Wednesday, October 2, 2013

16% to 26% of U.S. Mobile Customers Use OTT Messaging At Least Once a Month

These days, it is hard to distinguish between use of text, voice and video features of over the top "VoIP" apps, but in many countries a majority of smart phone customers use an over the top messaging app during a typical month. 
In the U.S. market, perhaps 26 percent of smart phone users surveyed by Yankee Group use an over the top VoIP app once a month. About eight percent report using an app daily, while 10 percent report they do so at least weekly. 
Japanese smart phone panelists are the predominant users of Voice over IP (VoIP) applications on mobile devices, among seven countries tracked by Arbitron Mobile. That usage includes any messaging features of over the top VoIP apps.
Almost 70 percent of the smart phone panelists in Japan accessed VoIP apps during the month of January 2013, spending six hours and 25 minutes with voice and messaging apps. 
The Arbitron Mobile on-device software meter reported that VoIP users in the Japan smart phone panel accessed their VoIP apps an average of 222 times in the month, three times more than panelists in Indonesia, who at 65.9 sessions per month are the second most active users of VoIP apps across the seven Arbitron Mobile-based smart phone panels.
About 41 percent of Indonesia panelists use VoIP apps on their mobile devices, spending an average of 2 hours and 15 minutes a month.
China panelists are the least active users of VoIP apps. Only 16.4 percent of the China smart phone panel (operated by iResearch) accessed any VoIP apps in the month of January.

Panel
VoIP User %
VoIP Time Spent
(minutes per month)
Sessions/Month
Japan
68.2%
386.5
222.4
Indonesia
40.9%
134.9
65.9
United Kingdom
22.1%
79.2
35.1
United States
16.5%
77.6
35.6
Germany
27.0%
68.1
31.8
France
17.4%
65.2
34.3
China
16.4%
26.6
27.2
source: Arbitron
Japanese smart phone panelists, the heaviest users of mobile VoIP, spend the least amount of time—one hour, 36 minutes in the month—and have the fewest sessions—57.8 in the month—for carrier-based voice calls. 
Indonesian panelists, the second heaviest users of VoIP are the second lightest user of their carrier calling minutes.           

Panel
VoIP Time Spent
(minutes per month)
Voice Call Time Spent
(minutes per month)
Japan
386.5
96.3
Indonesia
134.9
109.0
United Kingdom
79.2
242.3
United States
77.6
460.6
Germany
68.1
167.8
France
65.2
298.4
China
26.6
225.6
source: Arbitron
Three VoIP apps occupy the leading position among Arbitron smart phone panelists around the world. Skype predominates in U.S. and Europe; LINE leads in Japan and Indonesia; and Youxin is the leader in a crowded field of VoIP apps in China.

Panel
VoIP
Apps
App User %
 App Time Spent
(minutes per month)
Number of
Sessions/Month
Japan
LINE
64.2%
392.3
225.7
Indonesia
LINE
27.6%
156.0
79.7
United Kingdom
Skype
14.4%
52.9
23.9
United States
Skype
11.5%
64.1
22.5
Germany
Skype
17.1%
53.1
23.1
France
Skype
12.8%
44.5
19.1
China
Youxin
4.7%
16.5
21.4
Arbitron

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

AT&T 1-Gbps Coming to Austin, Texas mid-2014

As promised, AT&T will activate at least some locations in Austin, Texas with a symmetrical gigabit access network by about mid-2014, perhaps not coincidentally when Google Fiber also is slated to begin sales.

The more-immediate import, for many potential customers, is the first part of the upgrade, to a symmetrical 300-Mbps connection, starting for some locations by December 2013.

AT&T, which says it is beginning construction of its gigabit network in Austin, Texas, might reach the gigabit standard at some locations by mid-2014.

AT&T says it is starting with “tens of thousands” of customer locations throughout Austin and the surrounding areas at the end of 2013 (300 Mbps), with additional local expansion planned in 2014, though no specific targets were immediately revealed.

Skeptics might say it is important that AT&T did not announce pricing, either, though others might counter that the launch is not expected until December 2013. A rational service provider might not want to reveal too much detail until service actually is available.

But AT&T also faces a problem Google Fiber does not, namely an installed base of customers whose perception of what a reasonable Internet access offer looks like will change, if AT&T starts selling gigabit connections for prices anywhere close to what Google Fiber offers.

The problem is the same as AT&T and other telcos faced when VoIP began to get traction in the market. Telcos had scores of millions of legacy voice accounts sold for healthy premiums compared to many of the upstart VoIP providers.

So the strategic challenges was simple: match VoIP prices and features, or essentially refuse to match those offers and face erosion of accounts. One might argue that is not smart, but the math works.

Instead of taking an across the board revenue hit on all existing lines, telcos mostly decided to lose market share over time, while maintaining prices on a dwindling customer base. To be sure, customers were deserting in any case for mobile alternatives.

AT&T will face the same issue with gigabit networks, as the new value-price relationships will be reset, by its own gigabit offer and Google Fiber and other offers that are hovering around a 1-Gbps for $70 to $80 retail pricing range.

That of course has implications for the value-price relationship for the 300-Mbps service and all other slower speed services, which essentially will be priced in relation to the 1-Gbps service.

Google Fiber, for example, already has done so. Customers can sign up for free 5 Mbps service, guaranteed for seven years.

But Internet access and voice markets have different strategic implications. As AT&T did decades ago in the stand-alone long distance market, a choice to harvest legacy revenues makes sense if a product is in the mature and declining part of its life cycle.

Internet access is in some ways "mature," but has a different strategic character, as it is the foundation for most, if not all, other services fixed network service providers will offer.

Though it will face criticism for not moving faster, AT&T and other major ISPs likely have concluded that although they have to respond to the gigabit challenge posed by Google Fiber, they will respond market by market, as they typically always do, mindful of the implications for their existing high speed access revenue streams.

AT&T likely also has concluded that rushing to gigabit speeds is a mistake, as most consumers are likely to be quite happy with 300-Mbps services that cost less.

Time Warner Cable's Chief Financial Officer Irene Esteves continues to get coverage every time she speaks in an investment or other conference about the state of consumer demand for 1-Gbps access, seemingly prompted in virtually every case by Google Fiber's Kansas City 1-Gbps network and service. Esteves repeatedly has said that Time Warner Cable does not see the demand for such speeds.

Some will be tempted to argue this is a typical effort by a quasi-monopolist to dismiss a competitor's better and disruptive offering, and rather incorrect, since people in Kansas City do seem to be buying Google Fiber.

A few might say the statement is an effort to stave off, as long as possible, or perhaps indefinitely, the need to invest major new sums in access technology.

Others will note that since Time Warner Cable faces Google directly in Kansas City, the question is rather an obvious question for investors to ask. There is some truth to all such interpretations.

On the other hand, to understand the comment that "we just don't see the need of delivering that to consumers." one has to unpack the statement and put it into context.

Esteves is not necessarily dismissive of Google Fiber.  "We're in the business of delivering what consumers want, and to stay a little ahead of what we think they will want," she said, and seems always to say when asked about the state of demand for 1-Gbps access.

A fair way to rephrase might be "At the moment, at the prices we would have to charge, we believe few customers would want to buy 1-Gbps access." The statement is highly conditional.

At very low prices, many consumers would buy 1-Gbps. At significant prices, far fewer will do so. At high prices, a small percentage will purchase.

A corollary might be that "right now, at significant prices compared to our other offerings, few consumers we sell to would willingly pay the incremental prices to get the fastest speeds."

The "consumers don't want it" is a highly conditional statement. Time Warner Cable and all other executives know full well there is some set of circumstances that could drive very high take rates.

Time Warner Cable's business objective is to supply any future forecast level of demand, under competitive market conditions, at a profit, without investing prematurely or wildly in ways that harm its financial prospects.

Some might say Time Warner Cable is craven, stupid or just wrong about end user demand for 1 Gbps access. That's unfair and incorrect. Time Warner is making a highly conditional statement about demand under a finite set of circumstances. The answer will be different under a different set of specific circumstances.

U.S. Mobile Service Provider Market Share Shifts after AT&T, T-Mobile US Acquisitions

The recent spate of mobile service provider acquisitions, in particular on the part of AT&T and T-Mobile US, have rearranged U.S. service provider market share, as measured by subscriber accounts.

Until the acquisition by T-Mobile US of MetroPCS, and AT&T’s purchase of Leap Wireless, Verizon held the lead in share of customer accounts.

Virtually all observers would have in 2012 agreed that Verizon Wireless had the largest number of U.S. mobile subscribers, with AT&T following. Sprint, by most estimates based on company reporting also had significantly more share than T-Mobile US.

But after the acquisitions, market share has shifted, with AT&T leading Verizon, and Sprint still ahead of T-Mobile US, but by a smaller margin.

Many compilations of market share from 2012 had Verizon leading with about 34 percent share, followed by AT&T with about 32 percent, then Sprint with about 17 percent and T-Mobile US with 10 percent share. After a spate of acquisitions, the shares are rearranged.

AT&T now seems to have passed Verizon, and T-Mobile US has gained market share.

2013 mobile service provider market share



Monday, September 30, 2013

A New Era of Computing and Communications: A Decade in the Making

Sometimes big changes occur so gradually we aren’t aware the changes are significant. Back in 2008, for example, IDC predicted the information technology industry was at the very
beginning of what IDC called a "hyper-disruption” of the business, something that happens "once every 20 years to 25 years."

Simply, IDC predicted, rightly, a shift to computing built on mobile devices and apps,
cloud services, mobile broadband networks, big data analytics, and social technologies. That would supersede the current era, which many of us would have a hard time naming, though it is clear we had eras lead by mainframe, minicomputer and then PC devices.

More recently, the Internet has been a bigger factor, and mobile has clearly emerged as an important device form factor.

Collectively, IDC refers to this next era of computing as the "third platform." By about 2020,
when the information technology industry generates $5 trillion in spending, over $1.3 trillion
more than it does today, 40 percent of the industry's revenue and 98 percent of its
growth will be driven by third platform technologies that today represent just 22 percent of
spending.

It would be fair enough to note that such changes in computing eras had direct consequences for suppliers and buyers, notably the inability of any leader in one era to similarly dominate the next era, changes in sales channels (direct to indirect), end user devices, indoor networking and access networks and protocols.

Mobile and cloud are perhaps the easiest ways to characterize the direction of the shift. By extension, such periods of disruption also are going to disrupt revenue models and magnitudes for current suppliers.

A rational observer might agree that “consumerization” of information technology (people using consumer devices and apps) is characteristic of such a platform, as cloud services can be acquired and used by consumers (and also in their work roles) without distribution layers between end user and supplier.

Those distribution layers are important because they include significant businesses--telcos, cable companies, satellite providers, mobile service providers, ISPs, channel partners, distributors, value-added resellers and device suppliers.




Video Makes "Pricing by Value" Difficult

Video entertainment is going to pose a huge challenge for ISPs using every type of business model, from simple “best effort” access to providers of managed services. Sheer volume is the problem for providers of best effort access; but revenue per bit is the issue for some managed service providers.

The revenue per bit problem is easy to describe. Assume an ISP sells a triple-play package for a $130 a month retail price, where each component--voice, Internet access and entertainment video--is priced equally (an implied price of $43 for each component).

Ignore other cost of service elements, such as marketing and content acquisition fees. In term of network usage, that would make sense if each constituent service “consumed” roughly equivalent amounts of capacity, or if retail charging was based relatively directly on consumed bandwidth, and not “perceived value.”

Of course, retail pricing is to some extent based on perceived value. Any service provider would have trouble pricing a service wildly out of line with prevailing customer expectations. A voice service costing about $40 to $50 a month is viewed as a market level.

Internet access priced roughly in the same rangle is viewed as a reasonable, market-set level, as is video service of roughly $70 a month. In other words, people have expectations about what a certain product or service “should” cost, as Apple iTunes has created an expectation that the “right price” for one song is 99 cents.

Use of network resources is unbalanced, though. Voice requires use of almost no bandwidth, while video consumers nearly two orders of magnitude more capacity, for each minute of use. Internet traffic is in between, with some apps consuming little capacity (email), some apps consuming a moderate amount of capacity (web browsing) while others are heavy capacity consumers (video).

So video poses the big value-price issues for an ISP, exacerbated by the revenue and business model implications of third party, over the top video (Netflix, YouTube) and managed video (cable, satellite and telco TV).

The revenue per bit from a customer’s use of Netflix or YouTube is very low. The revenue from a managed video subscription service are arguably reasonable, so long as the delivery network is using multicast technology.

If any future shift to primary delivery of subscription video services using a standard Internet connection, the revenue issues will be compounded, since consumption of video bits will dominate total use of the network. And that will make “pricing by value,” or “pricing by consumption,” more difficult.

The reason is simply that consumers will "value" an hour or two hours of entertainment at levels that make "pricing by value" or "pricing by consumption" a difficult exercise.



Provo, Utah Residents Get Google Fiber 1-Gbps Service in October 2013



The point here is not so much that one U.S. community gets a symmetrical gigabit access service for $70 a month. The broader impliction is that Google Fiber is resetting retail price expectations for gigabit access services. 

That, in turn, is going to eventually reset consumer expectations for access services of lesser bandwidth as well. 

EPB, the Chattanooga, Tenn. supplier of 1-Gbps service, has dropped its gigabit service rate from $300 a month to $70 a month, a reaction to the price umbrella Google Fiber apparently is creating.

EPB also converted all existing customers with 100 and 250 megabit-per-second services to the the gigabit speed.

Separately, Utopia, which operates a wholesale gigabit network in about 10 Utah cities, also says its retail ISP partners have dropped prices for gigabit access from about $300 a month to $65 a month to $85 a month.

To the extent that Google Fiber aimed to reset expectations about access speeds and prices, Google Fiber seems to be succeeding.

Exposing Network Features to Create Revenue is Hard, AT&T Seems to Find

AT&T Adworks is one example of how a service provider can monetize what it knows about its customers, providing insight to third party business partners. Virtually nobody thinks that is an easy new business to create. 

And AT&T might be shifting attention elsewhere (connected car and other machine to machine initiatives, for example), as rumors of job cuts at the business unit are heard.

That doesn't mean mobile service providers will not achieve success at some point, and to some extent. But  AT&T's present efforts to make available data allowing advertisers to target users on mobile, TV and other devices, is not getting traction. 

To be sure, few initiatives of this type--exposing network features to third party business partners--are getting too much traction, though there was much hope five years ago. 

To be sure, we are early in the potential development of this hoped-for trend. But service providers have relatively little to show for the effort, so far. 

On the other hand, app providers might be getting more traction with service providers, as shown either by co-marketing of over the top messaging apps or Virgin Media's cooperation with Netflix. 


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