Monday, April 18, 2016

Verizon Readies New FiOS IP Video Service

In addition to its go90 mobile video streaming service, Verizon appears close to launching a new managed video service to run over its FiOS network, but with features more like an over the top streaming service, though it apparently will require use of a Verizon decoder, as does the current FiOS TV service, Variety reports.  

Both go90 and the new TV service show Verizon is serious about its belief that linear TV is not going to be the dominant delivery method in the future.

Observers believe the new service will incorporate additional services such as AOL and Netflix, using the “menu” approach common to smart TVs and Internet TV dongles.

In the past, many have questioned how well firms such as Verizon (and other telcos) would perform in the entertainment video markets. It is not a core competency, many would argue.

That is true, but arguably is true for virtually all participants in IP content, app and service ecosystems who move into adjacencies.

One might argue that devices and video streaming are not core competencies for Amazon. One might argue Internet access, devices, self driving cars, artificial intelligence and most apps other than search are not core competencies for Google.

One might argue Facebook’s core competence is not messaging, or that cable TV companies would never be “good” at selling communications services to enterprises and mid-market businesses.

None of that has mattered.

These days, participants moving into adjacencies is simply part of business strategy in competitive markets.

U.S. Fixed Wireless Market About to be Rearranged

With Google, Facebook and AT&T exploring, testing or intending to deploy fixed wireless  for Internet access networks, the fixed wireless industry is on the brink of major redefinition. AT&T alone has said it would use fixed wireless to serve 13 million locations.

Others such as Starry, also are hoping fixed wireless emerges as a major platform for providing Internet access.

In 2012, there were perhaps 2,000 to 2,500 fixed wireless Internet service providers supplying Internet access to two million to three million subscribers in the United States, according to the Wireless Internet Service Providers Association.

So just about any serious deployment of Google, Facebook or AT&T fixed wireless would immediately reshape the U.S. fixed wireless business.

At 13 million connections, AT&T alone would represent 87 percent of all U.S. fixed wireless installed base, even if Google Fiber and Facebook added zero new accounts in the U.S. market.

Assuming Google is able to add only incrementally to its present installed base of accounts, while Facebook does not even enter the U.S. market, AT&T now looms as the major factor in the U.S. fixed wireless market.

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Cloud Infrastructure Growing Faster than Software as a Service

The worldwide public cloud services market is projected to grow 16.5 percent in 2016 to total $204 billion, up from $175 billion in 2015, according to Gartner, Inc.


The highest growth will come from cloud system infrastructure services (infrastructure as a service [IaaS]), which is projected to grow 38.4 percent in 2016.


Gartner now also includes cloud advertising in its cloud services forecast.


Cloud advertising includes cloud-based services that support the selection, transaction and delivery of advertising and ad-related data.


Cloud application services (SaaS) are forecast to grow 20.3 percent in 2016, to $37.7 billion.


Cloud advertising services involve an auction mechanism that matches bidders with advertising impressions as they become available.


In fact, cloud advertising will be the largest segment of the global cloud services market, growing 13.6 percent in 2016 to reach $90.3 billion in 2016.


"The market for public cloud services is continuing to demonstrate high rates of growth across all markets and Gartner expects this to continue through 2017," said Sid Nag, research director at Gartner. "This strong growth continues reflect a shift away from legacy IT services to cloud-based services, due to increased trend of organizations pursuing a digital business strategy."


Worldwide Public Cloud Services Forecast (Billions of U.S. Dollars)
2015
2015 Growth (%)
2016
2016 Growth (%)
Cloud business process services (BPaaS)
39.2
2.7
42.6
8.7
Cloud application services (SaaS)
31.4
15.5
37.7
20.3
Cloud application infrastructure services (PaaS)
3.8
16.1
4.6
21.1
Cloud system infrastructure services (IaaS)
16.2
31.9
22.4
38.4
Cloud management and security services
5.0
20.7
6.2
24.7
Cloud advertising
79.4
15.4
90.3
13.6
Total market
175.0
13.7
203.9
16.5



Saturday, April 16, 2016

Bankruptcy for Former Incumbent Telcos?

Few veterans of the monopoly telecom business can imagine outright failure of the former incumbents. But few should hold such views. Outright failure seems not only possible, but increasingly likely, over the next couple of decades.

Pre-1980, the notion that a national telecom company could go “out of business” was fanciful in the extreme. In the Internet Protocol era, any single provider probably can “go out of business” without imperiling the national interest in maintaining a viable communications fabric.

That is, to say the least, a huge change in possibility that all too often seems imperfectly reflected in regulatory approach. We keep regulating as though some markets need to be “stimulated,” when in fact markets already are evolving in a fundamentally more competitive direction.

We keep acting as though “former incumbents” have decisive market power, when at every turn their power is eroding.

Someday we will have to confront actual market failure on the part of former incumbents. Because we now live in an IP world, specifically designed to overcome failures and outages, the communications fabric will not suffer catastrophic damage.

But the mindset has to change.

Some big telecom companies can--and most likely will--eventually go out of business. There are multiple reasons. Some legacy firms simply have unsustainable cost structures, while operating in markets where lower-cost, higher-value competitors are emerging.

In the U.S. market, it is not unreasonable to argue that Comcast will eventually become the biggest and most-important provider of many fixed network “telecom” services (Internet access, voice, video) and a leading provider of mobile services.

It is not unreasonable to expect that although Verizon, AT&T and Comcast lead, other former leaders will be absorbed, merged, or otherwise removed from the market as branded entities.

It is not unreasonable to assume that leading app providers such as Google and Facebook, or major device suppliers such as Apple, might not become significant providers of mobile access services.

All of those trends will undermine the legacy telco business model, but also provide the replacement providers, so that the national communications infrastructure remains intact. IP really helps, in that regard.

“Dumb pipe” (access and transport functions) is “supposed” to support all the other layers of the software function. Over time, even as communications providers sell a mix of managed and “dumb pipe” services, dumb pipe is going to become more important.

But dumb pipe also tends to imply much lower profit margins. That is not to say incumbents cannot hope to create new managed services. They can do so, and will try very hard. They might ultimately succeed at finding big new revenue sources to replace the lost managed voice and messaging revenue sources.

It just is not easy. Eventually, some big household names are going to disappear, and new providers are going to emerge to replace them. Our switch from monopoly to competition, and from TDM to IP, are going to wring inefficiency out of the business, imperiling survival for high cost providers.  

"Winner Take All" or "Winner Take Most" for Future Telecom Markets?

Referrals to content sites provide a clear illustration of the “winner take all” nature so often seen in application markets. On the Parse.ly network, for example, more than 80 percent of referrals are generated either by Facebook or Google sites.




So far, telecom markets have developed since dergulation as "winner takes most" structures. Unlike the structure of the Parse.ly referral market, most mobile markets (and mobile markets are most of the telecom business, these days) feature three to four dominant providers.

That is not as concentrated as the Parse.ly referral market, but still concentrated. The big issue now is whether a stable long-term pattern requires a reduction of leading providers to just three, from the four or five pattern still prevalent in most markets. 

A few countries have the opposite problem, suggesting that there is room for serious debate about whether three contestants really is enough to encourage robust competition on a sustainable basis. In South Korea and Japan, for example, policymakers seem to want to create room for a fourth mobile provider, though all efforts to do so, so far, have failed. 

The point is that it does not seem telecom markets are that different from most others. Over time, "digital" product markets seem to establish "winner take all" structures. And telecommunications now is a "digital product."

Friday, April 15, 2016

Are OTT Video Service Churn Rates High or Low?

How one defines “churn” radically affects one’s calculation of customer churn rates. And Parks Associates counts churn at least two different ways. One method suggests low churn, the other suggests high churn. Take your pick.

By one methodology, which compares churn as a percentage of lost customers across the whole base of U.S. broadband homes, churn rates are low for a consumer service, amounting to annual losses of about 20 percent, or monthly rates of less than two percent.

Using the other methodology, one more common for churn measurements--the percentage of the current subscriber base who drop service in a month or year--OTT video service churn is low for Netflix, relatively low for Amazon Prime and high for Hulu Plus.

In 2015, Netflix lost about nine percent annually; Hulu Plus about 50 percent for the year; Amazon Prime about 19 percent over 12 months.

On a monthly basis, that suggests Netflix churn of about three quarters of one percent a month--quite low for a consumer service of any type. Hulu Plus appears to be about four percent a month, high by consumer service standards.

Amazon Prime is about 1.5 percent a month, acceptably low for a consumer service.

Mature access services, especially mobile and triple play services, can have churn of less than one percent a month, by way of comparison.

Parks Associates' OTT Video Market Tracker shows 33 new OTT services entering the U.S. market in 2015. Among all U.S. broadband households, 64 percent of U.S. broadband households subscribe to an OTT video service, up from 59 percent in 2015.

Google, Facebook Drive More than 80% of Referrals to News Sites

Referrals to content sites provide a clear illustration of the “winner take all” nature so often seen in application markets. On the Parse.ly network, for example, more than 80 percent of referrals are generated either by Facebook or Google sites.

source: parsely.com

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

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