Are rural broadband customers all that different from suburban or urban customers? Not so much, a new analysis by Parks Associations suggests.
The percentages of rural broadband households who are very satisfied and very dissatisfied with their broadband services are within the margin of error for all U.S. broadband households, Parks Asociates notes. In other words, they are no more inclined to be pleased or upset with their service and service provider.
Rural broadband consumers desire value-added services on par with all U.S. broadband households, with premium technical support services and online backup as the top-two desired value-added services.
And the overwhelming percentage of U.S. broadband consumers are highly satisfied with their access services, despite a small percentage that say they are highly dissatisfied.
Overall, the rural status of a household has little impact on level of satisfaction with its broadband service. The type of access service does seem to have some bearing on high and low satisfaction.
Households with fiber broadband services report high satisfaction ratings in larger numbers, and households receiving satellite and wireless broadband services exhibit lower satisfaction ratings. But there is an important caveat. Customers who buy bundles of service are happier than customers who do not buy bundles. So the key variable seems to be the ability to buy a bundle, more than the type fo access.
The business implications would seem to be clear enough. Bundles create higher satisfaction and higher satisfaction reduces churn. A highly satisfied broadband subscriber is 46 percent less likely to churn from a current provider, whereas a highly dissatisfied customer is 384 percent more likely to leave a current broadband provider.
A subscriber to a triple play of access services (broadband, television, and home telephone)
is 15 percent more likely to be a highly satisfied broadband customer.
More than 70 percent of cable broadband households subscribe to a bundle, about 25 percent of which buy a triple play. But most, about 66 percent, buy a dual-play bundle of video and broadband access.
DSL providers have 58 percent bundle penetration, with 25 percent of customers opting for a dual-play package of broadband and video while 17 percent buy a triple-play bundle.
Fiber broadband providers have 78 percent bundle penetration, with 64 percent buying a dual-play broadband and video bundle and 49 percent buying a triple-play package.
Rural broadband customers are 10 percent to 20 percent less likely than broadband subscribers on a national level to subscribe to the most-common broadband bundles. One would therefore expect lower satisfaction in rural areas, since satisfaction and bundles seem to be directly related.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Rural-Urban Broadband Customers Not so Different
Labels:
broadband,
cable modem,
DSL,
FTTH,
rural broadband,
satellite
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Monday, January 11, 2010
To Solve the "Broadband Access" Problem, You Have to Know What Causes It
Solving the problem "people who don't use broadband access at home" hinges on the actual barrier to usage. Some people don't use the Internet; some don't use computers; some are unwillingness to pay current subscription prices while others would buy but literally have no physical access at their remote locations.
All too often the problem is viewed uni-dimensionally, as though lack of supply is the key problem. But there is increasingly acknowledgement that there are other barriers to surmount, such as users who would like to use the Internet, and could afford it, but who do not own PCs, and are unlikely to buy one.
The U.K. government believes "lack of PCs" is among the barriers, and now plans to give away
270,000 low-income families with free laptops and broadband access, as part of its £300 million broadband stimulation program.
Since the fall of 2008 U.K. officials have been training "well off" families about the value of broadband for users who can afford to buy broadband, but do not see the value.
The new inititiative aims to address a different problem: people who would use the Internet and see its value, but cannot afford the PC or recurring cost of a connection.
The program is to be included in the Children, Schools and Families Bill for 2009/2010, which is yet to be debated in the House of Commons. The legislation aims to ensure that all families with children aged between seven and 14 will be able to apply for a grant to buy a computer and broadband connection.
All too often the problem is viewed uni-dimensionally, as though lack of supply is the key problem. But there is increasingly acknowledgement that there are other barriers to surmount, such as users who would like to use the Internet, and could afford it, but who do not own PCs, and are unlikely to buy one.
The U.K. government believes "lack of PCs" is among the barriers, and now plans to give away
270,000 low-income families with free laptops and broadband access, as part of its £300 million broadband stimulation program.
Since the fall of 2008 U.K. officials have been training "well off" families about the value of broadband for users who can afford to buy broadband, but do not see the value.
The new inititiative aims to address a different problem: people who would use the Internet and see its value, but cannot afford the PC or recurring cost of a connection.
The program is to be included in the Children, Schools and Families Bill for 2009/2010, which is yet to be debated in the House of Commons. The legislation aims to ensure that all families with children aged between seven and 14 will be able to apply for a grant to buy a computer and broadband connection.
Labels:
broadband,
broadband access,
broadband stimulus
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Loosely-Coupled Nexus One Mobile Ecosystem Creates Problems
Some problems are predictable; some aren't. It was predictable that as owners of unlocked Nexus One devices began to experience problems, they'd have to run the gauntlet of fingerpointing one often sees when ecosystems are loosely coupled.
Reporting connectivity issues, some users have been told by T-Mobile USA that it is "an HTC problem," while some users communicating with HTC have been told "it's a T-Mobile problem."
Other problems are echoes of what has been seen in the recent and immediate past, namely complaints about the quality of the 3G networks. Some users complain that 3G coverage is weak or non-existent. Some report that their devices are switching from 3G to 2G networks. Again, it might be a handset issue, but switching from a 3G to a 2G network is what happens when a 3G network gets congested.
In other cases, the error modes suggest there is a software or hardware problem. At least some users say an active HTC device, when sitting right next to a Nexus One, gets great signal while the Nexus One gets a weak signal. It's hard to blame that particular circumstance on network issues.
All that is known right now is that there is some problem using the Nexus One on the T-Mobile network.
The loosely-coupled ecosystem (open devices sold independently of service) is bound to create customer service issues, irrespective of the merits of either a network or handset.
Reporting connectivity issues, some users have been told by T-Mobile USA that it is "an HTC problem," while some users communicating with HTC have been told "it's a T-Mobile problem."
Other problems are echoes of what has been seen in the recent and immediate past, namely complaints about the quality of the 3G networks. Some users complain that 3G coverage is weak or non-existent. Some report that their devices are switching from 3G to 2G networks. Again, it might be a handset issue, but switching from a 3G to a 2G network is what happens when a 3G network gets congested.
In other cases, the error modes suggest there is a software or hardware problem. At least some users say an active HTC device, when sitting right next to a Nexus One, gets great signal while the Nexus One gets a weak signal. It's hard to blame that particular circumstance on network issues.
All that is known right now is that there is some problem using the Nexus One on the T-Mobile network.
The loosely-coupled ecosystem (open devices sold independently of service) is bound to create customer service issues, irrespective of the merits of either a network or handset.
Labels:
Android,
Nexus One,
open networks
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Google Nexus One: the Difference Between "Device" and "Service"
Most end users just want things to work. For all its potential problems, tighly-integrated retail approaches, where software, hardware and retail support are integrated, has advantages. That approach tends to reduce the potential for user unhappiness, particularly when after-sale issues start to arise.
That is one downside for the Google Nexus One approach, which has Google selling unlocked devices, without direct retail relationships with service providers. When problems start to manifest themselves, users are likely to become frustrated with Google's ability to provide email and forum support.
As the old saying goes, one of the things about being a service provider is that one "occasionally has to provide some service." Granted, Google actually is acting as a device retailer for Nexus One. But users are not likely to care. They got their phones from Google and they will expect Google to solve after-sale problems.
If T-Mobile did not sell users their phones, they logically are going to refer users back to Google for device-related questions. It is bound to cause headaches, and also is likely to cause some buyers to gravitate towards a Droid, as Verizon will take ownership for all problems that could arise.
"Open" leads to more innovation, no doubt. But the mobile business is only partly about innovation. It is a service business. And that is likely to prove important, going forward.
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Is Google Crazy, or Simply Unusual?
Cable and satellite providers of video entertainment have different financial interests from content providers, even though both are essential parts of the multi-channel video entertainment ecosystem.
Likewise, handets manufacturers, mobile application providers and access providers have distinct financial interests, though all are part of the single mobile ecosystem.
That being the case, conflicts between ecosystem partners are an ever-present reality. The issue is how much cooperation and conflict is possible, and whether enough benefit occurs, despite some conflict.
Google's release of the Nexus One, and its apparent plans to release a Nexus Two and other devices are prime examples. Some observers, including Google's competitors, will note that it is risky for a partner to compete with its other partners in a single ecosystem.
Microsoft of course questions the wisdom of Google's mobile strategy, insisting Google will have trouble attracting and keeping handset partners for its Android operating system now that the company is selling its very own branded devices.
That certainly is the conventional wisdom. But even a valid conventional wisdom can have exceptions. What "most" partners cannot envision, attempt or succeed at is not to say that "all" partners are so limited. Nor are relationships immutable; they can change over time.
Google might be one of the salient exceptions, as is Apple. Several years ago, most telecom executives were more afraid of Google than of cable operators. These days, executives are looking for ways to leverage and work with Google.
Apple has significantly reinvented business frameworks in the music and phone businesses, for example.
The other issue is that Google's relationship with some ecosystem partners can be qutie distinct. At least initially, HTC and Motorola have add a different relationship than other manufacturers, and T-Mobile as a service provider likewise was early to support Android.
Google's other partnerships are a bit more complicated and one has to think Verizon and Motorola are less than thrilled, even though both are key Android partners.
Still, the point is that ecosystem relationships periodically get tested. Content providers and cable and satellite operators are used to the possibility of significant conflict over carriage agreements. Also, at the margin, some distributors also are content owners, while some content owners have been distributors.
Some distributors are part of the equipment supplier segment, as well as distributors. Some equipment suppliers are becoming application providers.
Yes, Google risks some ire by distributing its own branded handset. But ecosystem "messiness" is growing throughout the communications and entertainment ecosystems. And some players can attempt strategies that would be considered suicidal if attempted by less powerful contestants.
There are rules, and exceptions to those rules. Apple and Google might prove to be right or wrong. What is indisputable is that they are different; they can attempt things most other players cannot think about.
Likewise, handets manufacturers, mobile application providers and access providers have distinct financial interests, though all are part of the single mobile ecosystem.
That being the case, conflicts between ecosystem partners are an ever-present reality. The issue is how much cooperation and conflict is possible, and whether enough benefit occurs, despite some conflict.
Google's release of the Nexus One, and its apparent plans to release a Nexus Two and other devices are prime examples. Some observers, including Google's competitors, will note that it is risky for a partner to compete with its other partners in a single ecosystem.
Microsoft of course questions the wisdom of Google's mobile strategy, insisting Google will have trouble attracting and keeping handset partners for its Android operating system now that the company is selling its very own branded devices.
That certainly is the conventional wisdom. But even a valid conventional wisdom can have exceptions. What "most" partners cannot envision, attempt or succeed at is not to say that "all" partners are so limited. Nor are relationships immutable; they can change over time.
Google might be one of the salient exceptions, as is Apple. Several years ago, most telecom executives were more afraid of Google than of cable operators. These days, executives are looking for ways to leverage and work with Google.
Apple has significantly reinvented business frameworks in the music and phone businesses, for example.
The other issue is that Google's relationship with some ecosystem partners can be qutie distinct. At least initially, HTC and Motorola have add a different relationship than other manufacturers, and T-Mobile as a service provider likewise was early to support Android.
Google's other partnerships are a bit more complicated and one has to think Verizon and Motorola are less than thrilled, even though both are key Android partners.
Still, the point is that ecosystem relationships periodically get tested. Content providers and cable and satellite operators are used to the possibility of significant conflict over carriage agreements. Also, at the margin, some distributors also are content owners, while some content owners have been distributors.
Some distributors are part of the equipment supplier segment, as well as distributors. Some equipment suppliers are becoming application providers.
Yes, Google risks some ire by distributing its own branded handset. But ecosystem "messiness" is growing throughout the communications and entertainment ecosystems. And some players can attempt strategies that would be considered suicidal if attempted by less powerful contestants.
There are rules, and exceptions to those rules. Apple and Google might prove to be right or wrong. What is indisputable is that they are different; they can attempt things most other players cannot think about.
Labels:
Apple,
business model,
cable,
Google,
satellite,
telco strategy
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
FCC has No Current Authority to Impose Network Neutrality Rules?
The U.S. Federal Appeals Court reviewing whether the Federal Communications Commission currently has authority to create or enforce "network neutrality" rules has not yet ruled.
But initial questioning suggests the court questions whether the Federal Communications Commission has current jurisdiction to write, much less enforce, net-neutrality rules for the Internet. So some legal observers now suggest the appeals court will in fact rule that the FCC had not authority to sanction Comcast for the way it managed peer-to-peer services.
A 2008 FCC order forced Comcast to stop throttling BitTorrent applications as a means of managing network congestion.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit Jude Raymong Randolph pointed out to an FCC attorney that “you have yet to identify a specific statute.”
Since the Congress has passed no laws relating to network neutrality, the FCC had, and has, no authority to take action on the matter, the judge seems to suggest.
A ruling of that sort would at least temporarily delay any new efforts by the FCC to codify new network neutrality rules, and shift the battle over such rules to the Congress.
FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski has argued the agency has authority to set net neutrality rules because of the "Internet Freedoms Principles" set in 2005, which say that users have the right to use lawful applications, which P2P is, though the use of P2P sometimes includes transfers of copyrighted content without permission.
But Comcast argues it has the right to manage its network, which it interprets as permitting rate limiting of P2P services, when necessary to preserve user experience and relieve congestion.
To be sure, the specific issue at hand seems primarily about whether the FCC’s decision was improper for statutory reasons, as Congress has not given the FCC legislative permission to create such rules, observers say.
On a wider legislative front, some observers think the White House is dialing back its efforts to get "strong" network neutrality rules adopted. The evidence is indirect, but some point to the late-October resignation of of Susan Crawford, University of Michigan law professor, previously a key adviser to the president on technology and communications, and a proponent of "strong" network neutrality rules.
According to the American Spectator, Crawford's version of Net neutrality was too radical for White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers, contributing to her early departure. If that observation is correct, it would be a sign that any new rules would not strictly ban "every" form of packet prioritization.
Many observers note that quality of service measures typically are needed when users want to interact with important video or voice services, especially as video already has become the primary driver of bandwidth consumption on a global level.
Those observers also would note that strict versions of net neutrality, that would absolutely ban any packet prioritization, would prevent Internet access providers from applying prioritization on behalf of their users, even when those users might specifcially ask for, and desire, such prioritization.
"Packet discrimination" sounds bad, and is, when it is used as a business weapon, allowing unfair competition. But packet discrimination is a good thing when it helps maintain quality of experience for the emerging applications users say are important, especially video and voice.
Also, at the recent Consumer Electronics Show, White House deputy CTO Andrew McLaughlin said the FCC had yet to determine whether Net neutrality is needed to preserve the "open Internet."
If that seems unremarkable, consider that in 2009 McLaughlin had said network management practices of cable companies that limited the speeds of large file downloads were essentially the same thing as Chinese-style Internet censorship.
Management of bandwidth-heavy applications by some users at times of network congestion is not application "blocking" or censorship. It is an effort to maintain quality of service for most users. Some methods will be more palatable than others.
The analogy is access to the old voice network. Telcos do not "censor" speech when, at times of peak load, a user might encounter a "fast busy" signal indicating that no circuits are available. The point is that every network gets congested at least some of the time.
And it always has been recognized that some method of regulating access at such times is a legitimate network management matter. In fact, a fast busy tone does mean a user has temporarily been "blocked" from the network. Sometimes a mobile voice call experiences the same sort of temporary blocking.
That sort of access blocking is not any suppression of freedom of communication or expression. It is not an infringement of Internet freedom. It is a simple way of managing a congested resource at times of peak load.
The immediate matter at hand, though, is the simple matter of legislatively-granted authority. The appeals court seems to be signaling its belief that Congress has granted the FCC no authority to impose rules about network congerstion management or methods of doing so.
But initial questioning suggests the court questions whether the Federal Communications Commission has current jurisdiction to write, much less enforce, net-neutrality rules for the Internet. So some legal observers now suggest the appeals court will in fact rule that the FCC had not authority to sanction Comcast for the way it managed peer-to-peer services.
A 2008 FCC order forced Comcast to stop throttling BitTorrent applications as a means of managing network congestion.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit Jude Raymong Randolph pointed out to an FCC attorney that “you have yet to identify a specific statute.”
Since the Congress has passed no laws relating to network neutrality, the FCC had, and has, no authority to take action on the matter, the judge seems to suggest.
A ruling of that sort would at least temporarily delay any new efforts by the FCC to codify new network neutrality rules, and shift the battle over such rules to the Congress.
FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski has argued the agency has authority to set net neutrality rules because of the "Internet Freedoms Principles" set in 2005, which say that users have the right to use lawful applications, which P2P is, though the use of P2P sometimes includes transfers of copyrighted content without permission.
But Comcast argues it has the right to manage its network, which it interprets as permitting rate limiting of P2P services, when necessary to preserve user experience and relieve congestion.
To be sure, the specific issue at hand seems primarily about whether the FCC’s decision was improper for statutory reasons, as Congress has not given the FCC legislative permission to create such rules, observers say.
On a wider legislative front, some observers think the White House is dialing back its efforts to get "strong" network neutrality rules adopted. The evidence is indirect, but some point to the late-October resignation of of Susan Crawford, University of Michigan law professor, previously a key adviser to the president on technology and communications, and a proponent of "strong" network neutrality rules.
According to the American Spectator, Crawford's version of Net neutrality was too radical for White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers, contributing to her early departure. If that observation is correct, it would be a sign that any new rules would not strictly ban "every" form of packet prioritization.
Many observers note that quality of service measures typically are needed when users want to interact with important video or voice services, especially as video already has become the primary driver of bandwidth consumption on a global level.
Those observers also would note that strict versions of net neutrality, that would absolutely ban any packet prioritization, would prevent Internet access providers from applying prioritization on behalf of their users, even when those users might specifcially ask for, and desire, such prioritization.
"Packet discrimination" sounds bad, and is, when it is used as a business weapon, allowing unfair competition. But packet discrimination is a good thing when it helps maintain quality of experience for the emerging applications users say are important, especially video and voice.
Also, at the recent Consumer Electronics Show, White House deputy CTO Andrew McLaughlin said the FCC had yet to determine whether Net neutrality is needed to preserve the "open Internet."
If that seems unremarkable, consider that in 2009 McLaughlin had said network management practices of cable companies that limited the speeds of large file downloads were essentially the same thing as Chinese-style Internet censorship.
Management of bandwidth-heavy applications by some users at times of network congestion is not application "blocking" or censorship. It is an effort to maintain quality of service for most users. Some methods will be more palatable than others.
The analogy is access to the old voice network. Telcos do not "censor" speech when, at times of peak load, a user might encounter a "fast busy" signal indicating that no circuits are available. The point is that every network gets congested at least some of the time.
And it always has been recognized that some method of regulating access at such times is a legitimate network management matter. In fact, a fast busy tone does mean a user has temporarily been "blocked" from the network. Sometimes a mobile voice call experiences the same sort of temporary blocking.
That sort of access blocking is not any suppression of freedom of communication or expression. It is not an infringement of Internet freedom. It is a simple way of managing a congested resource at times of peak load.
The immediate matter at hand, though, is the simple matter of legislatively-granted authority. The appeals court seems to be signaling its belief that Congress has granted the FCC no authority to impose rules about network congerstion management or methods of doing so.
Labels:
comcast,
FCC,
network neutrality,
P2P
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Android: "Excessive Choice" Danger?
Android developments continue fast and furious. AT&T says it will launch five separate Android devices by June. Only days after announcing its Nexus One, Google says it will introduce a "Nexus Two" better optimized for business users.
The Verizon Droid, launched in November, seems to have abruptly changed Android's position in the mobile browsing market in under two months, and dramatically increased the general level of interest in Android devices overall.
In just two months, Android has emerged as the second most popular platform used to access InformationWeek’s mobile web site, pushing aside BlackBerry and taking a meaningful bite out of Apple’s iPhone share of traffic, says Tom Smith, TechWeb VP.
In November 2009, Android accounted for eight percent of mobile page views at TechWeb, compared to 59 percent for Apple and 17 percent for Blackberry, says Smith.
In December, though, Android did far better. Apple had 51 percent share; Android 24 percent; Blackberry eight percent, he says.
Google, which just released the the Nexus One phone, now says the Nexus Two will have a physical keyboard and will be more suitable for enterprise users (obligatory boilerplate: "Nexus One" is aimed at the Apple iPhone; Nexus Two will challenge the BlackBerry").
Android enthusiasts will be pleased by the explosion of activity, right? Well, yes and no. The whirlwind of activity could have an opposite effect: either freezing potential buyers into inaction as they wait for the next device, the next offer, the next set of business arrangements and carriers.
Social psychologists Sheena Iyengar, PhD, a management professor at Columbia University Business School, and Mark Lepper, PhD, a psychology professor at Stanford University, have demonstrated the downside of "excessive" choice.
In a 2000 paper the researchers showed that when shoppers are given the option of choosing among smaller and larger assortments of jam, they show more interest in the larger assortment.
But when it comes time to pick just one, they're 10 times more likely to make a purchase if they choose among six rather than among 24 flavors of jam.
In a separate study, Iyengar and Wei Jiang, PhD, a finance professor at Columbia Business School, analyzed retirement-fund choices, ranging from packages of two to 59 choices, among some 800,000 employees at 647 companies.
Instead of leading to more thoughtful choosing, however, more options led people to act like the jam buyers: When given two choices, 75 percent participated, but when given 59 choices, only 60 percent did. In addition, the greater the number of options, the more cautious people were with their investment strategies, the team found.
Relatedly, too much choice also can lead people to make simple, snap judgments just to avoid the hassle of wading through confusing options, which ironically can sabotage a company's marketing plan, finds social psychologist Alexander Chernev, PhD, of Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management.
Chernev found that when people were offered variants of the same brand of toothpaste, cavity-prevention, tartar-control and teeth-whitening types, for instance, they tended to switch to another brand that offered a single option.
So what's the problem? "The customer has no idea how to decide and may therefore switch to another brand that doesn't require making tradeoffs," Chernev says.
In that case, they often choose what Herbert Simon, PhD, first referred to as a "satisficing" option: people make the first reasonable choice that fits their preferences, but not the "absolute best" solution.
In other words, instead of exhaustively scanning all options until finding the perfect, or "maximizing" choice, people simply make the "it's okay" choice, not working through all the possible angles.
The implication for Android buyers? Study the options, then settle on something you feel good, if not perfectly, about. Trying to buy the "absolute best" device will create anxiety and buyer's remorse at some point as the next device option is made available, the price of older options plummets or terms of service and carrier choices evolve.
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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