Friday, January 8, 2016

1.66 Million Employed in App Industry; Perhaps 2.6 Million in Telecom Service Provider Industry

The U.S. app industry represents 1.66 million as of December 2015, according to the Progressive Policy Institute.

PPI includes among the firms employing those people large and small app developers; software and media companies; financial and retail companies; industrial companies; health and education enterprises; leading tech companies such as Google, Apple, and Facebook; nonprofits and government suppliers; and large accounting and consulting firms.

Such employees have direct information technology jobs, non-IT jobs that support those jobs, or spillover local retail and restaurant jobs, construction jobs, and all the other necessary services.

Core app economy workers number about 550,000.

By way of comparison, there were an estimated 910,000 people directly employed in the core telecom industry in 2010, according to US Telecom.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, there were in December 2015 some 868,000 core service provider jobs. Using the same ratio of indirect jobs to direct jobs as for the app economy analysis, there might be 2.6 million people employed by the core telecommunications services industry.
                                    Estimates of App Economy Jobs
Date of estimate
Date of publication
App Economy jobs, thousands

Fall 2011
Feb. 2012
466

April 2012
October 2012
519

June 2013
July 2013
752

Dec. 2015         January 2016
1660


Data: South Mountain Economics, Progressive Policy Institute, The Conference Board, Indeed, BLS



Cloud Computing Services Sales $47 Billion for 12 Months Ending in September 2015

Cloud computing infrastructure spending was about $60 billion for the 12 months ending in September 2015, according to Synergy Research Group, growing 28 percent annually.

About $47 billion was earned by sales of various cloud services.

Service revenues included $20 billion for cloud infrastructure services (IaaS, PaaS, private and hybrid services) and $27 billion from software as a service.

Public infrastructure as a service and platform as a service had the highest growth rate at 51 percent, followed by private and hybrid cloud infrastructure services at 45 percent.

Private cloud spending grew 16 percent.

cloud 2015
source: Synergy Research

2016 Year the Phone Number Disappears?

With 800 million people using Facebook’s Messenger app every month, it is understandable that
David Marcus, Facebook VP of Messaging Products, would say that 2016 is the year we see “the disappearance of the phone number.”

Many of you have been hearing such predictions for a decade or two, so will not pay too much attention. It is not that use of Messenger and other social messaging apps will stall. Indeed, it seems certain usage will grow.

But there simply is too much necessity for phone numbers, globally, for other reasons. Many of you know all the reasons why people do not rely on “phone numbers” to dial or reach people.

Underneath, in the network, there is little way to avoid such conventions.

75% of Cars Sold in 2020 Will Be Connected Car Capable

By 2020, 75 percent of cars shipped globally will be built with the necessary hardware to allow people to stream music, look up movie times, be alerted of traffic and weather conditions, and even power driving-assistance services such as self-parking. according to Business Insider Intelligence.

The connected-car market is growing at a five-year compound annual growth rate of 45 percent, about 10 times as fast as the overall car market.

Of the 220 million total connected cars on the road globally in 2020, connected services will be activated in 88 million of those vehicles.

Business Insider

Ration or Use Prices: There is No Other Way to Manage Use of Network Resources

All the arguments about network usage aside, “networks are finite resources, and there are only two possible ways of allocating those resources,” says analyst and consultant Martin Geddes.

Either there is a market for a “quantity or quality” and the price mechanism decides who really values it, or here is rationing of resources by some decision process imposed on users.

“There is no third option: pick one of the above,” Geddes says.

In other words, we have the choice of using a price mechanism, or rationing. Geddes argues that all T-Mobile US customers essentially win when Binge On is enabled, because overall network load is reduced.

Some prefer rationing, even if that is not what they claim is the case. Others prefer price mechanisms. Congestion is actually a form of rationing. So is Binge On.

Some argue use of price mechanisms would work better, in part because a price mechanism allows buyers to decide how much they want to pay for, and encourages them to consider alternate ways of satisfying their bandwidth demand.

That is why Wi-Fi offload works. People choose to use it, instead of staying on the mobile network, because there are actual or potential cost savings.

No Simple Way Forward for Access Providers

Communications service provider strategic and business model issues that were challenging before the Internet became far more acute afterwards. The widely-held notion that access providers were in danger of becoming “dumb pipes,” with application value migrating up the stack, is not misplaced.

The fundamental problem is that the historic, vertically-integrated voice model is difficult, at best, in the Internet era, where the fundamental model of computing is horizontal (layers) rather than vertically integrated.

That, in turn, has profound business implications. Of four major market positions examined by BCG analysts, though it is possible for a traditional telco to keep its legacy business model, some might say that will prove challenging, as it requires both vertical integration (apps and access) as well as the ability to maintain profitability with only incremental improvements to the key processes and services.

The problem is that the logical moves that could provide sustainability move in contradictory directions: towards a real focus on “hyper-scale” wholesale operations with massive scale, without worrying about innovation.

The other direction leads towards apps or platforms, both of which arguably are built on non-traditional telco skills and competencies.

The four types of roles “require different skills and motives, present different financial profiles to investors, and need to be managed on different time horizons.,” BCG argues. “A company can flourish in multiple layers—Amazon does it—but most organizations consistently underestimate the enormous challenges.”

Communities of users, professionals, and small entrepreneurs are typically found toward the top of the stack (application layer). “They flourish when uncertainty is high but the economies of mass are weak and where innovation comes through many small, seat-of-the-pants, trial-and-error bets,” BCG says.

Infrastructure organizations are typically found at the bottom of the stack. “They are most useful when uncertainty is low and economies of mass (specifically scale) are overwhelming,’ says BCG. “heir core competence is in long-term, numbers-driven capacity management.”

Curatorial platforms, narrowly defined as organizations that exist solely as hosts for communities, are a hybrid. In the stack, they lie immediately below the community they curate.

Traditional oligopolists occupy the broad middle of the stack. They have the advantage when uncertainty is high but not incalculable, and economies of mass (scale, scope, and experience) are significant but not overwhelming, BCG argues.

They exploit economies of scale and scope by placing big bets on technologies and facilities and make incremental improvements in products and processes.

Telcos and cable TV companies are “traditional oligopolists.” To sustain that role, they must sustain or create vertically-integrated services, continue to operate with economies of scale, and hope that incremental improvements are sufficient to sustain the business model.

That is a tall order, given the declines we continue to see in all the core legacy services. And that is why strategy now matters so much, and why Internet of Things now matters hugely. IoT might offer the best opportunity for creating a big, new vertically-integrated replacement business.

source: bcg

Thursday, January 7, 2016

IoT Could Turn "Digital" Laggers into Leaders

The Internet of Things is going to be a big deal for a number of reasons, not least of which is the likelihood that IoT is the way “physical” industries, unlike “virtual” industries, will be able to leverage digital technology.

Up to this point, the industries that have been most able to take advantage of digital technology are based on intangible, or largely intangible (software) products, including information technology, media, finance and insurance.

It does not take much insight to suggest that manufacturing, trade, health care and other industries can benefit from IoT capabilities.

source: McKinsey

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

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