Sunday, January 22, 2012

Are Phone Subsidies a Bad Idea for Service Providers?

Handset subsidies largely are responsible for rapidly increasing smart phone penetration. On the other hand, the subsidies put pressure on service provider profit margins. Assume a service provider subsidies a device at about 50 percent of its actual cost, in exchange for a two-year service contract.

A device that costs the service provider $400 might be sold for $200, with the subsidy value recouped over the life of the service contract.

One might say handset subsidies are a necessary evil, allowing service providers to more easily acquire new customers, reduce churn and increase sales of smart phone data plans.

Typically, smart phone users commit to new multi-year-term contracts and generate average revenue per unit nearly twice that of voice-only consumers.

But handset prices are a major issue for consumers, in China and elsewhere.


But there is a price: the subsidies are a real cost of acquiring customers and reduce both cash flow and operating margins.

“In Canada, operators are seeing the benefits of higher sales and upgrade volumes largely wiped out by the impact of discounted handset pricing,” says Joss Gillet, Wireless Intelligence senior analyst.

The acquisition cost handset subsidies represent is in the range of $350 to $400 per new subscriber in Canada, and about the same amount in the U.S. market.

Nevertheless, Canadian operators value these costs as positive investments since they help to acquire and retain higher ARPU, lower-churning customers on longer-term contracts.

In markets that are saturated, there now are pressures to reduce subsidies. But nobody really can predict what will happen if service providers do so. One has to think (economics suggests higher prices for any product people want will lead to lower demand; while lower prices lead to higher consumption) much-higher handset prices will reduce purchases of new handsets.

At the very least, that will reduce the rate of innovation in devices, as users will refresh their devices at a slower rate, and it is device innovation that drives change in the mobile business.

Lower subsidies also will drive consumers to buy less-expensive devices, as well. On the other hand, at least some might argue that service providers should “double down” by extending contracts and refresh cycles, essentially gaining longer contract terms at the price of more-rapid refresh rates.

Some might say the solution is simply to provide more prepaid options for consumers. Such plans require that users buy their phones at full retail prices. But that also means there is no need for an operator subsidy.

But service providers also differentiate postpaid service from prepaid by the selection of devices. Typically, the hot new devices only are available on postpaid plans, in part to encourage purchase of the higher-margin postpaid plans.

If for no other reason than the differences in average revenue per user and profit margin, it seems unlikely service providers will want to shift too far in the direction of greater sales of prepaid plans.

Another tactic, namely making less costly phones available, will likely be preferred. But some of that potential also depends on supplier ability to create attractive devices at lower cost, as well as user willingness to buy those devices.

So far, no service provider has been willing to take the risk of selling even the most highly desired Apple iPhone without a subsidy. Whether a workable solution can be found--allowing service providers to reduce subsidies without losing customers--remains to be seen.

Some might say the consumer net present value actually is higher when users do not buy on contract, the logic being the early termination charge that could apply. But consumers do not perform an NPV calculations when shopping for a new phone or new service provider.

Also, one might argue that the potential payment of an early termination fee is about the same as the incremental cost of a full-price phone, so that in most cases there is not much difference between buying a subsidized phone under contract, and paying full price for the device to avoid the contract.

Each consumer has to make their own evaluations, but the evidence so far suggests buyers prefer the subsidies, even if they don't like the contracts. It's a bit like attitudes and behavior in the video entertainment business.

People always tell researchers they don't like advertising. But if you ask whether they would prefer to get free or highly-discounted content they want, in exchange for ad exposure, they vote for ad exposure.

Service providers would prefer not to have to provide subsidies. Consumers would prefer not to have contracts. But consumers clearly prefer less-expensive prices for their devices. In a business where the enabler of service--the phone--costs more than a PC, subsidies probably are necessary.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Google’s Mobile Ad Revenues $7 Per Smart Phone

google-mobileCowen Group equity analyst Jim Friedland estimates that Google is generating $7 per year from each smart phone and tablet now used by mobile consumers globally. 


That figure includes both search and display advertising in mobile apps on both Android and iOS (iPhones and iPads). 


Active smart mobile devices worldwide reached 509 million in 2011, and are projected by Friedland to reach 914 million in 2012.


Based on that figure, Google’s mobile ad revenues could more than double from an estimated $2.5 billion in 2011 to $5.8 billion in 2012. 


As a percentage of Google’s total revenues, Friedland estimates that mobile grew from three percent in 2010 to seven percent in 2011 and will almost double again to 13 percent in 2012. 


By 2016, he expects mobile to be a $20 billion business for Google, and represent 26 percent of its total revenues. Google’s mobile ad revenue $5.8 Billion in 2012?


That suggests the magnitude of the challenge facing mobile service providers who generally consider mobile advertising one of a small handful of growth opportunities lucrative enough to contribute significant incremental revenue once mobile broadband the current growth driver, starts to saturate. 


If any mobile operator were to do as well as Google now does, that would work out to about $1.17 a month of incremental revenue per smart phone user, per month, at a $14 annual run rate. Consider that current revenues for voice, texting and data can run $75 per user, per month. 


Of course, the problem is that some current revenue contributors, especially voice and messaging, slowly are declining. And some observers think capital investments and operating costs actually could go negative, in many markets across Europe, North America and the Asia-Pacific region as early as 2015. 


Mobile advertising, mobile payments or machine-to-machine services, as well as cloud computing and other initiatives simply will not contribute significant revenues over the next five to 10 years, during which mobile service providers will have to rely on mobile broadband to fuel revenue growth.


Though not every mobile service provider will face such issues, many mobile executives will be facing huge profitability challenges between now and 2016, according to Juniper Research, which forecasts that mobile service providers face potential capital investment and operating costs that actually exceed revenues by about 2014, Juniper Research says. 

Separately, analysts at Analysys Mason concluded that carriers in many regions around the world face the risk of an "end to profit" in 2015 if not before.

A study carried out by mobileSquared surveyed 31 global mobile operators and found that one third of operators already see traffic and revenue decline, while 75 percent of are worried about losing revenues to mobile application providers.

The research confirmed that over-the-top apps already are affecting traffic and revenues. Some 32 percent of respondents thought operator traffic from messaging, voice and video calling would decline between 11 percent and 20 percent over the next five to 10 years. About 20 percent of respondents estimated revenue would fall 31 percent to 40 percent over the next five to 10-year period.
The problem, according to Juniper Research, is that profit margins are running between 15 percent and 20 percent, which means many service providers are at about break even.

By 2015, costs will exceed revenues slightly, and fall below capital and operating expense by about 2016.

Separately, analysts at Tellabs also predict that revenue could fall below costs "within four years."

The Analysys study assumes a continuation of current cost and revenue trends, especially the current pricing of bandwidth. The findings also suggest the immediate need mobile service providers have for changes in retail packaging and pricing to keep revenues above cost. 



In the near term, increasing data revenue per subscriber is about the only way mobile service providers will avoid a dangerous turn towards sustained financial losses. 

Algorithms Now Drive Advertising

Measured by dollars or by impressions, greater than 50 percent of online advertising is bought using "algorithms" that purport to demonstrate return on investment. 


In the future, some believe, 90 percent of all digital ad impressions, and more than 75 percent of digital ad dollars, will be bought and sold using such algorithmic methods. Content still matters, but algorithms drive buys

For better or worse, media and advertising are driven by the numbers. One has to hope that many intangibles can be quantified accurately and with relevance. There is no way to stop the drive for algorithmic buying. Online, print shifts


Strong Ties, Weak Ties in Facebook

tieznew study commissioned by Facebook suggests that the social network sometimes is an "echo chamber," but not always. 


The study of sharing habits of approximately 283 million Facebook users shows that much, perhaps most, sharing activity and influence is with "friends. That should come as no surprise, since that is the way Facebook is structured. 


The issue is the extent to which shared items affect people with whom any single user has only "weak ties," including people you do not know, as well as with people you know well, such as good friends, co-workers and family. 


Researchers looked at the extent to which strong and weak ties affect the likelihood that "novel" or unexpected new information is received from other people with whom any user has "strong ties," compared to "weak ties."

How Big Will M2M Market Be, Near Term?

Verizon Wireless and Encore Networks today announced the availability of Machine-to-Machine (M2M) solutions, with particular emphasis on enabling wireless capabilities for utility apps that traditionally have run over voice lines.


To be sure, M2M revenues are in an earlier stage of development than mobile broadband, which will account for most mobile service provider revenue growth over the near term.



The two companies will offer Encore's entire “Bandit”  line of enterprise routers, including devices that enable data transmission using the Verizon Wireless mobile network.



Many legacy applications could benefit, including automated teller machines, point-of-sale terminals, elevators, vending machines, kiosks and healthcare devices.



Power distribution sub-stations, refineries and transportation fleets are other expected application scenarios.



M2M is among a handful of potentially-important new mobile applications believed to be big enough, in terms of revenue, to sustain mobile service provider growth as voice and messaging revenues decline, and after mobile broadband uptake has saturated. Global M2M market in Euros

Groupon Move Hints at Mobile Commerce Ambitions

Mertado, a venue for shopping (social e-commerce), is being acquired by Groupon, the daily deals company. The move represents an expansion of Groupon's activities in the e-commerce space. 


Groupon Goods , for example, already has been selling physical products directly to end users, rather than simply offering other merchants a way to stimulate walk-in traffic at retail locations.



Mertado TV, which uses video content to sell products, is one capability Groupon seems to value. Mertado becomes Groupon

Friday, January 20, 2012

Will Mobile Revenues Fall Below Costs Between 2014 and 2016?

Though not every mobile service provider will face such issues, many mobile executives will be facing huge profitability challenges between now and 2016, according to Juniper Research, which forecasts that mobile service providers face potential capital investment and operating costs that actually exceed revenues by about 2014, Juniper Research says. 



Separately, analysts at Analysys Mason concluded that carriers in many regions around the world face the risk of an "end to profit" in 2015 if not before.

A study carried out by mobileSquared surveyed 31 global mobile operators and found that one third of operators already see traffic and revenue decline, while 75 percent of are worried about losing revenues to mobile application providers.


The research confirmed that over-the-top apps already are affecting traffic and revenues. Some 32 percent of respondents thought operator traffic from messaging, voice and video calling would decline between 11 percent and 20 percent over the next five to 10 years. About 20 percent of respondents estimated revenue would fall 31 percent to 40 percent over the next five to 10-year period. 


My own framework calls for a decline of as much as 50 percent in the legacy lines of service over 10 years, based on price trends in long distance. 

The problem, according to Juniper Research, is that profit margins are running between 15 percent and 20 percent, which means many service providers are at about break even.

By 2015, costs will exceed revenues slightly, and fall below capital and operating expense by about 2016.



Separately, analysts at Tellabs also predict that revenue could fall below costs "within four years."

The Analysys study assumes a continuation of current cost and revenue trends, especially the current pricing of bandwidth. The findings also suggest the immediate need mobile service providers have for changes in retail packaging and pricing to keep revenues above cost. 

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