Thursday, February 18, 2016

Jana Gets New Funding for Sponsored Data App and Platform

Advertising traditionally has provided the business model allowing consumers to get “no additional cost” or “free” access to content, and has become an important business model for over the top Internet apps as well.

Jana prefers the term “unrestricted” Internet access to the controversial term “sponsored” access or sponsored data, but the fundamental concept is the same. User access is underwritten on behalf of the user, by an advertiser or sponsor.

Jana just announced a $57 million Series C round led by new investor Verizon Ventures and participation from existing investors Spark Capital and Publicis Groupe.

“Over 30 million users have benefited from Jana’s free, unrestricted internet access, but our goal is to reach the next billion,” said Nathan Eagle, CEO of Jana.

Following Jana’s success in India and expansion into additional key markets, such as Indonesia and Brazil, the company has ambitious plans to launch its mCent program in China.

Jana’s mCent Android app offers “free data in exchange for brand engagement, allowing users to earn data that can be used anywhere on the internet.

As the second largest mobile advertising platform in India next to Google, Jana has twice the reach of users than Free Basics (formerly Internet.org) and surpassed Facebook’s growth revenue in nine months after launching mCent in India, Jana says.

Amazon, Saavn, Twitter, and WeChat and 311 mobile carriers are partners.

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Syntonic Sponsored Data Platform Launches Across Southeast Asia

“Freeway,” the sponsored data app produced by Syntonic, is launching across Southeast Asia in the first quarter of 2016.

The market expansion will enable leading mobile operators the opportunity to offer subscribers in the region with free mobile access to Clash of Clans and an inaugural list of popular messaging and social media applications.

WhatsApp, BBM, WeChat, and Twitter also will be part of the program. This catalog of sponsored data offers will only be available in Southeast Asia.

Sponsored data will become a US$6b market opportunity in Asia and a US$23b opportunity worldwide by 2019, Syntonic argues.

Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand, and Malaysia represent the world’s highest concentrations of smartphone devices as well as prepaid data plans, making it the most attractive market for sponsored data services.

In Indonesia, 98 percent of mobile plans are prepaid, normally meaning that data usage allotments are quite modest.

Prepaid markets will see mobile data traffic increase 14 times from 2015 to 2021. In many such markets, data costs can represent two percent to six percent of median household income.

AT&T was among Syntonic’s first carrier partners for the Syntonic sponsored data app, while Expedia was among the first content providers to take advantage of the platform.

Sponsored data allows brands to pay for mobile data usage on behalf of an individual mobile subscriber. Syntonic believes the markets where such features will be most valuable are those where data plans are relatively expensive and consumer ability to pay is more limited.

The sponsored data capability  increases app reach and opens up a host of new acquisition, engagement, and monetization opportunities for mobile service providers.

In that sense, sponsored data is an enabler for sponsored advertising, which some experts estimate will make up 23 percent of mobile ad spend by 2017.

AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon have already launched, or are in the process of launching, sponsored data offerings in the United States.

Outside North America, where pre-paid mobile data plans force data rationing, the market opportunity for sponsored data is even more significant, Syntonic believes.

Using Freeway by Syntonic, eligible AT&T customers gain unlimited access to a growing number of premium applications and content, all without incurring data charges.

Will AT&T Phase Out U-verse TV in Favor of DirecTV Access?

AT&T Inc. is phasing out the U-verse TV service, a Bloomberg report argues, citing analyst Chris Ucko of CreditSights. “AT&T is going to actively get out of the U-verse business,” said Ucko. AT&T predictably denies the report.

Ucko argues that AT&T is shifting linear video operations to DirecTV, a strategy some had suggested would be the case in territory, as well as out of region, while others believed DirecTV would be relied on primarily where AT&T did not have fixed network footprint.

As evidence, Bloomberg notes that AT&T has stopped building U-verse set-top boxes.

That might be a premature conclusion, though it clearly makes financial sense for AT&T to serve new linear video customers using the DirecTV network.

As an example, per-subscriber content costs are about $17 a month higher for U-verse customers than for DirecTV subscribers, Chief Financial Officer John Stephens has said. That is a meaningful difference for a service that has pressured profit margins and likely faces continued decline.

That is a function of subscriber volume, as programming contracts feature lower prices as volume builds. DirecTV has about five times as many customers as AT&T has U-verse video subscribers.

In part, that is a result of relatively limited U-verse access network coverage.

Of the 57 million households AT&T passes with its broadband service today, only 13 million have U-verse, and only about half could receive U-verse TV, where all 57 million can be sold TV now as part of a bundle from AT&T that uses DirecTV for linear video delivery.


It generally makes sense to harvest cash flow from any declining legacy business, so that would be one explanation for why AT&T might prefer to use DirecTV as the linear video delivery platform of choice.

Of course, capping the incremental revenue from linear video makes the business decision on upgrading the access network more difficult. In essence, high speed access has to carry the load, where it comes to incremental revenue from deploying a next-generation network.

But AT&T might see other alternatives in that area as well. New fifth generation mobile networks might provide another way to supply high speed access, without a full fiber to home upgrade.

Likewise, there might be new opportunities to use fixed wireless, in 5G spectrum, for fixed high speed access as well.

The other angle is that if linear video bandwidth can be repurposed--as cable TV operators already do--then U-verse networks will be able to support higher Internet access speeds as well.


DOCSIS 3.1 Full Duplex Will Support Symmetrical 10 Gbps High Speed Access

CableLabs has embarked on a new development effort to craft a “full duplex” use of hybrid fiber coax networks that breaks significantly with the traditional frequency division method used to support high speed access on cable TV networks, where one set of frequencies is reserved for upstream, and a different set of frequencies for upstream communications.

In full duplex communication, the upstream and downstream traffic use the same spectrum at the same time, roughly doubling efficiency, CableLabs says

A DOCSIS 3.1 full duplex network provides the peak speeds and flexibility of time division duplex solutions, but outperforms both time division and frequency division multiplexing in terms of bandwidth efficiency.

Full duplex will help evolve cable-provided high speed Internet access to support symmetric multi-gigabit service up to 10 Gbps on 1-GHz HFC networks, with the potential for even higher performance by utilizing spectrum that is currently available for future expansion above 1 GHz.


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Today’s Technology Duplex: Time Division Duplex
Frequency_Division_Duplex
Today’s Technology Duplex: Frequency Division Duplex

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T-Mobile Reports Strong 4Q 2015 Results, Predicts Strong 2016

T-Mobile US had another strong fourth quarter of 2015. In fact, T-Mobile US CEO John Legere argues that T-Mobile US acquired 108 percent of all industry net account growth over the year.

T-Mobile US added 2.1 million total net accounts in the fourth quarter (8.3 million in 2015). Among those gains were 1.3 million branded postpaid accounts (4.5 million in 2015), a metric widely considered the most-crucial “type of account” metric.

Service revenues grew a strong 11.7 percent year over year in the quarter and 10.9 percent, year over year, for all of 2015.

Total revenues grew 1.1 percent, year over year for the quarter and  8.4 percent for the full year.

Adjusted earnings (EBITDA) of $2.3 billion in the fourth quarter and $7.4 billion for the full year represented growth of 30.2 percent for the quarter (year over year) and 31.2 percent for the full year.

T-Mobile US expects branded postpaid net customer additions for 2016 between 2.4 million and 3.4 million.

For the full-year 2016, T-Mobile expects Adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $9.1 to $9.7 billion.

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

India, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand are Places to Watch for App Growth

For many in the app industry, India is the key market to watch in 2016. “Not only does India have the brightest economic outlook of the BRIC markets, but smartphone adoption is progressing rapidly with plenty of runway to grow,” argues App Annie.

“Some of the biggest app success stories can be found in India’s sensational mobile commerce growth, resulting in considerable investment for leading companies such as Flipkart and Snapdeal,” App Annie says.

Indonesia also say 40 percent growth in app downloads in 2015. In Indonesia, the sustained increase in mobile transactions fuelled incredible growth for marketplaces such as Tokopedia and Bukalapak in 2015.

Download growth rose as high as 60 percent, year over year, in Vietnam.

“Vietnam was the standout emerging market in 2015,” says App Annie.


While game downloads and revenue tend to be an early indicator of a booming app economy in most emerging markets, the gaming sector was notably robust in Vietnam in 2015.

Mobile games represent nearly 50 percent share of downloads on both Google Play and iOS in 2015.

In the local market, social, entertainment and games publisher VNG’s card and casino games ZingPlay - Tiến lên and ZingPlay Tá Lả proved popular. VNG also offers the most-downloaded messaging app in Vietnam,  Zalo.

In Thailand, messaging app LINE is a leader.  In 2015, the LINE app led combined iOS and Google Play revenue in Thailand. Facebook also maintained a huge presence in social networking in Thailand.

Photo apps also remain a key part of Thailand’s app economy. The photography category trailed only tools in Google Play downloads--outside of games--and grew 25 percent  year over year.

Nine Operators Form App and Service Alliance Reaching 1 Billion Customers

Nine telecom companies have created a “Partnering Operator Alliance” that aims to promote new apps and services for a billion mobile and fixed network customers in more than 80 countries.

Current members of the alliance include BT, Deutsche Telekom, Reliance Jio Infocomm, Millicom, MTS, Orange, Rogers, TeliaSonera and TIM.

The Alliance hopes to promote all relevant product categories within an operator’s business, mobile as well as fixed, B2C as well as B2B. The Alliance will be expanding to additional operators soon.

The Alliance focuses on exchanging best practices on how to bring partner propositions to the market, on joint efforts in partner scouting and will also exchange knowledge about upcoming trends and services amongst the group.

Already, the Alliance has established relationships with 30 innovative partner businesses including AirBnB, Celltick, Disconnect, Idoomoo, Magisto, Mojio and Spotify.

The alliance is an open network of like-minded operators worldwide with complementary geographic footprints.

DIY and Licensed GenAI Patterns Will Continue

As always with software, firms are going to opt for a mix of "do it yourself" owned technology and licensed third party offerings....