Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Wireless Broadband Incremental or a Substitute?

A recent analysis suggests more people are getting their broadband from wireless providers in the Twin Cities and fewer are using traditional services like cable and DSL, according to a new study by St. Paul-based ID Insight, which found that wireless broadband (both from mobile companies and the Minneapolis Wi-Fi network operated by US Internet rose 7.5 percent in the 12 months ending in March. Wireless broadband taking bigger slice of local market

To be careful, it actually isn't so clear whether what the data shows is simply that more people are buying mobile broadband plans, which is largely additive to the universe of broadband connections, or that people are starting to substitute wireless for fixed connections (which some of us do). 


To see what was going on with wireless Internet access, compared to fixed-line access, ID Insight used "Broadband Scout" to look at access trends over the last couple of quarters. "What we found was that internet transactions through a wireless device increased by a factor of over 200 percent, whereas Cable and DSL diminished by a few percentage points." Wireless access grows fast

In and of itself, that simply means people are using their smart phones to do things on the Internet more than they used to do. The reported decrease in fixed network access would be expected to dropk as a percentage of total, if wireless usage is growing so fast. 


The study shows transactions on Comcast's network was 37.6 percent of total and CenturyLink represented 27.8 percent of total. Both of those providers saw their share decline slightly, but again, it might be expected if wireless has grown so fast. 


Wireless broadband, which includes the cellular providers and the Minneapolis Wi-Fi network, ranked third (16.6 percent, or about 152,000 households). The number for wireless customers does not include Wi-Fi networks inside homes.

Among Twin Cities wireless customers, about 131,000 appear to be smartphone, laptop or tablet computers users with data plans. The other 21,000 wireless customers belong to the Minneapolis Wi-Fi network, said Joe Caldwell, the CEO of USI Wireless of Minnetonka, which runs the network. 
Wireless grows

"Over the past few months and quarters the notion of where my broadband connection resides has shifted, at least for me," says ID Insight's Adam Elliott, company president. "A few short months ago, I would have told you that my broadband provider was Comcast, as that was who provided internet access to my home."

"A few short months later, I am not so sure," says Elliott. "A few months ago, I bought one of those funky new Android smart phones on Sprint's 4G network. I am now seeing download speeds of 3 Mbps to 6 Mbps that exceeded my basic Comcast cable connection that was coming in around 3 Mbps." 
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Still, it is not possible to say with certainty that users are dropping fixed connections and relying solely on wireless broadband. 


Other studies likewise have shown growing use of mobile broadband, but that does not, in and of itself, suggest anything definite about whether the usage is complementary to fixed line access, or a substitute. 



Early data from YouGov’s new “DongleTrack” study shows that 10 percent of respondents have used a dongle (USB modem) or a datacard to access the Internet outside the home or work. A mobile phone has been used as an Internet access device by more than one fifth of the online population (21 percent). 
As often is the case, marketers will be looking at younger users for an indication that end user preferences could be changing. In that regard, younger users seem more willing to use wireless broadband services. U.K. trends


The study suggests that 69 percent of respondents under 25 have used wireless broadband access, about 67 percent of those 25 to 34, and 65 percent of those who live in London. 


For almost one in seven users of mobile broadband (14 percent), the use of a dongle or datacard is their only Internet access method. This figure rises to 21 percent of males, 31 percent of 18 to 24 year olds and over one third of Londoners (34 percent).



The study suggests that although much wireless broadband is complementary and supplemental to fixed broadband access, there is a significant adoption of wireless broadband as a substitute for fixed services. 




Why T-Mobile is Going Over the Top for Voice

It might be seen as a harbinger of things to come, but T-Mobile USA, lagging behind the leaders in the U.S. mobile market, wants to make its Bobsled voice application something users can engage with on any device or carrier, something that would have been a "problem" in earlier days.

Bobsled, originally supporting VoIP conversations between Facebook users, now also supports VoIP calling to telephone numbers.

If you wonder why T-Mobile USA is taking an action that will cannibalize its voice revenues, the answer probably is that T-Mobile USA sees that as an inevitability.
Informa Telecom & Media predicts that North American consumer use of services such as Skype and Google Talk already accounts for 20 percent of all voice activity in 2011.

By 2014, that figure is expected to rise to 40 percent. Messaging also is moving to over the top mechanisms. Some three trillion messages will be sent using over the top apps in 2011, growing to nine trillion messages in three years. By 2015, IP messaging will surpass traditional cellular messaging, Informa predicts.

T-Mobile USA likely assumes that it has less to lose from cannibalizing its voice minutes of use, than it has to gain by becoming an application provider relevant on iPhones and other smart phone devices.

In-Store Mobile Marketing Works, Mall Owner Says

General Growth Properties operates 166 shopping malls in 43 states and has found conversion rates from location-based email at its sites to range from 30 percent to 60 percent, says Jeff Cloud, director of customer relationships and mobile marketing at General Growth.

He cited the example of a program that sends text promotions, with a shopper’s permission, to customers when they’re at a General Growth mall; the shopper texts back a code to receive a discount at a mall store or restaurant. E-mail marketing using location

A survey in the first quarter showed 50 percent of General Growth mall shoppers owned smart phones, compared to 41 percent of U.S. consumers. The survey also revealed that six in 10 moms that shop General Growth malls check e-mail on a mobile device, 53 percent search for coupons and offers via mobile and one in four purchases on mobile phones or tablet computers.

Cloud also reported that 17 percent of the e-mail General Growth sends its customers is opened on mobile devices, with about two-thirds being opened on Apple iPhones. He says General Growth uses a tool called Litmus to track customer response to marketing programs and finds that 46 percent of consumers who open an e-mail on an iPhone read it, 17 percent skim it and 37 percent just glance at it or delete it; comparable figures for Android phones are 57 percent reading, 13 percent skimming and 30 percent glancing or deleting.

He says General Growth has narrowed the size of its e-mail messages to 600 pixels from 750 or more pixels so that they will fit on the small screen of mobile phones. The company also has concluded mobile e-mails are most effective when they are 60 percent text and only 40 percent images.

What’s the future of mobile banking in Europe? - McKinsey Quarterly - Financial Services - Banking

Bankers across Europe believe that mobile devices will transform the retail-banking landscape in the next three to five years, but also believe they are not investing sufficiently to take advantage of the opportunities. They also think mobile service providers and other nonbanks are leading the way. That might come as a surprise to some, but banking applications and services are among the few new businesses tier-one telcos can get into that offer enough incremental revenue to justify the effort.

The study by McKinsey and the European Financial Management and Marketing Association also suggests that mobile devices’ overall economic impact on the banking industry may be neutral at best.

Individual banks should be able to increase their revenues and cut costs if they successfully exploit the convenience of mobile, its potential to drive digital commerce, and the opportunity it represents to target the unbanked in emerging markets, researchers at McKinsey say.

Some banks, however, may find that mobile adds to costs and erodes prices unless they offer a truly differentiated product or service. Mobile banking in Europe

Some 87 percent of banks aim to have a mobile site, and 84 percent are planning to launch some sort of mobile-banking “app” within the next 12 months, compared with 59 percent and 47 percent, respectively, that have them now. The mobile features these institutions currently offer are traditional banking services, such as the ability to check account balances and recent transactions and to conduct simple transactions. But 70 percent of banks said they plan to add more advanced functionality within the next 12 months.

Worldwide Social Media Revenue $14.9 Billion in 2012

Worldwide social media revenue is on track to reach $10.3 billion in 2011, a 41.4 percent increase from 2010 revenue of $7.3 billion, according to Gartner, Inc. Worldwide social media revenue is forecast for consistent growth with 2012 revenue totaling $14.9 billion, and the market is projected to reach $29.1 billion in 2015.

Advertising revenue is, and will remain, the largest contributor to overall social media revenue. Social media advertising revenue is forecast to total $5.5 billion in 2011, and grow to $8.2 billion in 2012. Advertising revenue includes display advertising and digital video commercials on any device including PCs, mobile and media tablets.

Hollywood Tries One More Way to Embrace Streaming Without Cannibalizing Legacy Business

Lots of people are hoping that streaming and over the top delivery of professional content will somehow lead not only to more "on demand" access, but somehow lead to lower prices. That might happen, but not if content owners and distributors have success creating "sell through" requirements that link streaming to purchase of legacy products.

The "Ultraviolet" initiative is one more example. Some have dubbed the streaming service the “Giant Media DRM Cloud Coalition Featuring Everyone Except Apple and Disney and Amazon."

The service allows users to buy movies first on DVD or Blu-Ray, providing a code that will let users stream or download the film on other devices, like iPads, Android phones and laptops. Hollywood Hopes "Ultraviolet" Will Save DVDs

Monday, October 10, 2011

Nearly 7 Percent of U.S. Content is Consumed on Mobile Devices

Share of Non-Computer Device Traffic in the U.S. U.S. consumers are increasingly connecting to digital content using a variety of devices such as smart phones, tablets and other mobile devices. In August 2011, the share of non-computer traffic for the U.S. increased to 6.8 percent from just 6.2 percent at the end of the previous quarter.

The largest percentage from this share came from mobile devices, which drove 4.4 percent of total digital traffic in the U.S.

The second largest driver of non-computer traffic was the tablet category, contributing nearly two percent of total traffic. Nearly 7 Percent of U.S. digital content now consumed on mobiles



Directv-Dish Merger Fails

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