Friday, June 10, 2011

Small Businesses Consider Facebook, Other Online Marketing Channels "Highly Effective"

The sixth "Merchant Confidence Index" survey of 4,942 small business owners and managers shows that small business managers use a wide variety of online marketing channels, lead by Facebook, but also including Google, LinkedIn, Google Places, Twitter and other applications.


Profiles on social network sites are deemed the "most effective" channel, but email, local review sites and online Yellow Pages are considered among the most-effective channels used by small businesses.

Being Too Early is as Dangerous as Being Too Late

Former Time Warner CEO Gerald Levin thinks the AOL-Huffington Post deal ironically fulfills the vision Time Warner originally had for merging AOL with Time Warner.

"Time Warner was basically a content distribution company and AOL was a digital service company and putting the two together was intended to put an Internet injection into Time Warner," he says. "It didn’t exactly work out that way, but the intention was really significant."

But he thinks, a decade later, that the strategy will work, or at least has a reasonable chance of working, where the Time Warner merger with AOL is widely viewed to have been a failure. Being too early is as dangerous as being too late.

Time Warner Cable Sees Opportunity in 'Single Play' Broadband Business - WSJ.com

"'We've become less of a TV company than we were previously,"said Glenn Britt, Time Warner Cable CEO recently said, adding that the company's focus has shifted more toward its role as a provider of infrastructure for the delivery of media. That might have been an odd statement 10 years ago, when both cable companies and telcos began to find that the competitive market was forcing a rethinking of product bundling.

In a monopoly environment, with high end user penetration, it is rational to build networks that have only a single service to sell. That used to be the case for cable operators selling video entertainment, or telcos selling voice. In a competitive environment, with multiple providers, any provider can expect penetration ranging from 20 percent for any major new service, and a declining share of the original legacy business, if there was one.

For a cable company or telco, that has meant selling multiple products to a smaller base of customers. That's why triple play or double play packages have become so important in recent years. Now, though, even that strategy requires revision. Once a network has been built, and a company has gotten about as many triple play or dual play customers as it can, it makes sense to avoid stranding assets by selling single services, if one can, to customers that have chosen to buy a key service from another provider.

In cable's case, that means acknowledging that, for many customers, a satellite service simply makes more sense, and that some customers will not give up their satellite TV services for a terrestrial alternative. So Time Warner Cable now wants to "take what the market will give it" by focusing new market attention on "broadband only" sales to customers unlikely to abandon their video or voice services providers.

That is not to say the fundamental economics of a broadband fixed-line network do not require healthy triple play or dual play sales. That still is necessary, under conditions where other contestants are going to get significant market share. But neither does it make sense to strand assets when some percentage of customers can be enticed to buy a single product, in cable's case broadband access.

There is another interesting nuggest in Britt's remarks, though. Note the statement about Time Warner Cable's overall "role as a provider of infrastructure for the delivery of media." That's a flat out acknowledgement that the growing part of Time Warner Cable's business is the "dumb pipe" part, broadband access, not entertainment video or voice.

Protestations to the contrary notwithstanding, Britt is correct. Time Warner Cable is close to the point where its "dumb pipe" customers will equal the number of legacy video customers. The company has about two million customers who buy broadband access, but not video. It has 12.5 million video customers.

There is something else to be gleaned here. Britt noted that about half its "broadband only" customers were business accounts. So although Time Warner Cable expects to sell more "broadband only" accounts to residences, it likely also will find it is selling more business access accounts as well.

So not only is Time Warner Cable shifting from "video first" to possibly "video or broadband first," it also is shifting towards sales to business customers, where its legacy business has been consumer focused. That is not to say either cable or telco service providers will not strive mightily to create other new revenue streams. It is to say that "dumb pipe" remains foundational to the overall business.

SMS Growth Slows, Some Worry

Text messaging has been one of the most profitable services for carriers for years with profit margins reaching 80 percent, but growth is slowing.
The most-recent data from the CTIA suggests growth of about nine percent. That shouldn't surprise. Text messaging is a universal feature of all phones, and texting has grown quite popular. But no market grows indefinitely.

Apple's recent announcement of its own iOS messaging capability obviously has people wondering whether that capability will eat into carrier text messaging revenue. It's hard to say. Captive services are useful within the iOS community, but few captive communications media achieve widespread use until there is full interoperability.

At least in the U.S. market, many users have text messaging plans that are functionally or actually "unlimited," eliminating the economic driver to substitute iOS messaging for text messaging.

How Do Consumers Gain Power Over Sellers?

A study fielded in May 2011 with 502 small business, mid-market and enterprise respondents worldwide has some interesting implications for content marketers and the role of content in the sales process.

As you might expect, the top concern overall was "changes in costs to deliver current products or services," such as competitors with lower cost structures that are able to deliver competitive products at lower retail prices. Some 29 percent of respondents suggested they were "fully or very exposed" to such dangers.

But the second most important source of potential revenue disruption was "increased customer bargaining power, gained directly by their access to better information about product offerings and alternatives." Some 28 percent of respondents reported they were "fully or very exposed" to such dangers.

In other words, competitors selling at lower prices and greater buyer knowledge were nearly equal in terms of dangers to revenue models. That should reinforce the notion that potential buyers have to be reached, indirectly, through web channels, as those prospects conduct buying research, since these actions occur before a brand is aware a prospect is in the market.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Sprint to Introduce 10 New Motorola Devices using Android

MotorolaTRIUMPH-<br />VirginMobileFrontSprint and its prepaid brands of Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile USA will launch more than 10 new Motorola wireless devices in 2011, all using Android, and including smartphones, tablets and best-in-class Push-to-Talk devices.

Two new devices were announced June 9, 2011, including the iconic Motorola PHOTON 4G, Motorola’s first Sprint 4G device with a dual-core 1GHz processor, Android 2.3, Sprint ID and worldphone capabilities, and Motorola TRIUMPH, the first Virgin Mobile USA device from Motorola.
PHOTON4GFrontHome

Google's Enterprise Vision: Mobile First, In the Cloud

The meeting is the staple of corporate life. But lots of people would argue most of the meetings are counter productive.

Google's enterprise vision is to leverage mobility and the cloud to change the fundamental way people work. Workforce productivity used to be about how you can optimize individual output. Google thinks that by putting all that functionality into a cloud environment, workers can use whatever device they want and always be working as a group towards on the mission.

A faster, more secure, more cost efficient workplace will be the result, the thinking goes.

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

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