Verizon Communications now will allow customers to sign up for its FiOS television and Internet services on a month-to-month basis at the same price as long-term contracts and without early termination fees. Though Verizon might have preferred the revenue stability contracts tend to provide, consumers hate them, especially the early termination fees.
And though many observers do not believe there is sufficient competition in the fixed broadband access market, the Verizon move seems clearly a result of marketing by its cable competitors blasting the Verizon requirements and touting the ability cable TV customers have to buy without contracts or early termination fees.
Verizon in January 2010 raised the early termination fees for FiOS customers to $360 from $179. To be sure, Verizon's economic rationale was the cost to activate a location. But that's a business issue Verizon has to deal with, as all providers incur additional expense to activate a customer.
But market pressure seems to have had effect. Effective immediately, all new Verizon FiOS customers can opt to pay for a bundle on a month-to-month basis, at the same prices charged to customers purchasing a term contract, and receive price protection for one year without an early-termination fee.
New FiOS consumers who order a Verizon bundle as part of a two-year contract can take advantage of the "Worry-Free Guarantee," allowing them to cancel their service within 30 days of the date of activation, with no termination fee.
The month-to-month option and "Worry-Free Guarantee" expand upon offers introduced earlier this year in Florida and Pennsylvania and that have met with very favorable customer response. It's hard to imagine those offers getting anything less than that reception, given the distaste consumers have for contracts and termination fees, despite the "goodies" that sometimes are part of the overall offers.
http://newscenter.verizon.com/press-releases/verizon/2010/new-verizon-fios-customers.html
Monday, June 21, 2010
Verizon Offers new FiOS Customers "No Contract: Service
Labels:
contracts,
early termination fees,
ETF,
Verizon
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.
Apple Wants to Sell Razors (iPads), Amazon Blades (Media)
Some observers will point out that about half of Amazon's total revenues come from selling media (books, for example) and that the Apple iPad is an obvious danger to the extent that digital content distribution moves out of its control.
To be sure, Kindle inventory can be bought on an iPad. But Apple is going to push its iBooks offering, shifting sales away from Amazon.
To be sure, notes Citi analyst Mark Mahaney, Amazon enjoys a lead for the moment in product breadth and depth. Comparing Kindle and iBooks, using the New York Times best sellers list as the data source, Mahaney notes that 88 percent of New York times fiction and non-fiction best sellers are available on Kindle, compared to 63 percent from iBooks.
The average price for eBooks on Kindle is $11.23 compared to $12.31 for iBooks, a 10 percent advantage for Amazon.
About half of NYT fiction and non-fiction best sellers are available for both platforms, and 80 percent of those items are priced identically on each platform. About 20 percent of the items that are cheaper on Kindle are about 11 percent cheaper, on average.
That's probably not a sustainable advantage, as a 10-percent price advantage on a $12 item is just $1.20, not likely a sustainable "moat."
The iPad is not exactly a "give away the razor, buy the blades" strategy. Apple very much wants to sell razors. Amazon, on the other hand, really wants to sell blades. That illustrates an interesting difference in business models. Apple would merchandise content to sell media consumption devices. Amazon really would rather merchandise the platform and make a living selling the content.
Apple sells devices in the $500 to $800 range, while Kindle sells in the $189 to $489 range (basic version or the Kindle DX). Others may disagree, but it would seem Amazon has incentives to figure out how to "destroy" its hardware pricing to grab more media sales. That certainly makes more sense in the near term than trying to move upmarket directly into the iPad space.
To be sure, Kindle inventory can be bought on an iPad. But Apple is going to push its iBooks offering, shifting sales away from Amazon.
To be sure, notes Citi analyst Mark Mahaney, Amazon enjoys a lead for the moment in product breadth and depth. Comparing Kindle and iBooks, using the New York Times best sellers list as the data source, Mahaney notes that 88 percent of New York times fiction and non-fiction best sellers are available on Kindle, compared to 63 percent from iBooks.
The average price for eBooks on Kindle is $11.23 compared to $12.31 for iBooks, a 10 percent advantage for Amazon.
About half of NYT fiction and non-fiction best sellers are available for both platforms, and 80 percent of those items are priced identically on each platform. About 20 percent of the items that are cheaper on Kindle are about 11 percent cheaper, on average.
That's probably not a sustainable advantage, as a 10-percent price advantage on a $12 item is just $1.20, not likely a sustainable "moat."
The iPad is not exactly a "give away the razor, buy the blades" strategy. Apple very much wants to sell razors. Amazon, on the other hand, really wants to sell blades. That illustrates an interesting difference in business models. Apple would merchandise content to sell media consumption devices. Amazon really would rather merchandise the platform and make a living selling the content.
Apple sells devices in the $500 to $800 range, while Kindle sells in the $189 to $489 range (basic version or the Kindle DX). Others may disagree, but it would seem Amazon has incentives to figure out how to "destroy" its hardware pricing to grab more media sales. That certainly makes more sense in the near term than trying to move upmarket directly into the iPad space.
Labels:
ebook reader,
iPad,
Kindle
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.
Amazon Cuts Kindle Prices to $189
The reaction didn't take long: Barnes & Noble Inc. cut the price of its Nook e-reader to $199 on June 21, 2010. So did Amazon, just a few hours later. Amazon's standard Kindle e-reader now costs to $189, down from $259, though the "Kindle DX," featuring a larger screen and global mobile coverage, still sells for $489.
The strategic issue is whether e-book readers essentially wind up even cheaper than current levels as e-book and e-content purchase volume grows. It wasn't so long ago that would-be e-book reader suppliers thought a $400 or higher purchase price would still be viable.
Obviously the rapid emergence of a potentially-rival tablet market, exemplified by the Apple iPad, at about the $500 price point, plus Amazon and Barnes & Noble marketing at the $260 price point, has dashed a few business plans.
Of course, ask yourself which device you'd rather use, despite the higher price of the iPad. There's nothing wrong with the Kindle, but it is a monochrome e-book reader.
The iPad is a multi-purpose device that also doubles as an e-book reader.
The strategic issue is whether e-book readers essentially wind up even cheaper than current levels as e-book and e-content purchase volume grows. It wasn't so long ago that would-be e-book reader suppliers thought a $400 or higher purchase price would still be viable.
Obviously the rapid emergence of a potentially-rival tablet market, exemplified by the Apple iPad, at about the $500 price point, plus Amazon and Barnes & Noble marketing at the $260 price point, has dashed a few business plans.
Of course, ask yourself which device you'd rather use, despite the higher price of the iPad. There's nothing wrong with the Kindle, but it is a monochrome e-book reader.
The iPad is a multi-purpose device that also doubles as an e-book reader.
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.
Did Skype Rip $143 Billion a Year Out of Global Voice Revenue?
Skype CEO Josh Silverman offered a few statistics at Communicasia about how disruption works. Today, 12 percent of the world’s international calling minutes are on Skype, and Skype users spend seven to eight minutes of "free" calling for each minute that is a "paid" minute of use.
Skype’s on-net international traffic (between two Skype users) grew 51 percent in 2008, and is projected to have grow 63 percent in 2009, to 54 billion minutes (TeleGeography has not yet published 2009 figures).
Already the world average retail price of an international call is under one-fifth of the $1.20 per minute price of 15 years ago, says Telegeography. Which leads to an interesting exercise.
Assume for the sake of argument that an "average" international long distance call today costs 22 cents a minute.
Assume that, over the last 15 years, competition alone would have driven average prices down by 50 percent, so that the average price of an international call dropped to 60 cents a minute, even without further price pressure from Skype and other IP voice providers.
Then assume the "Skype effect" (overall pricing impact caused by Skype and other VoIP providers) is 38 cents a minute, the difference between the "natural" decrease to 60 cents a minute and current 22-cent rates arguably lower because of Skype and other VoIP providers.
Using those assumptions, the global telecom industry now "loses" $142.9 billion a year in revenue because of overall lower rates caused by VoIP competition, even assuming that Skype market share is simply a shift of some traffic and revenue ($11.9 billion imputed value) from the incumbent providers to a "new" competitor.
It's just an exercise, as it is impossible to determine precisely how much lower prices would have affected demand, in the absence of the impact of VoIP on average calling prices, or how much prices would have fallen for other reasons.
The point is that disruption can create an "okay" business out of a "really good" business, looked at from the standpoint of an attacking provider. If a firm has zero market share, then creating a business worth nearly $1 billion in annual revenues is not a bad thing.
Obviously we are dealing here with "imputed" revenue, not actual revenue, since Skype doesn't today make anywhere near 22 cents a minute, on average, across all of its traffic. Indeed, seven to eight times more zero-revenue calls are made, compared to "paid" minutes of use.
The overall impact is quite a bit more dramatic on legacy providers, though obviously good for buyers and users of trans-border voice service. Losing some amount of market share is not the most-important impact. The bigger issue is the overall decline in average prices per minute.
link
Skype’s on-net international traffic (between two Skype users) grew 51 percent in 2008, and is projected to have grow 63 percent in 2009, to 54 billion minutes (TeleGeography has not yet published 2009 figures).
Already the world average retail price of an international call is under one-fifth of the $1.20 per minute price of 15 years ago, says Telegeography. Which leads to an interesting exercise.
Assume for the sake of argument that an "average" international long distance call today costs 22 cents a minute.
Assume that, over the last 15 years, competition alone would have driven average prices down by 50 percent, so that the average price of an international call dropped to 60 cents a minute, even without further price pressure from Skype and other IP voice providers.
Then assume the "Skype effect" (overall pricing impact caused by Skype and other VoIP providers) is 38 cents a minute, the difference between the "natural" decrease to 60 cents a minute and current 22-cent rates arguably lower because of Skype and other VoIP providers.
Using those assumptions, the global telecom industry now "loses" $142.9 billion a year in revenue because of overall lower rates caused by VoIP competition, even assuming that Skype market share is simply a shift of some traffic and revenue ($11.9 billion imputed value) from the incumbent providers to a "new" competitor.
It's just an exercise, as it is impossible to determine precisely how much lower prices would have affected demand, in the absence of the impact of VoIP on average calling prices, or how much prices would have fallen for other reasons.
The point is that disruption can create an "okay" business out of a "really good" business, looked at from the standpoint of an attacking provider. If a firm has zero market share, then creating a business worth nearly $1 billion in annual revenues is not a bad thing.
Obviously we are dealing here with "imputed" revenue, not actual revenue, since Skype doesn't today make anywhere near 22 cents a minute, on average, across all of its traffic. Indeed, seven to eight times more zero-revenue calls are made, compared to "paid" minutes of use.
The overall impact is quite a bit more dramatic on legacy providers, though obviously good for buyers and users of trans-border voice service. Losing some amount of market share is not the most-important impact. The bigger issue is the overall decline in average prices per minute.
link
Labels:
international long distance,
Skype
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.
What Becomes of Microsoft?
Investors largely believe Microsoft will gradually become the equivalent of a technology utility, a boring but necessary provider of the software that runs the world's business community, says Henry Blodget. A smaller, more optimistic crowd is still arguing that, one day, Microsoft will be able to turn its fortunes around, and fight its way back into an industry leadership position.
Blodget suggests a much darker potential scenario, where difficulties in the company's core operating system and Office franchises simply become less important in the world which seems to be developing, Blodget argues.
The Internet has continued to free app-makers from dependency on Windows or any other desktop platform while Apple's iPhone has revolutionized the mobile business, unleashing a whole new wave of personal computing devices.
Apple's iPad seems on its way to supplanting the low-end PC business.
Importantly, none of these trends depend in any way on Microsoft's original monopoly and cash cow, Windows, Blodget says. "Microsoft is nowhere" in mobile or tablets, he says.
Google, meanwhile, is trying to do the same thing to Apple that Microsoft did to Apple 15 years ago: Separate software and hardware and create a ubiquitous software platform for the world's developers to build
To be sure, lots of smart people thought that was exactly what would have to Netflix, and the doomsday scenario has so far refused to play out. But analysts get paid to analyze and create scenarios. This scenario might seem far fetched as anything other than a scenario many analysts get paid to imagine.
But it does illustrate the dangers for any dominant franchise when computing models shift, as nearly everybody now believes is about to happen. Nor does history offer much optimism. Never in computing history has the leader in one computing era emerged as a leader in the new era.
That will not stop firms such as Microsoft, Cisco and Apple or Google from trying. But they will have to make history to emerge as leaders in the next era.
link
Blodget suggests a much darker potential scenario, where difficulties in the company's core operating system and Office franchises simply become less important in the world which seems to be developing, Blodget argues.
The Internet has continued to free app-makers from dependency on Windows or any other desktop platform while Apple's iPhone has revolutionized the mobile business, unleashing a whole new wave of personal computing devices.
Apple's iPad seems on its way to supplanting the low-end PC business.
Importantly, none of these trends depend in any way on Microsoft's original monopoly and cash cow, Windows, Blodget says. "Microsoft is nowhere" in mobile or tablets, he says.
Google, meanwhile, is trying to do the same thing to Apple that Microsoft did to Apple 15 years ago: Separate software and hardware and create a ubiquitous software platform for the world's developers to build
To be sure, lots of smart people thought that was exactly what would have to Netflix, and the doomsday scenario has so far refused to play out. But analysts get paid to analyze and create scenarios. This scenario might seem far fetched as anything other than a scenario many analysts get paid to imagine.
But it does illustrate the dangers for any dominant franchise when computing models shift, as nearly everybody now believes is about to happen. Nor does history offer much optimism. Never in computing history has the leader in one computing era emerged as a leader in the new era.
That will not stop firms such as Microsoft, Cisco and Apple or Google from trying. But they will have to make history to emerge as leaders in the next era.
link
Labels:
business model,
Microsoft
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.
Are Mobile Apps More Like Songs or Software?
Nobody knows yet how the mobile applications will develop, and how big a business it might become for various ecosystem participants. So far, the Apple App Store has sold about $1.4 billion in apps, of which developers keep about 70 percent.
Some developers can point to mobile apps as a significant revenue generator in its own right. Most cannot make that claim. But some might suggest the developing business is quite a lot more like the "song" business than the software business, according to Getjar.
On average, it takes about the same time to write a mobile app as it does to compose a song, says Ilja Laurs, GetJar CEO. Both cost about the same to download, $1.90 on average.
Advertising and e-commerce will add some revenue on top of actual sales revenue. But at least so far, most "for-fee" mobile apps appear to sell like single songs, rather than productivity or other apps people use on their PCs.
link
Some developers can point to mobile apps as a significant revenue generator in its own right. Most cannot make that claim. But some might suggest the developing business is quite a lot more like the "song" business than the software business, according to Getjar.
On average, it takes about the same time to write a mobile app as it does to compose a song, says Ilja Laurs, GetJar CEO. Both cost about the same to download, $1.90 on average.
Advertising and e-commerce will add some revenue on top of actual sales revenue. But at least so far, most "for-fee" mobile apps appear to sell like single songs, rather than productivity or other apps people use on their PCs.
link
Labels:
mobile apps
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.
How iPad Changes Gmail Experience
One of the more interesting questions about the tablet device market, assuming it does develop as a new and discrete mobile device category, is how user experience and application design might change simply because of the new form factor and navigation method.
For Google, one of the changes it already has made is a redesign of the Gmail interface on the Apple iPad.
As with adaptations made to format content and navigation for smartphone screens, it appears Google already has made adaptations of the email-compose layout specifically for the iPad form factor.
For application providers, all this suggests a possible need for a "third" way to format web sites and applications, including different rendering for large PC screens, small mobile phone screens and mid-size tablet form factors.
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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