Thursday, May 8, 2008

85.9 Million U.S. Social Networkers This Year

eMarketer forecasts that mobile social networking will grow from 82 million users in 2007 to over 800 million worldwide by 2012.

"This population will comprise current online social networkers who are extending their digital lives to mobile as well as a growing number of mobile-only social networkers," says John du Pre Gauntt, eMarketer senior analyst.

In fact, mobile might be the best way to interact with social networks, if you think about it. Since much social networking is about where you are and what you are doing, it makes sense that the always-with-you mobile is going to spur more-frequent interactions. It's somewhat akin to what happened with picture taking when mobiles routinely were outfitted with cameras. People started taking more pictures.

For example, MySpace recorded over seven million unique visitors to MySpace Mobile in the United States in the six months since launch. "It wasn't until we rolled out m.myspace.com that we got a sense of how powerful demand was for MySpace on cell phones," says Brandon Lucas, MySpace senior director.

As the user base grows, marketing and sales professsionals will start to pay more attention to how to take advantage of the sharing effects.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

iProvo Sells Network to Broadweave Networks

Provo, Utah's citywide fiberoptic network has been sold to Broadweave Networks, a local company that hopes to make a business out of triple-play services where Provo had not been able to do so. The network, called iProvo, was the largest municipally-owned fiber-to-the-premises network in the United States, reaching all 36,000 residences and businesses within the city.

Up to this point, Broadweave has served the Traverse Mountain planned community of 8,000 homes and 4.5 million square feet of office and retail space across 3,000 acres in Utah's technology belt. So the acquisition gives Broadweave about four times more homes passed than it currently has access to.

Broadweave will purchase the fiberoptic network for $40.6 million, which is enough to retire outstanding bonds incurred by Provo to build the system.

Under the terms of the deal, which is subject to municipal council approval, the city retains a license to use the network to connect city buildings, schools, and power infrastructure. Broadweave will operate as a retail provider, rather than as a wholesale provider of transport to third parties and says it will put more emphasis on services aimed at business customers.

One might draw several conclusions from iProvo's experience so far. Some will argue that overbuilders are going to have a tough time competing against both cable and telephone companies offering triple play services.

Others will say the sale shows municipalities really should not be running communication networks. Some will point to other fiber access networks in the Salt Lake City and Provo regions and argue that neither wholesale nor retail strategies have worked well.

The issue is what Broadweave's new management thinks it really can do to improve financial performance. One of the salient features of most networks serving entire communities is that there is an 80/20 rule for revenue. A small number of neighborhoods actually produce most of the revenue.

In fact, some studies suggest that as few as five to seven percent of neighborhoods of 500 homes or so produce half the revenue created by an entire citywide network. And the same sort of thing is true for business revenue as well. So it might not be so easy to boost revenues.

Broadweave will gain some scale benefits, though the difference between 8,000 and 44,000 might not be as large as you might think. Programming contracts won't be noticeably affected. There might still be a need for two headends. Installers can only do so many jobs a day. Some marketing and other overhead can be spread over a wider base of customers, of course.

Still, operating cost savings are unlikely to change the financial picture all that much. Only significant new sales volume is going to change the current iProvo financial model.

$10 Billion Annual Mobile Enterprise App Spending

More than 90 percent of enterprise mobile applications spending is now focused on mobile email and messaging, but the percentage of spending on mobilizing other critical enterprise applications -- many of them broadband-optimized -- will increase rapidly over the next five years, according to Pike & Fischer. The research house projects 2012 spending on mobilizing such applications as customer-relations management and sales-force automation will exceed $10 billion annually.

Add Jangl to the Dead Company List

Jangl, the Internet phone company is being closed down, after efforts to find a buyer failed. Most of the team are joining Jajah.

What Cable, Google Get from Clearwire, Sprint

Google and several cable operators got some goodies in addition to equity in the new Clearwire national WiMAX network. And the advantages do not come from WiMAX, but from the Sprint 3G network.

Briefly, Google apps (YouTube, Google Maps, Gmail) get premiere placement on some Sprint devices, while Google Web, local search and location information become the default options for Sprint data customers.

The cable operators become resellers of Sprint 3G services, including voice. So now the three operators will be able to construct quadruple play services. That is the more important development, as interesting as the Clearwire resale agreement is. In the near term, cable operators need a viable mobile voice option more than they need a future mobile broadband option.

To be sure, Google and the new cable investors will become resellers of the WiMAX network as well.

Google will partner with the new Clearwire in the development of Internet services, advertising services and applications for mobile WiMAX devices. In addition, Google will be the search provider and a preferred provider of other applications for the new Clearwire’s retail product. As an open network, anybody can "partner" with Clearwire to develop applications or supply devices. But Google is a "preferred" and "default" provider, which historically has real value in the mobile arena.

The new Clearwire will support Google’s Android operating system software in its future voice and data devices that it provides to its retail customers.

But Sprint and Google have also entered into an agreement whereby Google will become the default provider of web and local search services, both of which will be enabled with location information, for Sprint, as well.

Sprint will also preload several Google services, including Google Maps for mobile, Gmail and YouTube, on select mobile phones and provide easier access to other Google services.

Comcast, Time Warner Cable, and Bright House Networks will be resellers of Clearwire’s mobile WiMAX service. More important, over the near term, all three cable operators now will become wholesale retailers of all Sprint 3G services, including voice services.

Clearwire is getting the attention. But Sprint 3G will be where the action is.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Qwest 12 Mbps, 20 Mbps is Resonating

Of the 90,000 the net additions Qwest had for high-speed access in the most recent quarter, 13,000 (14 percent) of them were related to the new fiber-to-the-node build-out. You might think, "so what?"

Those customers were gotten in just 30 days, in the last month of the quarter, so it appears there is strong demand for a higher-speed (12 Mbps or 20 Mbps) product.

Qwest also appears to be readying an "over the top" video on demand service in conjunction with DirecTV, which already supplies Qwest linear entertainment video services. That would make perfect sense for both companies. DirecTV needs more bandwidth on the ground to serve up an effective VOD service, and Qwest has the bandwidth.

Qwest also has been an effective retail partner for DirecTV services, so the any new offer would make sense to consumers who already buy DirecTV from Qwest.

"We are hopeful to take advantage of video on demand with our DirecTV," Mueller says. Qwest is "preparing for the natural synergies between their video on demand product to launch this year and our investment in broadband capabilities."

And high-speed access prices will rise. "We will do price increases, that is our plan," says CEO Ed Mueller. The logical path is to create higher-speed tiers and then charge more for them. People understand that sort of packaging.

Qwest Report "Steady" Results

Under the current challenging circumstances, "typical" or "normal" performance is a good thing. And Qwest Communications International reported "steady operating results" for the first quarter of 2008. Adjusted EBITDA totaled $1.14 billion with adjusted EBITDA margins of 33.6 percent as data, Internet and video revenue grew by nine percent compared to the first quarter of 2007.

Broadband subscriptions were up 17 percent year-over-year while video subscribers were up 42 percent, year over year. Total data, Internet and video services revenue now represents nearly 40 percent of operating revenue.

The business market segment reported revenue of $995 million in the first quarter, up 3.1 percent year over year as data and Internet revenue grew 6.9 percent. Data and Internet revenue grew 29 percent over the same period a year ago.

Mass markets revenue was $1.48 billion in the quarter, a 0.7 percent decline compared to the prior year. Data, Internet and video revenue growth of 20.7 percent was offset by declines in both voice and wireless services.

Consumer average revenue per unit increased 7.8 percent to $55 from $51 a year ago. Qwest Broadband subscribers increased 90,000 in the quarter to reach 2.7 million, up 17.2 percent from a year ago.

Wholesale Markets reported revenue of $841 million in the quarter, down seven percent year over year largely due to long-distance revenue pricing and supplier consolidation. Data and Internet revenue was up three percent year over year.

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