Saturday, October 29, 2022

Linear TV Value Prop Keeps Getting Worse

Linear TV subscriptions have been cannibalized by video streaming alternatives for a decade, partly because on-demand provides more value; partly because some like the lower cost per service; partly because linear value now increasingly comes down to sports, news and unscripted reality content. 


But lower overall cost seems less and less a value driver, as many consumers buy four or more streaming services. Most scripted content has largely shifted to streaming delivery. 


source: Ark Investment 


A recent survey by FinanceBuzz of 1,000 U.S. adults found that 24 percent of households are buying “at least three additional streaming services than they did one year ago,” while another 21 percent of respondents are now paying for two more streaming services.


The point is that consumers are buying multiple services at a higher rate than they did five to 10 years ago. 

source: Financebuzz 


About 25 percent of respondents spend more than $75 per month on streaming subscriptions. If you assume the typical linear service costs between $60 and $80 a month, it is clear that consumers are not buying streaming services because the necessarily save money. 


The issue is where linear TV value will lie, as the shift of scripted content to streaming continues. Even sports now are shifting to streaming delivery, leaving unscripted reality shows and news as the anchors for linear. That will be a declining value proposition for a greater range of customers over time. 


I, for example, never watch anything but sports or news on linear, so the entire value proposition comes from just those two types of programming. Most channels never get watched, which always was true, even before streaming. 


But the whole value-price relationship keeps getting worse. Not that many younger people watch news channels and more sports content is moving to streaming, perhaps leaving unscripted reality TV as the last bastion of “value” for linear TV, assuming one watches that genre. 


The point is that it is fairly hard to justify spending $60 to $80 a month for what boils down to regular viewing of two news channels and one-season viewing of up to two sports channels. The only channels that get watched all year are the two news channels. Looked at that way, the value proposition is even worse.


Is Net Neutrality a Problem Creator?

Network neutrality has been worse than a solution in search of a genuine problem: it actually causes actual problems to fester. Consider only auto-run video. 


Consider the amount of data consumption by most customers of any access network. How much consumption actually is quite unintentional and caused by auto-run video? Quite a lot, as it turns out. 


You might argue data consumption of the unwanted sort would be lessened if auto-run video could be lessened if internet service providers could prevent auto-run videos from playing “automatically.” But that would be considered traffic shaping that network neutrality does not allow. 


But some forms of traffic shaping already seem to be quite common, despite net neutrality rules. Many mobile service plans specifically limit video resolution, for example, even if content providers and advertisers create their content at high-definition and 4K image quality levels. In principle, limiting resolution of some content could be considered a net neutrality violation as it shapes traffic (imposes rate limits), though applied in a way that all content suppliers are equally affected. 


Though advertisers and content owners arguably prefer auto-run, that practice increases data consumption for customers and ISPs who do not benefit from the practice. For both access network customers and ISPs, it is unwanted data consumption.


And the data usage is  “unintentional” only on the customer’s part. That unwanted usage is quite intentional on the advertiser’s part. Advertisers and content providers like--and embed--auto-run functions to increase “views.”


Keep in mind the various constituencies in the content value chain whose behavior shapes data consumption. To limit auto-run requires lots of agreement to do so, and such agreements are not necessarily in an advertiser’s or content provider’s or commerce platform’s interest. 


In principle, the ecosystem could agree to reduce auto-run video and take other measures to reduce customer or ISP unwanted data consumption. But such agreements require key stakeholders to agree, even when auto-run furthers some business interest. 


And network neutrality rules make some decisions impossible, such as adjusting quality differentially. That Is more a problem on fixed networks, which bear the brunt of net neutrality rules, than on mobile networks, where the rules are less stringent in application.  


Devices of various screen sizes consume different amounts of data, but screen resolution can only benefit so much from higher-resolution settings that are more data-intensive. On a small mobile phone screen, the human eye cannot discern the difference between 4K and high-definition quality. And HD arguably does not improve user experience over standard definition.


So it is possible for many mobile service plans to deliberately degrade image resolution without running afoul of net neutrality rules. 


Network management rules also are allowed, even when net neutrality rules hold. Downloads and software updates can be managed to avoid doing so at times and locations of peak congestion, for example, without necessarily violating net neutrality rules. 


So is traffic shaping of this sort simple "network management," or is it a violation of network neutrality?


The point is that net neutrality represents a policy that apparently was not needed, aimed to solve a problem that did not arise, and more importantly, prevents ISPs and other partners from taking measures that enhance user experience while avoiding unnecessary and unwanted data consumption. 


Some argue voluntary agreements can be crafted. Sure, Wi-Fi offload helps. More-affordable infrastructure helps. But the internet ecosystem necessarily is loosely-coupled. In a closed ecosystem, everything might be optimized to avoid excessive and unwanted data consumption. That is not how the internet ecosystem works. 


Voluntary agreements can be crafted, but only when all the affected parties agree it is in their own interests. To be honest, app and content providers, and their business model partners, likely have no reason to limit auto-run video. 


Network neutrality rules arguably impede creation of access rules that would reduce unwanted data consumption, helping ISPs on the cost side without harming customer experience. But it is not so clear advertisers and content owners would agree. Auto-run video exists because it has a perceived business benefit. 


How often in life do we see ecosystem partners voluntarily harming their business models to make others in the ecosystem happy by aiding the models of the other partners?


We might need to be rid of netowrk neutrality to allow ISPs to craft policies that avoid significant costs on their part, without harming their customers' user experience. Voluntary rules are possible if we can resolve issues of vested business interests of others in the value chain.


Friday, October 28, 2022

Metaverse or AR/VR? It Matters Which Definition One Uses

With the caveat that we all can be wrong when predicting the future, a new study of 350 chief technology officers, chief information officers and IT director technology leaders from the U.S., U.K., China, India, and Brazil suggests 2023 technologies of note are cloud computing (40 percent), 5G (38 percent), metaverse (37 percent), electric vehicles (EVs) (35 percent), and the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) (33 percent).


What might be shocking is the appearance of "metaverse" on the list of 2023 priorities. All the others seem uncontroversial to a large extent. The inclusion of metaverse is the surprise. But the key to understanding the response is to note that the functional representation of metaverse is goggles, headsets or glasses used for VR or AR experiences and content.


Many of us would not consider those to be "metaverse."


As you might expect, respondents identified 5G and ubiquitous connectivity  (71 percent); virtual reality (VR) headsets (58 percent) and augmented reality (AR) glasses (58 percent) as the near-term key technologies. 


The IEEE study  probed for views about 2023 technologies expected to be important even for longer-run developments, including the metaverse.


It is unclear how aggressively respondents will be pursuing use of what we might term “pre-metaverse” tools in 2023, however. As with many relatively open-ended surveys of attitudes, respondents might not have had to make firm predictions about how important, and when, various important technologies would correlate with actual information technology spending. 


Views about use of artificial intelligence also vary, but might also be considered less likely to drive major investments in 2023. 


And despite slow going at first, respondents expect 5G  to affect vehicle connectivity and automation in 2023, fully 97 percent of survey respondents agree.


Most affected in 2023 are: 

  • (56 percent) remote learning and education

  • (54 percent) telemedicine, including remote surgery, health record transmissions

  • (51 percent) entertainment, sports, and live event streaming

  • (49 percent) personal and professional day-to-day communications

  • (29 percent) transportation and traffic control

  • (25 percent) manufacturing/assembly

  • (23 percent) carbon footprint reduction and energy efficiency


Also, 95 percent believe satellites for remote mobile connectivity will be a game-changer in 2023. 


As always, when there are no consequences for being “wrong,” the predictions are to be considered indicative of possible future trends rather than correlated directly with 2023 spending. 


All of us who have had to make technology forecasts have a poor track record, as predicting the future is inherently difficult. Nor did the survey force respondents to consider all the other assumptions a fully-formed forecast would require. 


It might not be wrong to argue that most predictions are wrong, not only in terms of what happened, but also how long it took to get there. There are many examples of how we get it wrong all the time.    

5G Revenue is Right Where the Revenue Already Is, With One Exception

There are many reasons why mobile operators have worried about the 5G business model. They might prefer not to make the capital investment; they recently upgraded national 4G networks; average revenue per account might not increase; new spectrum licenses are expensive; costly small cell networks will have to be built; new revenue sources will be few and far between, to begin.


Though mobile operators might not like the frank answer to the question “where is the 5G revenue?,” the answer, for the most part, right now, is “right where it already is.” Which is simply to say that the bulk of “5G” revenue, with one exception, comes from existing or new customers switching from 4G to 5G.


The one exception is fixed wireless, which is the first new revenue source possible with 5G than was not so common with 4G, though that source did exist. Eventually, new sources will develop. The likely candidates include network slices, private networks, edge computing or some involvement in internet of things ecosystems. 


But all that will take time. 


source: Juniper Research


The other issue is that some markets have more revenue potential because average revenue per account is higher than the global average. The U.S. market and likely Canada are in that category. As Juniper Research argues, 5G revenue, as a proportion of the global total, is greater than 5G accounts might suggest. The other region where 5G revenue should exceed global norms is Western Europe, according to Juniper Research estimates. 

source: Juniper Research


Of course, there is that other next-generation network: the fixed network. But as important as home broadband might be for revenue earned by most fixed network service providers, it is not a product with a high growth rate. In fact, growth rates are slowing, according to Point Topic. Where growth rates were in the two-percent range in 2021, they have dropped to about 1.3 percent in 2022. 

source: Point Topic 


The causes are several. The war in Ukraine has depressed growth in the Eastern Europe region. Saturation is an issue in Western Europe and North America. Economic issues might be tempering net additions in other markets. 


In the mobile markets, growth can be measured in several ways: total accounts or subscribers; growth of 4G or 5G; growth of mobile broadband accounts. 4G and 5G growth rates are higher than global mobile account growth rates, which might run about three percent per year. . 


How Big a Revenue Driver is "Home Security?"

EE is getting into the home security business. It is a logical and not unprecedented move for either a mobile operator or a fixed network access provider hoping to create a significant new revenue stream. 


U.S. cable operator Comcast has been doing so since 2013, but interest in the business predates that entrance into the market. AT&T had gotten into the business using 3G mobile networks, but wound down the business when it sunsetted the 3G network. 


The demand for home monitoring appliances might be a separate business from the remote monitoring services business that telcos and cable operators seek to enter. The former includes a wide range of appliance suppliers, the latter focuses more on monitoring managed monitoring services, though self-monitoring options also are available. 


It remains unclear how big an opportunity this might represent for access providers. Many see home security as a subset of the smart home market, which includes both self-managed appliances and systems as well as managed services.   


What is an Access Provider's Core Competence?

Liberty Global is looking at selling its Belgian tower network. Separately, Liberty and Telefonica are investigating selling  U.K. towers as well. Both deals illustrate the changing value of asset infrastructure in the mobility business. Where once tower ownership was considered essential, it now is considered optional. 


That in turn raises logical questions about the value of towers as business moats. As it turns out, ownership of radios on towers, and not the towers, is considered important. Ownership of spectrum licenses also remains strategic. 


In a tactical sense, mobile operators have found they can raise capital to reduce debt or increase investments by selling tower assets. In a strategic sense, the move to divest towers, create joint ventures or wholesale-only access in the fixed networks business raises questions about the business moats formerly provided by ownership of scarce access networks. 


Many of the same questions could be raised about digital infrastructure assets of other types, including data centers and optical fiber assets. To the extent that owners are willing to sell off all or parts of their infra assets, that suggests a business decision that such actions preserve what is essential to the business while creating greater liquidity. 


But the corollary is that those assets might not be sources of business advantage they once were thought to be, in whole or in part. 


As the asset light business model gains more traction, issues about structural separation, once thought to be a regulatory issue, not become matters of business strategy. In a growing number of cases, access providers are choosing to deemphasize asset ownership in favor of a more asset-light approach. 


Often forced by necessity, such moves still show a belief that some parts of the digital infra asset base can be shed without loss of too much competitive advantage. 


There are other corollaries. Telco executives once claimed that their core competence was “knowing how to run networks.” That makes less sense once ownership of the networks is given up, in part or in whole. 


So “running networks” turns out not to be the core competence. That might come as a shock to many who work in the industry, but is an inescapable conclusion. The ability to shape the regulatory process might arguably be closer to “core competence” than the ability to run networks. 


Thursday, October 27, 2022

Telecom Infra Project Looks at Open Fixed Networks

Telefonica, TIM and Vodafone are among ecosystem participants leading the Open Fixed Access Networks  sub-group of the The Telecom Infra Project’s Fixed Broadband Project Group.


The sub-group aims to drive the deployment of open, disaggregated and interoperable fixed network access technologies.


That includes interoperability between multiple supplier solutions, interworking between optical line terminals and optical network units,  as well as integration with software-defined network controllers, allowing service providers to mix and match network elements supplied by different infrastructure suppliers. 


The sub-group also seeks the virtualization and disaggregation of hardware and software, removing vendor lock-in.


Improved operating efficiencies also will be investigated. 


Will Video Content Industry Survive AI?

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