Sunday, February 9, 2020

Software Can Eat the World Even if its Direct GDP Contribution is Small

Some argue that information technology now changes everything; others argue IT cannot be that big a deal, as it represents such a small percentage of total U.S. gross domestic product, for example.  But that matters when observers try and estimate the impact of industries on the overall economy. 

In principle, one can argue that electricity, the internal combustion engine and information technology or communications are important only as their contribution to GDP suggests. Others might argue that misses the point. Innovations such as electricity are essential inputs to most other parts of the economy, and therefore have importance far beyond direct revenues.

But measurement alone is complicated, as there are methodological issues, for example.

Industries have every reason to inflate their economic impact. Furthermore, if one adds up all the claimed economic impact, the number is greater than the actual stated GDP. The reason is that multiple inputs (electricity, fuel, transportation, warehouse operations, information technology, communications, marketing and advertising all contribute to the defined output of any single “industry.”  And each industry can rightfully claim that economic activities in the infrastructure are part of the total economic contribution made by each industry.

In other cases all we can measure are expenditures by customers and suppliers, which means there is some risk of double counting, as, in principle, all producer costs are recouped by retail sales to actual users and customers. 

Finally, it is next to impossible to measure quality improvements. Computing, communications and device prices might go down, even as value and capability go up. We cannot measure qualitative changes using our quantitative methods. 

The U.S. electrical energy industry represents, in some analyses, six percent of gross domestic product. That seems too high. The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates total expenditures on energy--including natural gas, fuel and electricity--of close to seven percent. So it is doubtful electricity as such represents more than a few percent of GDP. 

We see the same issue with information technology, said by some to represent about 2.3 percent of U.S. GDP (six percent of real inflation-adjusted GDP, some say). Other estimates have U.S. “telecommunications revenue” at about 3.5 percent of GDP.  

Likewise, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis suggests “digital economy” category that represents perhaps six percent of U.S. GDP. That definition includes computing hardware and software, communications equipment and services, data centers and internet of things, collectively. 


By definition, none of those contributing industries can represent more than a couple percent of total. But industry size does not capture total economic value. In other words, it is still possible to argue that  software is eating the world and yet still attribute relatively little direct value to the software or computing industries.

Thursday, February 6, 2020

Telcos Must Choose Their B2B Roles

As much as 18 percent of the total value of “digital business transformation” and 47 percent of 5G-enabled business-to-business value can be addressed by service providers, according to Ericsson.

Service providers could take different roles ranging from connectivity to B2B service delivery and end-user application creation, Ericsson argues. 

That represents revenue of as much as $700 billion by 2030. It is possible that revenues service providers can earn might become meaningful, reaching possibly $50 billion about 2022 or 2023, A.D. Little forecasts. 


The total value of the global 5G-enabled market for service providers across 10 industries is projected to be USD 700 billion in 2030, beyond mobile broadband, Ericsson argues. 

One obvious observation is that any strategy beyond the horizontal “access” connection will require choosing from a few verticals, as no service provider, no matter how big, can create sizeable vertical competencies in more than a few industries. The cost to acquire or build domain competence is simply too high to allow realistic pursuit of industry platforms across the board.  


As always, the logical role is the horizontal connectivity role, shown below in light blue. The larger enablement role represents both larger revenue upside but higher cost and risk profiles. 


Telco Stranded Assets for Voice, Internet Access as High as 75%

Facilities-based competition radically changes the economics of any fixed network access market because it radically disrupts the ability to reap financial returns from any network investment. The math is pretty simple. All monopoly-era mass market networks assumed the customer or user base was nearly “all” households or consumers. 

So “network cost per customer” or “per user” was nearly identical with “cost per location.” Likewise, “revenue per location” was nearly identical with “location.” 

That all changes with facilities-based competition. Assume two equally-skilled facilities-based competitors operating ubiquitously in any area, one the legacy monopoly provider, the other a challenger. 

Assume that, over a period of perhaps a decade, a former monopolist loses 50 percent market share to the new competitor. By definition, the revenue per location drops in half, while the cost per location doubles. 

Telco losses in the U.S. market have been far worse than that. Taking all voice lines into consideration, fixed network share of voice lines (all suppliers) now is about 35 percent. Mobile has 65 percent share of accounts. 

Looking only at fixed network accounts, U.S. telcos have about 36 million accounts, while competitors (cable providers and independent VoIP providers) have 62 million accounts. If there are roughly 146 million household locations, telco sales of voice reach only about 25 percent of locations. So voice stranded assets are as high as 75 percent. 

In the increasingly core internet access business, telcos have about 38 million accounts, or about 26 percent of locations. So stranded internet access assets are as high as 74 percent. You might make roughly the same argument for video entertainment accounts. 

All of that arguably translates to low profit margins

It gets worse. Assume that for some services, there actually are three, possibly four facilities-based suppliers (satellite video providers, for example). Assume those competitors are competent as well. Assume those other competitors have a combined 20 percent market share.

Then the two fixed network providers have a theoretical 40-percent market share. That reduces revenue per location further, and raises cost per location. So 60 percent of the network investment is stranded. 

Further assume customer demand changes that steadily reduce revenue to be earned on the network. You can see this in voice take rates and now linear video take rates. That further raises cost per location and reduces revenue per location. 

To be sure, scale matters in the telecom industry, as it does in many capital-intensive industries, because heavy capital investment means financial returns are boosted by intensive use of those assets. 
Perhaps another way of saying “scale matters” is to note that market share matters for profitability. 

So network utilization--the ability to load revenue-generating traffic and services onto the network--has been a key issue for at least two decades, especially where facilities-based competition is possible. 

Typically, in any market, the supplier with the largest market share also is the most profitable. In the mobile phone business, it has been true for some years that most actual profits in the handset supplier portion of the ecosystem have been reaped by just two firms, Apple and Samsung. 

One salient feature of the internet ecosystem is that it tends toward “winner take all” market structures, whether one looks at the application, operating system, device or access parts of the ecosystem.

In the application space, advertising revenue is dominated by Google and Facebook, which claim 63 percent of U.S. digital ad revenue in 2017. In the operating system market, Android and Apple iOS were the leaders, with 99-percent market share. The device portion of the market is the least concentrated, although Apple and Samsung have earned most of the profits.  

Mobile and fixed network access markets likewise are oligopolies, in virtually every market. Fixed markets in many cases remain virtual monopolies, while mobile markets tend to be oligopolies.


But scale alone is proving to be an elusive way of assuring profits. 

Business strategies in the global telecom business have changed over the past four to five decades. Five decades ago, profits were driven by long distance calling and the base business was selling monopoly voice to everyone. 

Sometime in the 1980s the revenue and profit growth shifted from fixed network long distance to mobility. Fixed network operators facing stiff competition switched to a multi-product consumer services strategy. 

By the 2000s subscription growth drove mobile revenues. By the 2010s internet access began to be the revenue driver for fixed and mobile operators, not voice or subscriptions. 

It might be a matter of debate how much internal industry decisions and external forces have shaped strategy. 

As we enter the 5G era, it is possible to say that the fortunes of some mobile operators were determined early in the 3G era. Though it is reasonable to suggest that issues ranging from addressable internal market to regulatory policy have mattered, some argue that excessive spending on spectrum licenses for 3G created debt problems that hobbled mobile operator ability to foster growth.

But business strategy might also have played a role. When organic growth is quite slow, one obvious solution is to expand geographically, buying market share out of region, in other words. Many European firms, for example, went on a huge global expansion spree in the 3G and 4G eras. 

It also is impossible to ignore the impact of the internet and IP generally. Those trends essentially opened up the communications networks, ending the walled gardens that historically characterized telecom business models.

At the same time, the end of walled gardens, and the ease of competing “over the top” also mean that any telco-owned apps often must compete with third-party apps. And telcos never have been known for their prowess at creating big and popular new apps. 

Historically, there has been a simple solution for telcos wanting to enter new lines of business: acquisition. 

The new problem is that app provider market valuations and multiples make acquisitions of such firms expensive for telcos. In other words, telcos contemplating big app asset acquisitions encounter the price of expensive-currency assets to be bought with cheap currency. 

That has restricted the historically-important acquisition method telcos have used to enter new markets. In the past, most telcos have gotten entry into new and faster-growing markets by acquiring, rather than building, the new businesses. 

That is much harder when the would-be acquisitions are of high-multiple application suppliers, using low-multiple telco stock or borrowed money. Most telco free cash flow typically must be deployed to pay dividends and reduce past borrowings. 

Taken together, all those trends now suggest that decades-old geographic expansion plans conducted by some mobile operators now are unwinding, as the contribution to revenue growth has not often been matched by increases in profits. 

And that poses new strategy issues: where is revenue growth to be found if geographic expansion, once a logical path to growing revenue, is unavailable? The other logical answer--acquisitions of fast-growing firms in new markets--often is impossible because the market multiples of such firms are high, while telco valuations are low. 

In other words, acquisitions big enough to move the revenue needle cannot be made. Smaller acquisitions are possible, but often, because of small size, cannot move the revenue needle. And, in any market where scale matters, organic growth might never be fast enough to gain leadership. 

Most telcos, in most markets, have learned from their experiences with overpriced spectrum bids. Seldom, anymore, do spectrum prices seem unreasonable. On the other hand, the core telecom business is in slow growth mode in most markets, if still relatively higher in some emerging markets. 

Among the big new questions--if geographic expansion is not generally feasible--is how to reignite growth, especially in promising new markets. 

Compounding those questions is the growing need to look at revenue growth from outside the legacy domains based on connectivity services. Almost everyone assumes that will be quite difficult.

The traditional fear is that telcos really are not good at running businesses outside their core. And there are good reasons for that opinion. But with growth so slow in the core business, and competition not abating, while geographic expansion often is unpromising, telcos may ultimately have no choice. 

Of course, there are other paths. It might well be that most telcos will be unable to sustain themselves over the next few decades, as they are unable or unwilling to expand beyond connectivity. In that case, bankruptcy lies ahead, with potential restructuring of much of the business. 

Precisely how advanced connectivity still can be provided, if today’s business models fail, is not clear. It long has been the conventional wisdom that, in any competitive market, the low cost provider wins. Who those low-cost providers might be then is the issue. 

The other path, which only the biggest telcos might contemplate, aer risky, expensive acquisitions--exposing themselves to harsh criticism--to create new business models not so exclusively dependent on connectivity revenues. 

We already can see some illustrations of the stark choices. When big and small cable operators alike start to say their future is internet access, not video or voice, one must ask whether such a single product strategy will work, long term. The major reason why telcos and cable operators in the U.S. market have survived competition is a switch from single-product to multi-product strategies.

Essentially, they sell more things to a smaller number of customers. That might not work if the new model is one product sold to many customers, especially if the main competitors in those markets are competent. 

Cable operators clearly dominate market share in the U.S. fixed network internet access business. The issue is whether the business model works without other customer segments and products. If the answer is no, then the multi-product strategy will still have to be pursued.

The big shift might be from multi-product consumer bundles to multi-product operations based on consumer fixed network internet access, consumer mobility and business capacity services.

How Will Telco Strategy Change Next?

Business strategies in the global telecom business have changed over the past four to five decades. Five decades ago, profits were driven by long distance calling and the base business was selling monopoly voice to everyone. 

Sometime in the 1980s the revenue and profit growth shifted from fixed network long distance to mobility. Fixed network operators facing stiff competition switched to a multi-product consumer services strategy. 

By the 2000s subscription growth drove mobile revenues. By the 2010s internet access began to be the revenue driver for fixed and mobile operators, not voice or subscriptions. 

It might be a matter of debate how much internal industry decisions and external forces have shaped strategy. 

As we enter the 5G era, it is possible to say that the fortunes of some mobile operators were determined early in the 3G era. Though it is reasonable to suggest that issues ranging from addressable internal market to regulatory policy have mattered, some argue that excessive spending on spectrum licenses for 3G created debt problems that hobbled mobile operator ability to foster growth.

But business strategy might also have played a role. When organic growth is quite slow, one obvious solution is to expand geographically, buying market share out of region, in other words. Many European firms, for example, went on a huge global expansion spree in the 3G and 4G eras. 

It also is impossible to ignore the impact of the internet and IP generally. Those trends essentially opened up the communications networks, ending the walled gardens that historically characterized telecom business models.

At the same time, the end of walled gardens, and the ease of competing “over the top” also mean that any telco-owned apps often must compete with third-party apps. And telcos never have been known for their prowess at creating big and popular new apps. 

Historically, there has been a simple solution for telcos wanting to enter new lines of business: acquisition. 

The new problem is that app provider market valuations and multiples make acquisitions of such firms expensive for telcos. In other words, telcos contemplating big app asset acquisitions encounter the price of expensive-currency assets to be bought with cheap currency. 

That has restricted the historically-important acquisition method telcos have used to enter new markets. In the past, most telcos have gotten entry into new and faster-growing markets by acquiring, rather than building, the new businesses. 

That is much harder when the would-be acquisitions are of high-multiple application suppliers, using low-multiple telco stock or borrowed money. Most telco free cash flow typically must be deployed to pay dividends and reduce past borrowings. 

Taken together, all those trends now suggest that decades-old geographic expansion plans conducted by some mobile operators now are unwinding, as the contribution to revenue growth has not often been matched by increases in profits. 

And that poses new strategy issues: where is revenue growth to be found if geographic expansion, once a logical path to growing revenue, is unavailable? The other logical answer--acquisitions of fast-growing firms in new markets--often is impossible because the market multiples of such firms are high, while telco valuations are low. 

In other words, acquisitions big enough to move the revenue needle cannot be made. Smaller acquisitions are possible, but often, because of small size, cannot move the revenue needle. And, in any market where scale matters, organic growth might never be fast enough to gain leadership. 

Most telcos, in most markets, have learned from their experiences with overpriced spectrum bids. Seldom, anymore, do spectrum prices seem unreasonable. On the other hand, the core telecom business is in slow growth mode in most markets, if still relatively higher in some emerging markets. 

Among the big new questions--if geographic expansion is not generally feasible--is how to reignite growth, especially in promising new markets. 

Compounding those questions is the growing need to look at revenue growth from outside the legacy domains based on connectivity services. Almost everyone assumes that will be quite difficult.

The traditional fear is that telcos really are not good at running businesses outside their core. And there are good reasons for that opinion. But with growth so slow in the core business, and competition not abating, while geographic expansion often is unpromising, telcos may ultimately have no choice. 

Of course, there are other paths. It might well be that most telcos will be unable to sustain themselves over the next few decades, as they are unable or unwilling to expand beyond connectivity. In that case, bankruptcy lies ahead, with potential restructuring of much of the business. 

Precisely how advanced connectivity still can be provided, if today’s business models fail, is not clear. It long has been the conventional wisdom that, in any competitive market, the low cost provider wins. Who those low-cost providers might be then is the issue. 

The other path, which only the biggest telcos might contemplate, aer risky, expensive acquisitions--exposing themselves to harsh criticism--to create new business models not so exclusively dependent on connectivity revenues. 

We already can see some illustrations of the stark choices. When big and small cable operators alike start to say their future is internet access, not video or voice, one must ask whether such a single product strategy will work, long term. The major reason why telcos and cable operators in the U.S. market have survived competition is a switch from single-product to multi-product strategies.

Essentially, they sell more things to a smaller number of customers. That might not work if the new model is one product sold to many customers, especially if the main competitors in those markets are competent. 

Cable operators clearly dominate market share in the U.S. fixed network internet access business. The issue is whether the business model works without other customer segments and products. If the answer is no, then the multi-product strategy will still have to be pursued.

The big shift might be from multi-product consumer bundles to multi-product operations based on consumer fixed network internet access, consumer mobility and business capacity services.

Wednesday, February 5, 2020

U.S. Mobile Market Share is Unstable, With or Without T-Mobile US Merger with Sprint

Market share in the U.S. mobile market has in many past years depended partly on whether one counted subscribers or revenue. In 2019 AT&T was biggest, measured by accounts. In the past, in some years Verizon was biggest if one measured by revenue

By 2018, AT&T arguably was the leader in both revenue and subscribers. 

This look a 2018 revenue shows AT&T leading in revenue and subscribers, overall.

One could make an argument that Verizon lead in postpaid accounts, though. 


Perhaps ironically, whether the T-Mobile US merger with Sprint is approved or denied, U.S. mobile market structure will remain unsettled and open to share changes of some size. The reason is that, longer term, markets tend to take an unequal share distribution. 

With or without a T-Mobile merger with Sprint, U.S. market structure is unstable, using some classic rules of thumb. Heavily capital intensive industries serving mass markets often take an oligopolistic shape, if not a monopolistic shape. 

At best, only a few firms are sustainable. 

Most stable markets are led by a few firms. In fact, many stable markets take a particular shape. As the PIMS database suggests, a stable industry structure eventually tends to take a shape where the number-two provider has half the share of the leader, while the number-three provider has share half that of number two. 

That tends to produce a market share distribution of something like 4:2:1. So far, that tends to be true for physical industries that are asset heavy as well as internet and applications businesses that are asset light. That might be why it so often seems to be the case that a market follows a rule of three

More importantly, in many markets, just two firms have 80 percent of profits

So with, or without, a merger of T-Mobile US with Sprint, the U.S. mobile market would have an uncomfortably unusual market structure. The gap between AT&T and Verizon is not wide enough to be stable, for example. 

When the market structure 4:2:1 or something close to it prevails, competitors two or three do not have incentives to launch price attacks against the market leader, as the leader has the resources and incentive to do whatever is required to beat back a price attack. 

Big Changes in Product Strategy Must Come, for Fixed Network Service Providers

Google Fiber will no longer offer a linear TV product to new customers, essentially migrating the business model to a more-typical independent internet service provider model that is based on one product, not a triple play or dual play (video or voice). 

Comcast and Charter Communications, though noting that entertainment video still is a highly-significant revenue source, also say they now focus on core communications--especially internet access, business services and the new mobility segment--as their revenue drivers. 

Some small cable TV operators and small telcos might be moving the same way, essentially letting their video customer base dwindle, as mobile phone and internet access become the ubiquitous services consumers want. 

The big problem for small and rural service providers always has been that the linear TV business model is quite challenged. Few such operators have ever actually claimed they make a profit on entertainment video. 

In rural areas, where there essentially is no business model, subsidies always have made the difference between no service and “some level of service.”

At times, some rural service providers that have taken on too much debt might find themselves unsustainable

There are clear business model and strategy implications. In a competitive market, the reasonable assumption must be that two excellent providers will split market share; three excellent providers might expect only 33 percent share. 

There are two really-important implications. Without a lower cost structure, any single firm cannot expect to prosper if it has been built to support two, three or more key products. In the monopoly days, one service could support a full network, whether that service was TV, radio, voice or telegraph. 

In a competitive market featuring skilled competitors, suppliers might have to sustain themselves with customer share of 50 percent, 33 percent or less. That is why the triple play became important. The revenue impact of serving one out of three locations is mitigated if three services are sold to each customer location.

All that changes if we start seeing one key product supplied by most firms in competitive markets. Lower costs are necessary. That is why most independent internet service providers have such low overhead, compared to the larger telcos and cable companies.

But it also is likely that no bigger firm can get by simply by slashing costs. Additional revenue must be generated from other products and roles, to replace the dwindling legacy sources. 

So we might predict two developments. Single-product fixed networks using cables are only feasible if internet access is the product. Voice and video will not generate enough revenue to support a fixed network. 

So far, it has been possible for a wireless network to support itself on the strength of TV, radio or internet access. 

That changed in the competitive era, when single-product strategies based on high adoption (market share of 80 percent or more) began to fail. Multi-product sales based on selling more things to fewer customers (scope), rather than one product to nearly everyone (scale). 

All that seems to be changing as revenue upside from voice and linear video dwindles. Video arguably is the more-difficult challenge, as cost of goods is quite high. 

It certainly will make more sense, in a growing number of settings, for highly-focused, low overhead firms to try and make a go of things based solely on internet access, abandoning the multi-product strategy. 

But other changes must follow. Either overhead, capital and operating costs must be drastically pared, or new revenue sources found, or both. The decades where product bundles compensated for lower market share seem to be ending.

Something equally challenging now emerges: how to make a profit from a one-product network with lowest take rates.

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...