Tuesday, January 4, 2011

A La Carte is a 20th Century Solution to a 21st Century Problem

If in 2011, larger numbers of TV viewers become more screen-agnostic, using Hulu, Netflix, mobile video to a greater extent than they do today, with their demonstrated appetites for 'snackable' video clips of all sorts, and as major TV distributors and appliance vendors ramp up sales of devices that allow Internet-delivered TV to be viewed on standard TV screens, it is possible more questions are going to be asked about the future of linear TV.

That would come as no surprise. It is not clear whether older debates about allowing or forcing linear TV to be offered channel-by-channel, in a la carte fashion, will resurface. Right now, it seems unlikely. Nor is it especially likely any of the leading linear video distributors will reverse course and suddenly decide their business models are better served by a widespread shift to a la carte viewing.

Most important of all, content owners and program networks do not yet see the value of a la carte buying. Content businesses are all about the content, fundamentally. Without access to the "hot" content lots of people want, any distribution channel will enjoy modest success.

Is Cable TV "Toast"?

There was a time when a reasonable person might have questioned the extent of demand for 'cable TV.' Why people would pay extra when they could just watch broadcast TV did not seem to make sense. But then cable TV changed, transitioning from its original 'antenna reception' to the 'more choice' platform it uses today.

Lots of observers have to be wondering whether something about that significant could happen within the next decade or so. Granted, that pace of change would seem glacially slow to people expecting change at the rate of web apps, but the TV ecosystem is much more highly integrated, unlike the loosely-coupled Internet ecosystem.

But that same loose coupling could be a huge issue if content owners and networks decide to make lots more content available for Internet streaming, and if the rest of the supporting ecosystem can get critical mass. Those are big 'ifs.'

Still, even some executives in the multichannel video business seem convinced huge changes are possible. Shawn Strickland, Verizon VP, says the firm, which offers FiOS TV, now believes a substantial amount of video cord cutting will happen.

'We've been looking at this issue for the better part of a year, and our perspective has pretty much done a 180 to a belief now that pay-TV 'cord cutting' will happen,' he says."

Infonetics Research - Telecom outsourcing thriving; Ericsson, NSN, ALU, Huawei: soon running 3/4 of world’s networks?

By the end of 2010, telecom service providers worldwide will have outsourced about $53.5 billion worth of networking tasks to equipment vendors, eight percent more than they outsourced in 2009, according to Stéphane Téral, Infonetics Research
principal analyst.

The trend is more prevalent among mobile networks than fixed networks. In 2008 revenue from mobile and fixed network outsourcing was roughly the same; by 2014, mobile network outsourcing will grow to account for 61 percent of all network outsourcing, says Téral.

The major growth areas for telecom network outsourcing include network maintenance, planning, design, and operations
Much of the growth in outsourced services is coming from EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa) and Asia Pacific, and to a lesser extent, Central and Latin America, with the Oi-Nokia Siemens deal in Brazil and activity increasing in Mexico.

One might argue that mobile network outsourcing is an easier proposition because the labor intensity of a mobile access network is vastly less complicated than a fixed network, and corresponding ability to create service quality differentiation are correspondingly reduced in a mobile setting. Some video entertainment providers have in the past outsourced installation chores to contractors, with mixed results. For brand management, many firms now believe they have to control their own installation and repair staffs, rolling stock and so forth.

Mobile operators do not have the premises wiring, premises equipment and cable, wire and active element issues that fixed network providers do, making outsourcing of access network duties an easier proposition.

Firefox overtakes Internet Explorer in Europe

Firefox overtook Microsoft's Internet Explorer to become the number one browser in Europe in December 2010 according to StatCounter. StatCounter Global Stats reports that in December, Firefox took 38 percent of European market share, compared to IE's 37.5 percent.

'This is the first time that IE has been dethroned from the number one spot in a major territory,' commented Aodhan Cullen, CEO, StatCounter. "This appears to be happening because Google's Chrome is stealing share from Internet Explorer while Firefox is mainly maintaining its existing share," said Cullen.

Google Chrome has grown to 14.6 percent compared to five percent in December 2009.

Lots of Ways to Over-Simplify Mobile Business

Over-simplistic analysis of the mobile service provider, or fixed-line business, is easy to understand. It's a complicated business in many ways, and complicated stories are hard to tell. "Rich service providers gouging customers" is a vastly-easier storyline than many others.

As some of you know, I'd argue that the U.S. communications business faces very-serious challenges. In fact, fixed line providers face issues more analogous to the U.S. steel, auto and textile industries than anything else. That is to say, the traditional business of selling voice services for money is a sunset business. That is not to say voice communications is any less important for most people, most of the time, and for all people at least some of the time.

It is to say that a highly capital intensive business that is losing its historic business model has radical transformation before it, or an unpleasant demise. I think everybody would agree that broadband and mobile communications are an important foundation for economic success, and that such success cannot be taken for granted. For such reasons, virtually all observers might argue it is a wise policy to encourage investment in the business, as well as investment to create a higher-quality broadband access infrastructure.

Chetan Sharma, an independent analyst, estimates that U.S. carriers will generate about $165 billion in revenues in 2010. Of the total, nearly $55 billion will come from sales of data services alone. That factoid, taken in isolation, can be used to argue that service providers are making way more money from their capital investments than might be justified, or at least that such investments prove the business is sound, since carriers invest about $30 billion to $50 billion annually.

I wouldn't characterize matters that way. It now is tough to raise significant capital for infrastructure, as investors aren't generally dumb. They can see that the business model is challenged, and that new revenue sources beyond voice and even broadband access must be created. That is no less true of the mobile side of the business than of the fixed-line side of the business.

Mission-critical industries that are declining, are not places to create new burdens, one might argue. You might wonder why debates about communications, and what has to be done, so rarely are positioned that way. I'd argue there are sound reasons.

No executive of a public company is going to say anything contrary to the notion that "we face challenges, but have plans in place to meet those challenges." Critics of the industry will always position carriers and service providers as rich, monopolistic, uncaring providers who need to be reined in. Some will argue, in private, that they need to be vanquished, one way or the other.

That isn't to argue that the major providers are not powerful generators of revenue. It isn't so clear they are powerful generators of profit, but for the moment just focus on the revenue. If you believe an ultimate loss of perhaps 50 to 80 percent of the current revenue are inevitable, the strategic picture is quite different. The U.S. steel industry, or auto industry, once appears that way as well.

But those industries could not, or would not, radically change. The strategic challenges are huge. If somebody told you, whatever your current occupation or business, that you would lose half to 80 percent of your revenue in perhaps 10 years, and that every step of the way between here and there would feature more pressure, I doubt you'd appreciate being saddled with obstacles that reduced your current income faster, and limited your ability to reposition, as you fought to change.

The argument that advanced communications will be expensive and difficult to finance, and that obstacles should not be placed in the way, is just a practical response to market conditions that seem almost self evident. Sure, there will always be legitimate issues about abuse of power. But nobody worries about abuse of power in the textile, auto or steel industries, because their "power" evaporated with their business fortunes.

Advanced communications is too important to let wither, and there are clear obstacles to the investment we need to be making. Ripping the profit out of the business is a good way to block the advances we need.

Is Usage-Based Billing A Big Deal?

Bell Canada's request to bill customers, both retail and wholesale, based on how much end users or wholesale partners consume each month, in gigabytes, predictably causes outrage in some quarters, but should not, in actuality, affect the typical consumer at all.

The typical consumer doesn't actually consume all that much data on a monthly basis. Comcast, for some time, for example, has had a monthly 'cap' of 250 gigabytes per household. But the typical household really consumers about two gigabytes to four gigabytes a month.

Primus, a Bell Canada wholesale customer, apparently is notifying its customers that existing high-speed access customers will soon have 25 GBytes of monthly usage included with their service. Additional usage up to 300 GBytes will be charged at $2 per additional GByte, up to a maximum of $60 a month.

Usage in excess of 300 GBytes per month will be charged an additional $1.10 per GByte. Customers who are worried about the 25 Gbyte cap can buy an 'additional usage plan' costing $5 a month for an additional 40 GBytes, for starters.

Typical users won't notice a thing.

Will Mobile Payments Enable Mobile Marketing?

Deborah Baxley, Principal, Global financial services, Capgemini, would not be the first or only analyst who suspects mobile payments capabilities will be intimately connected to a number of mobile marketing approaches, ranging from barcodes, numbered coupons, text messages, sticker-based loyalty programs, to use of near field communications to turn the mobile phone into a digital wallet.

Early results show much higher response rates than traditional marketing, such as paper coupons. Secure chip technology is expected to be the ultimate solution, optimizing usability, convenience, security and consumer opt-in.

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

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