Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Zynga, Pandora and Groupon are "Mobile Mostly"


You hear much talk these days of "mobile first," the strategy of building applications with a priority for mobile access, rather than "desktop."
But Zynga, Pandora and Groupon have achieved something virtually none of the other apps have done, and that is become "mobile mostly" apps whose usage is "normally" mobile. In fact, mobile use of Zynga and Groupon is at least double that of desktop usage. 
Media Metrix Multi-Platform Top 50 Properties
February 2013
Total U.S. (Age 18+ on iOS & Android platforms for Mobile)
Source: comScore Media Metrix Multi-Platform
 Unique Visitors/Viewers (000)
Total Digital PopulationDesktop*Mobile**Mobile-OnlyMobile Audience Incremental % to Desktop
 Total Internet : Total Audience 235,855221,379127,10614,4757%
1Google Sites228,084196,782107,60431,30216%
2Yahoo! Sites210,603186,59688,87624,00713%
3Microsoft Sites175,902166,34648,8679,5566%
4Facebook174,800145,30699,69829,49420%
5Amazon Sites147,031115,36374,12231,66827%
6AOL, Inc.130,619115,20254,01015,41713%
7Glam Media126,117104,51748,01621,60021%
8Apple Inc.115,92075,35862,10440,56254%
9Wikimedia Foundation Sites109,52385,85649,29623,66728%
10CBS Interactive100,77285,78334,02914,98917%
11Turner Digital98,31181,50138,42416,81021%
12Demand Media97,25078,51235,80018,73824%
13eBay84,67765,76441,35518,91329%
14About83,74364,78230,00018,96229%
15Ask Network81,43069,35520,93312,07517%
16Comcast NBCUniversal81,27567,18332,19314,09221%
17Viacom Digital79,96670,44620,1949,52014%
18The Weather Company76,64256,12037,36820,52237%
19Pandora.com65,14223,03551,97742,107183%
20Gannett Sites63,05547,61127,02315,44532%
21Answers.com Sites60,86147,73817,83213,12327%
22VEVO58,01055,9534,5862,0574%
23Yelp.com55,64136,77527,56918,86651%
24Twitter.com55,54035,96331,37219,57754%
25craigslist, inc.55,52046,38018,8399,14020%
26Adobe Sites54,84040,98419,81013,85634%
27Federated Media Publishing54,60739,57724,29715,03038%
28Hearst Corporation54,49841,51420,96712,98431%
29Linkedin54,07145,69914,9788,37118%
30Wal-Mart52,85738,85422,39714,00436%
31WebMD Health50,84132,64127,61418,20056%
32NDN46,26246,260N/AN/AN/A
33Meredith Women's Network45,53332,25319,77113,28041%
34ESPN44,75930,34827,73514,41147%
35Tribune Interactive44,61832,99117,98211,62735%
36New York Times Digital44,20633,17519,86911,03133%
37YP Local Media Network43,19130,11217,53913,07943%
38Pinterest.com41,21026,97222,99414,23853%
39Disney Online39,55127,62118,02211,93043%
40Netflix.com38,98729,20521,4809,78233%
41Everyday Health38,72027,14316,14111,57743%
42Intuit38,02929,09115,1058,93831%
43Discovery Digital Media Sites37,59030,50410,6227,08523%
44Zynga37,45912,05129,93625,408211%
45Fox News Digital Network37,34029,82915,2767,51225%
46Scripps Networks Interactive Inc.37,05026,51415,46910,53640%
47Groupon36,92411,42128,72225,503223%
48Wordpress.com36,84627,96411,9768,88232%
49Target Corporation36,06123,04318,02813,01856%
50Time Warner (Excl. Turner/WB)35,14225,72913,6939,41337%
*Note: Desktop includes audience reached via video and will therefore differ from standard Media Metrix rankings
**Mobile includes smartphone and tablet platforms

Will Move Away from Subsidies Really Help T-Mobile USA, or You?

Will consumers really care if the out of pocket monthly payments for T-Mobile USA service are marginally lower, in the case of services without subsidies but with an installment plan?

Put another way, will consumers actually even save money on T-Mobile USA's new "no contract" plans?

The answer might well be that most consumers will not save much money, if any money.  

In fact, some consumers might even wind up paying less, out of pocket, with a contract plan. 

If one assumes most consumers still are going to opt for device installment plans rather than buying their devices outright, the savings are relatively slight, on a recurring basis, for purchases involving high-end devices.

T-Mobile USA has a $60-a-month 2.5 gigabyte data plan is more than $300 cheaper over two years than an AT&T plan that offers 3 gigabytes and 450 minutes of talk time with the same device. For a user who opts for the installment plan, that works out to about $12.50 a month lower bills than for the rival AT&T plan.

There is an argument that T-Mobile USA plans will save more, compared to service from Verizon Wireless. A user buying that same T-Mobile USA plan, and using the installment plan, would save perhaps $20.83 a month, over two years, compared to a single-user Verizon Wireless plan with 2 gigabytes of data (though the Verizon Wireless plan also would offer unlimited talking and text messaging. 

Still unknown is whether bring your own device trends will get a boost, in addition to a possible shift of end user demand to installment plans or lower-priced devices. 

Vodafone has had unpleasant experience with a shift to "no device subsides" in Spain, leading the firm to reverse course. 

So if you are expecting T-Mobile USA to "disrupt" the U.S. market, you are most likely in a for a let-down. Many of us think the real potential disruption could come from a Softbank-lead Sprint, one way or the other.

Do you really think a "Google" mobile service would fail to be disruptive?

Monday, March 25, 2013

FCC Thinks Mobile Business is "Not Competitive"

The Federal Communications Commission does not, in its latest report on mobile competition in the U.S. mobile industry, find the business “competitive,” despite the observation that  “82 percent of the U.S. population has a choice of at least four mobile broadband providers and approximately 92 percent of Americans are served by at least four mobile providers of voice and text messaging services.

And prices are dropping. Mobile wireless prices declined overall in 2010 and 2011, the
FCC mobile competition report says, and are down since 2006.

Oddly, outgoing FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski argues that among the most important achievements of the Commission under his leadership is that the United States leads the world in “advanced wireless networks, devices, applications.

Genachowski notes that the United States is the first country deploying 4G LTE networks at scale, and in late 2012 the U.S. had as many LTE subscribers as the rest of the world combined, making the United States the global test bed for LTE apps and services.

The FCC report also notes that Long Term coverage has grown rapidly since 2010, when virtually no customers could buy LTE, from nothing in mid-2010 to 86 percent of the U.S. population as of October 2012.

Annual investment in U.S. wireless networks grew more than 40 percent between 2009 and 2012, from $21 billion to $30 billion, while investment in European wireless networks has been flat since 2009, and wireless investment in Asia, including China, is up only four percent during that time.

Genachowski notes that more than 90 percent of smart phones sold globally in 2012 run operating systems developed by U.S. companies, up from 25 percent three years ago.

Also, notes Genachowski, the new mobile apps economy is a “made in the U.S.A.” phenomenon as well.

It is reasonable to look at competition as it exists in rural areas, which always are more difficult for service providers to serve, compared to urban areas.

At the moment, at least 65.4 percent of the rural population can buy mobile broadband service from at least three different providers, and increasingly, people will be able to buy a 4G service.

In addition, 63.6 percent of rural square miles and 87.3 percent of rural road miles in the U.S. were covered by at least one mobile broadband provider, while 90.9 percent of non-rural square miles and 98.7 percent of non-rural road miles were covered by at least one mobile broadband providers, the FCC says.

Based on October 2012 Mosaik data, 97 percent of the U.S. rural population has coverage by at least one mobile wireless broadband provider, up from 92 percent in November 2009.

In contrast, 99.9 percent of the non-rural population is covered by at least one mobile broadband provider.

While rural mobile broadband coverage has improved, 1.3 million people in rural areas have no mobile broadband access.

While 97.7 percent of the population in non-rural areas was covered by two or more mobile broadband providers, only 89.7 percent of the rural population was covered by two or more providers as of October 2012, up from 69.1 percent as of August 2010, according to the FCC.

Furthermore, 65.4 percent of the rural population was covered by at least three providers and 37.4 percent by at least four providers, compared to 97.7 percent and 92.4 percent, respectively, for the non-rural population as of October 2012.

This represents an increase in coverage to the rural population since August 2010 when only 38.1 percent of the rural population was covered by three or more providers and only 17.1 percent was covered by four or more providers, according to the FCC.

With regard to rural road miles, 87.3 percent are covered by at least one mobile broadband provider, compared to 98.7 percent of non-rural road miles.

In addition, while only 67.7 percent of rural road miles are covered by at least two mobile broadband providers, 95.8 percent of non-rural road miles are covered by at least two mobile broadband providers.

In addition, only 35.7 percent of rural road miles are covered by at least three mobile broadband providers and only 14.2 percent by four mobile broadband providers compared to 86.6 and 71.8 percent, respectively, of non-rural road miles.

There are other potential implications as well, namely the growing likelihood that AT&T and Verizon, among others, will use LTE as ways to provide new broadband access alternatives to fixed networks in rural areas.

Mobile wireless Internet access service could provide an alternative to wireline service for consumers who are willing to trade speed for mobility, as well as consumers who are relatively indifferent with regard to the attributes, performance, and pricing of mobile and fixed platforms,” the FCC says.

in 2010, Verizon Wireless launched the “LTE in Rural America Program” to expand LTE coverage in rural areas.

Under this program, Verizon Wireless leases portions of its 700 MHz Upper C Block spectrum licenses to facilities-based mobile wireless service providers in rural areas where Verizon Wireless currently lacks coverage and does not intend to build out.

The rural partners also gain reciprocal roaming rights on Verizon Wireless’s nationwide LTE network, while Verizon Wireless’s customers can roam on the rural providers’ LTE networks when traveling in such areas.

As of September 2012, the program included 18 small, rural providers that planned to launch LTE to areas covering 2.7 million people across 14 states.1207 In April 2012,

Are Net Neutrality Rules Stifling Fixed Network Investment?

There's really no way to say for certain whether U.S. network neutrality rules have shifted investment decisions. A rational actor, owning both mobile and fixed assets, might well conclude that higher investment returns are gotten from deploying capital to support the mobile networks, rather than the fixed networks. 

But departing Federal Communications Commission member Robert McDowell speculates that mandating "best effort only" policies for the fixed network, while allowing mobile networks to potentially provide quality of service features could have something to do with investment decisions. 

To be sure, telco and cable TV operator capital investment is down substantially from late 1990s levels. But those reductions predate the net neutrality rules. 

AI Will Improve Productivity, But That is Not the Biggest Possible Change

Many would note that the internet impact on content media has been profound, boosting social and online media at the expense of linear form...