One common way of estimating the size of a new market is to look at existing activities and behavior that a new and alternative method could displace. In Sub-Saharan Africa, the need for people to send and receive money from friends and family members, in a single country, seems to be a widespread existing activity, suggesting that a more-convenient and safer method, using mobile phones, could see large uptake.
Some 32 percent of adults in 11 sub-Saharan African countries--about 80 million people--received money from family members or friends living in a different city of their country in the 30 days before being surveyed in 2011, according to a recent Gallup study.
This figure dwarfs the four percent of the total adult population (approximately 10 million people) in the 11 countries who received money from people in other countries in the same time frame. The implication is that money transfers largely are an intra-country activity, not an inter-country activity, for the most part.
Some 20 percent of the total adult population in the countries surveyed (roughly 50 million people) reported having sent domestic remittances to family members or friends living in different parts of the country.
This 20 percent is the total of respondents who only brought money in person (seven percent), only sent money in cash (three percent), only sent money electronically (five percent), and only sent money using informal as well as formal payment channels (six percent).
This compares with one percent (more than two million people) who sent international remittances -- excluding money brought in person -- with the majority of senders transferring money to another African country.
Across the region, only a handful of respondents sent money to another African country or to a country outside of Africa. Residents of Sierra Leone once again stood out with seven percent having sent money to another country in the previous 30 days, while all other countries had two percent or fewer adults sending remittances externally.
The reisk of sending money informally, in cash, is the problem mobile money transfers will solve. It often involves paying a bus driver to carry money in an envelope, or sending money with a friend who happens to be traveling the same direction, methods that can be slow, costly, and unreliable and put money in transit at risk of theft.
Some 53 percent of adults in 11 sub-Saharan countries interviewed in 2011, or about 134.3 million people, made transactions involving distant counterparties in the 30 days before the survey, according to a new Gallup study funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Despite the large flow of nationwide transactions, few in the countries surveyed used formal payment channels. Some 31 percent of all adults (approximately 79.0 million people) used only informal, cash-based modes such as informal money carriers, sending the money by bus or traveling friends, or simply carrying cash themselves to deliver it in person, to move money across the country.
So the opportunity would seem to be rather significant. Even in South Africa and Kenya, the two countries with the most advanced payment markets, respondents were more likely to report that they only used informal cash payments than to have used only electronic payment methods.
About 31 percent of South Africans and 22 percent of Kenyans used only informal cash payments in the past 30 days, the study found. Those percentages translate into 10.9 million and 5.2 million potential consumers of financial services, respectively.
The best growth potential in sub-Saharan Africa is likely in Nigeria, the biggest potential market, with an adult population of 90.6 million. An estimated 34.8 million Nigerians are using only informal cash payments.
Sub-Saharan Africans do not generally make use of electronic payments of any sort, including bank, mobile phone, or formal money transfer services such as Western Union), with nine percent of all adults (roughly 22.7 million) saying they made their payments this way.
About 47 percent, about 118.4 million adults, made no payments of any kind. But the larger point is that 53 percent of people in the 11 countries already have a need to transfer money on a regular or frequent basis.
These results come from a new study of 11 sub-Saharan African countries, "Payments and Money Transfer Behavior of Sub-Saharan Africans." w
Saturday, July 14, 2012
53% of People in 11 African Countries Routinely Send or Receive Money in a Month's Time: Mobile Could Help
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.
Friday, July 13, 2012
Aereo Aside, TV Broadcasters Will Go Mobile
Aereo Inc., the streaming television service that captures over the air broadcasts and makes them available to subscribers using iPhones and other Web-connected devices, will expand from New York to other large U.S. cities following a favorable court ruling that Aereo was not infringing broadcaster copyrights, Bloomberg says.
“Within a year and a half, certainly by ’13, we’ll be in most major” markets, said CEO Barry Diller. TV broadcasters are worried about the venture for a couple of reasons. For starters, cable, satellite and telco video service providers currently pay over the air broadcasters for retransmitting their signals.
If Aereo can retransmit without paying a fee, the door is open for cable, satellite and telco video service providers to argue they also should be exempt from such carriage fees. That obviously would hurt broadcaster revenues in two ways, first by slicing the fees they currently are paid, and secondly by sharply reducing their advertising potential.
Whether Aereo survives all the broadcast industry lawsuits, or does not, over the air TV broadcasters will get into mobile video themselves.
“Within a year and a half, certainly by ’13, we’ll be in most major” markets, said CEO Barry Diller. TV broadcasters are worried about the venture for a couple of reasons. For starters, cable, satellite and telco video service providers currently pay over the air broadcasters for retransmitting their signals.
If Aereo can retransmit without paying a fee, the door is open for cable, satellite and telco video service providers to argue they also should be exempt from such carriage fees. That obviously would hurt broadcaster revenues in two ways, first by slicing the fees they currently are paid, and secondly by sharply reducing their advertising potential.
Whether Aereo survives all the broadcast industry lawsuits, or does not, over the air TV broadcasters will get into mobile video themselves.
The Mobile Content Venture (MCV), a joint venture consisting of 12 major broadcast groups that operate the Dyle mobile TV service, suggests 68 percent of respondents would watch more TV if they we
More than 50 percent of consumers would consider watching mobile TV on smartphones and tablets.
Whether the current "dongle" approach Dyle is using makes sense, long term, is arguably a key
question, though.
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 Device Subsidy Decision Cost Telefonica, Vodafone 380,000 Customers?
Mobile service providers in Spain lost a quarter of a million clients in May 2012, the fourth consecutive month of subscriber losses, la ComisiĆ³n del Mercado de las Telecomunicaciones says.
The industry also lost 380,000 customers in April 2012, according to the Spanish telecommunications commission.
Precisely why customers are deserting is the issue. Spain is in what might be called a deep recession, so it is possible customers are dropping their mobile subscriptions to save money.
And it remains true that prepaid service, which offers consumers more control over their spending, continues to gain customers, which might reinforce the notion that economic distress is causing what might be called an unusual negative move in mobile subscriptions.
But some might suspect that the industry's end of subsidies for handsets also has had some negative impact, primarily by shrinking the number of new accounts mobile service providers need to add every month to compensate for departing customers.
The industry also lost 380,000 customers in April 2012, according to the Spanish telecommunications commission.
Precisely why customers are deserting is the issue. Spain is in what might be called a deep recession, so it is possible customers are dropping their mobile subscriptions to save money.
And it remains true that prepaid service, which offers consumers more control over their spending, continues to gain customers, which might reinforce the notion that economic distress is causing what might be called an unusual negative move in mobile subscriptions.
But some might suspect that the industry's end of subsidies for handsets also has had some negative impact, primarily by shrinking the number of new accounts mobile service providers need to add every month to compensate for departing customers.
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.
Dept. of Justice Skeptical About Verizon-Cable Marketing Deals, Maybe for Wrong Reasons
Though the Federal Communications Commission has cleared a sale of spectrum by major cable operators to Verizon, the Department of Justice apparently is concerned a related marketing deal between the cable operators and Verizon would be anti-competitive.
That deal has Verizon and several cable operators, including Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Cox Communications and Bright House Networks in marketing deals that allow each of the cable partners to sell Verizon products, while Verizon can sell cable products.
The Justice Department therefore is holding up Verizon Wireless's $3.9 billion deal to acquire cable-company airwaves, according to WSJ.com.
Justice Department officials think the marketing deal would be anti-competitive, amounting to an agreement "not to compete" with each other.
The problem, of course, is that there is no "fact base" that would allow anybody to determine whether that fear is justified, or not. There are some markets, including Boston and Baltimore, where Verizon has not already finishing building its FiOS network.
So the fear that Verizon will somehow "not compete" with local cable operators, when it already has spent the money to build a competitive network, is hard to substantiate, with the notable exceptions of Boston and Baltimore.
Some also fear that the cable operators will henceforth not be competitors to Verizon in wireless. Some might point out that cable operators have been buying spectrum, creating ventures and trying to sell service for decades, and never have been able to create an effective mobile operation.
Not everyone will agree, but there is a sense in which the concern, though possibly justified in some respects, misses the larger point. It is no secret that fixed network business models are becoming troubled. It is not a secret that a telco can make more money, and earn more profit, in the wireless realm.
Beyond that, some of us would argue that it appears the financial return Verizon expected from FiOS has not proven to be as robust as its executives had hoped. The total return from incremental revenue seems to be lower than hoped, while operating cost savings seem also to be less than hoped. In other words, fiber to the home might not have been the best use of capital, after all.
In the abstract, it is fine to hope for robust facilities-based fixed network competition. As a practical matter, it is no longer so easy a decision to defend. European service providers, for example, face investments of perhaps Eur 270 billion to build fiber to home networks.
And it is absolutely no secret that executives question whether there is a financial return to be had, not to mention the higher returns from other uses of that capital.
So the Dept. of Justice might be rightly concerned about competition, but possibly for the wrong reasons. One might make the argument that, in the coming market, it might be imprudent for most service providers to invest heavily in fiber to the home.
That deal has Verizon and several cable operators, including Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Cox Communications and Bright House Networks in marketing deals that allow each of the cable partners to sell Verizon products, while Verizon can sell cable products.
The Justice Department therefore is holding up Verizon Wireless's $3.9 billion deal to acquire cable-company airwaves, according to WSJ.com.
Justice Department officials think the marketing deal would be anti-competitive, amounting to an agreement "not to compete" with each other.
The problem, of course, is that there is no "fact base" that would allow anybody to determine whether that fear is justified, or not. There are some markets, including Boston and Baltimore, where Verizon has not already finishing building its FiOS network.
So the fear that Verizon will somehow "not compete" with local cable operators, when it already has spent the money to build a competitive network, is hard to substantiate, with the notable exceptions of Boston and Baltimore.
Some also fear that the cable operators will henceforth not be competitors to Verizon in wireless. Some might point out that cable operators have been buying spectrum, creating ventures and trying to sell service for decades, and never have been able to create an effective mobile operation.
Not everyone will agree, but there is a sense in which the concern, though possibly justified in some respects, misses the larger point. It is no secret that fixed network business models are becoming troubled. It is not a secret that a telco can make more money, and earn more profit, in the wireless realm.
Beyond that, some of us would argue that it appears the financial return Verizon expected from FiOS has not proven to be as robust as its executives had hoped. The total return from incremental revenue seems to be lower than hoped, while operating cost savings seem also to be less than hoped. In other words, fiber to the home might not have been the best use of capital, after all.
In the abstract, it is fine to hope for robust facilities-based fixed network competition. As a practical matter, it is no longer so easy a decision to defend. European service providers, for example, face investments of perhaps Eur 270 billion to build fiber to home networks.
And it is absolutely no secret that executives question whether there is a financial return to be had, not to mention the higher returns from other uses of that capital.
So the Dept. of Justice might be rightly concerned about competition, but possibly for the wrong reasons. One might make the argument that, in the coming market, it might be imprudent for most service providers to invest heavily in fiber to the home.
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.
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Local Commerce Enabled by Mobile Devices Might Reach $17 Billion in 2015
But the business will be highly fragmented. Perhaps the single biggest segment will be mobile payments, assuming about 1.75 percent of gross retail volume as the revenue for transaction processors. But the "new" point of sale terminal segment, loyalty and daily deals segments will contribute revenues of single-digit billions.
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.
66% of New Devices Purchased in U.S. are Smart Phones
Some 66 percent of U.S. consumers who bought a new mobile phone in the second quarter of 2012 bought a smart phone, Nielsen reports.
The installed base of U.S. devices now includes 54.9 percent smart phones at the end of June 2012.
Android continues to lead the smart phone market in the U.S., with 51.8 percent of people using an Android OS handset. Some 34.3 percent of smart phone owners use an Apple iPhone.
The installed base of U.S. devices now includes 54.9 percent smart phones at the end of June 2012.
Android continues to lead the smart phone market in the U.S., with 51.8 percent of people using an Android OS handset. Some 34.3 percent of smart phone owners use an Apple iPhone.
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.
In Competitive Markets, Lowest-Cost Provider Wins
In a competitive market, the provider with the lowest operating costs wins, one might argue. And if there is one statement that virtually all contestants might agree upon, it is that, as a rule, the tier one telecom service providers have the highest costs.
Cable companies virtually always have lower overall costs, in both capital and operating areas. Contestants that base their businesses on wholesale access, either mobile or fixed, tend to have lower costs than the companies from which they buy that wholesale access.
Internet-only firms have lower costs than all the above. Of course, that is the easy part. Telecom executives are anything but dumb. They know their cost structures, and those of their competitors.
The practical issues are how to continue wringing costs out of their operations. And that means identifying cost drivers.
European service providers have, for example, been attacking operating costs since at least 1996. And though you might think converting increasingly to IP-based services would wring out cost, in some cases, it might increase operating costs, at least in the customer service area, contrary to expectations.
So where can telcos look for savings? According to researchers at Deloitte, telco operating costs can be classified into three categories. As a figure of merit, “non-process costs” account for 25 to 30 percent of the cost base (35 to 40 percent for wireless carriers).
That includes interconnection fees, taxes, customer premises equipment and uncollectible items. Deloitte researchers think it will be difficult to cut those costs very significantly.
Support processes typically account for 20 to 25 percent of the cost base (15 to 25 percent for wireless carriers), and include marketing, HR, IT, finance and other administrative costs. While savings opportunities may exist in support process areas, most telcos have done a better job of controlling these costs, so far.
Operational processes typically represent about 50 to 55 percent of the cost base (40 to 45 percent for wireless carriers). Those process costs include customer service, sales, billing, and network-related processes.
It is these costs that carriers are challenged to control as the market changes, and this is where carriers should first focus on finding efficiencies and savings, Deloitte argues.
Network-related process costs (installation and repair, operations, and design) can typically account for 60 to 75 percent of operating expenses. Deloitte argues that 18 percent to 29 percent in savings in two main areas, including reducing dispatches and improving productivity of installation and repair technicians.
Reducing dispatches can save five to eight percent of total network operating expense,
achieved through better screening of tickets to reduce “no-trouble-found” dispatches, improved scheduling to reduce “no-access” dispatches, better management policies to reduce “non-demand” dispatches, and an increase in fi rst-pass resolution of tickets.
Deloitte also has seen savings of 12 to 18 percent of total network operating expense achieved by increasing the use of “Good Jobs in Eight” (a metric that measures the number of good jobs in eight hours per technician), and moving to a pay-for-performance model.
But it is non-network operations which can account for 35 to 45 percent of operating expense,
and Deloitte has seen changes in those areas yield 28 to 44 percent in costs. Telcos should focus on non-network operational process areas, such as call centers, field sales, retail stores, and the “order to cash” processes to get savings in those areas.
Cable companies virtually always have lower overall costs, in both capital and operating areas. Contestants that base their businesses on wholesale access, either mobile or fixed, tend to have lower costs than the companies from which they buy that wholesale access.
Internet-only firms have lower costs than all the above. Of course, that is the easy part. Telecom executives are anything but dumb. They know their cost structures, and those of their competitors.
The practical issues are how to continue wringing costs out of their operations. And that means identifying cost drivers.
European service providers have, for example, been attacking operating costs since at least 1996. And though you might think converting increasingly to IP-based services would wring out cost, in some cases, it might increase operating costs, at least in the customer service area, contrary to expectations.
So where can telcos look for savings? According to researchers at Deloitte, telco operating costs can be classified into three categories. As a figure of merit, “non-process costs” account for 25 to 30 percent of the cost base (35 to 40 percent for wireless carriers).
That includes interconnection fees, taxes, customer premises equipment and uncollectible items. Deloitte researchers think it will be difficult to cut those costs very significantly.
Support processes typically account for 20 to 25 percent of the cost base (15 to 25 percent for wireless carriers), and include marketing, HR, IT, finance and other administrative costs. While savings opportunities may exist in support process areas, most telcos have done a better job of controlling these costs, so far.
Operational processes typically represent about 50 to 55 percent of the cost base (40 to 45 percent for wireless carriers). Those process costs include customer service, sales, billing, and network-related processes.
It is these costs that carriers are challenged to control as the market changes, and this is where carriers should first focus on finding efficiencies and savings, Deloitte argues.
Network-related process costs (installation and repair, operations, and design) can typically account for 60 to 75 percent of operating expenses. Deloitte argues that 18 percent to 29 percent in savings in two main areas, including reducing dispatches and improving productivity of installation and repair technicians.
Reducing dispatches can save five to eight percent of total network operating expense,
achieved through better screening of tickets to reduce “no-trouble-found” dispatches, improved scheduling to reduce “no-access” dispatches, better management policies to reduce “non-demand” dispatches, and an increase in fi rst-pass resolution of tickets.
Deloitte also has seen savings of 12 to 18 percent of total network operating expense achieved by increasing the use of “Good Jobs in Eight” (a metric that measures the number of good jobs in eight hours per technician), and moving to a pay-for-performance model.
But it is non-network operations which can account for 35 to 45 percent of operating expense,
and Deloitte has seen changes in those areas yield 28 to 44 percent in costs. Telcos should focus on non-network operational process areas, such as call centers, field sales, retail stores, and the “order to cash” processes to get savings in those areas.
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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