how many "out of network" minutes actually are needed on a monthly basis. That's the new element of uncertainty on the consumer end of the service.

Beyond that, large calling circle plans also have introduced a bit of uncertainty on the service provider end, at least as regards the profit margin on voice calling to "off network" numbers. One can assume that the marginal cost of terminating a domestic "on network" mobile call placed from a domestic "on network" number is quite small.

One also can assume that domestic off network calls within a purchased bucket of minutes carry a pre-determinded margin. So the really profitable scenario is when a user exceeds a bucket ("breakage") and has to pay a really-high incremental price per minute, or when users buy buckets of minutes they do not use.

Sprint's new "Any Mobile, Anytime" program is risky to a certain extent because Sprint might not fully understand how its users will behave once they have access to the new feature. Presumably quite a lot of data mining already has gone on, allowing Sprint planners to predict past termination behavior, especially the number of placed calls from Sprint mobiles that terminate off network to landlines and other mobiles.

It was just that sort of rudimentary data mining that lead all the carriers to craft programs that allow unlimited calling nights and weekends, for example, when usage is light enough that additional calling does not tax the networks.

But Sprint's data mining on behavior of its "unlimited" plan customers might have provided enough new insight into changes in user behavior that the company has confidence about the changes in user behavior that occur when users migrate from "large buckets" to "unlimited" calling plans.

Sprint might have uncovered in its data mining that the existing calling patterns of its current customers show a marked upsurge in mobile-to-mobile terminations, both on network and off network.

Sprint might also have discovered that, on balance, the cost of offering unlimited termination on rival networks can be captured within the new fee structure it has created.

In other words, unlimited mobile termination at current plan costs is at least revenue neutral when customers move to $70 a month access plans featuring 450 minutes terminated on domestic wired networks, or $90 a month when users terminate no more than 900 voice minutes on domestic wired networks.

But Sprint might also have concluded that getting more customers on data plans results in the new "Any Mobile, Any Time" plans being revenue incremental, not simply revenue neutral, after accounting for cost of service.

It's getting harder to tell what any given calling pattern actually represents for any user, at least in "cents per minute" terms. And that ultimately might be a very good thing for service providers and users. For users, the actual "cost" of calling will become less important an issue in choosing service plans.

For service providers, the actual profit margin on voice services might remain interesting, even as formal "price per minute" metrics fall.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

AT&T Launches Entertainment Portal

AT&T is getting into the online content business with the launch of its new website AT&T Entertainment. TheWeb site allows users to watch thousands of streaming TV shows and movies on their PCs. The online content, provided by numerous content providers including ABC and NBC Universal, CBS Interactive and dozens more, is available to all consumers at www.entertainment.att.net.

By delivering video entertainment to your PC, the new site is part of AT&T’s strategy to make popular content available to consumers across the three screens at the center of their lives — the TV, PC and wireless phone. AT&T plans to add more TV programs and movies from other leading providers in the coming months.

At AT&T Entertainment, fans can view thousands of TV shows after their initial network airing and movies from a variety of networks and studios, including ABC, Bravo, CBS Entertainment, CBS News, CNBC, NBC, Oxygen, Syfy, The CW, USA Network and more. Consumers can easily find content by browsing TV shows and movies alphabetically, by genre, or by network or studio. The site is open to any user; you do not have to be an AT&T customer to enjoy watching shows on the site.

AT&T "U-verse" TV and Internet customers who visit AT&T Entertainment can sign in to access U-verse "Web Remote Access," a popular application that allows customers to schedule and manage DVR recordings directly from their PC. U-verse Web Remote Access has been available through the att.net portal since 2006.

Palm Pixi for Holidays from Sprint


Palm's new Pixi phone will be available exclusively from Sprint in time for the holidays. The Pixi essentially is a slimmed-down version of the Pre, optimized for social networking and priced a bit lower than the Pre.

In addition to linking a user's information from Google, Facebook and Exchange ActiveSync, Palm Pixi adds Yahoo! and LinkedIn integration and assembles updates and messages all in a single view, threaded.

"Synergy" on Palm Pixi makes messaging easier by showing all user conversations with the same person in one chat-style thread, so users can start a conversation on AIM Instant Messenger, Google Talk or Yahoo! Messenger and continue it by text message later.

Complementing the phone's already rich Facebook integration with the contacts, phone, calendar and photo applications, a new Facebook application will be available with Palm Pixi so you can see and comment on all the latest updates from friends, as well as easily update your status.

The phone combines both a full QWERTY keyboard and a multi-touch screen lets users move back and forth between open applications using natural gestures.

The Palm Pixi runs on the Sprint 3G network and features multimedia options including pictures, video playback and music and featuring a 2-megapixel fixed-focus camera with LED flash, and a standard 3.5mm headset jack.

Motorola "CLIQ" Uses Android, Optimized for Social Networking


T-Mobile USA says the new Motorola CLIQ, the first Android-powered device from Motorola, will be available exclusively in the United States, using the T-Mobile network, later this fall. The CLIQ uses "Motoblur," a threading system that manages and integrates communications ranging from work email to social networking activity.

Updates to contacts, posts, messages, photos and more are streamed together and synced from sources including Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, Gmail and work and personal email.

Motoblur automatically delivers these updates to the home screen in easy-to-view streams so there is no need to open and close
different mobile applications to keep up with the latest content.

The 3G-capable smart phone features a slide-out QWERTY keyboard, a full touch-screen display and Wi-Fi capability.

Additional CLIQ features include a 3.1-inch HVGA touch-screen display, a 5 megapixel auto focus camera with video capture and playback at 24 frames per second, a 3.5mm headset jack, a music player with pre-loaded Amazon MP3 store application, Shazam, iMeem Mobile, and a pre-installed 2GB microSD memory card with support for up to 32 GB of removable
memory.

CLIQ also features multitasking capabilities and one-touch access to Google Search by voice, Google Maps with Street View, YouTube and Picasa. Easy access to both personal and corporate e-mail, calendars, and contacts is supported by Exchange Server and Gmail. E-mail and contacts are also supported by Yahoo!, Windows Live Hotmail, and other POP3 and IMAP e-mail services.

It also combines instant messaging support for Google Talk, as well as AOL, Yahoo! Messenger® and Windows Live Messenger.

T-Mobile`s 3G network is currently available in 200 cities nationwide and covers more than 150 million people. By the end of 2009, T-Mobile USA expects its 3G network to be available to approximately 200 million people across the United States.

The Click is the first of several products Motorola is developing as a result of its shift in software strategy towards fewer platforms and major support for Android.

Many of the elements that Motoblur contains can be considered the new expected fundamentals of the smartphone experience. Multiple home screens, customizable on-screen widgets, and integrated views that combine relevant information from a variety of sources such as various social networks, contact lists and email, are all part of the MotoBlur experience.

Is 768 kbps the Right Minimum Broadband Definition?

Predictably, comments by satellite and mobile wireless providers to the Federal Communications Commission on minimum broadband speeds have been criticized for setting minimum speeds that are too low, generally 768 kbps in the downstream direction and 200 kbps in the upstream.

Keeping in mind that those standards are minimums, not maximums, standards that are "platform neutral," in a world where different networks have distinct advantages and limitations, must not exclude some providers that are technologically limited in terms of speed, though other attributes of service, such as mobility or extreme low cost, are quite favorable.

That is not to argue that 768 kbps is the best, or only, minimum standard that is platform neutral. It simply is a standard all providers can supply now, as a minimum, on a widespread basis.

Keep in mind that nobody has to buy such services. Fixed wireline and wireless services blew past those speeds long ago. The 768 kbps standard primarily is an issue for at least one satellite provider, and sometimes will be an issue for mobile broadband services, at some locations.

The 768 kbps definition therefore bars no contestants and preserves maximum consumer choice. The marketplace already has moved on to megabit speeds, in most locations. Where megabit speeds are not available, it typically is rural and isolated locations where the cost to provide higher speeds is an issue.

It might be wise public policy not to bar such locations from getting broadband, even at lower speeds, as fast as possible.

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

Directv’’s termination of its deal to merge with EchoStar, apparently because EchoStar bondholders did not approve, means EchoStar continue...