|
26th January - inCode Telecom Group revealed its Top 10 Global
Wireless Predictions for 2007. The predictions help identify
emerging wireless trends for the year and indicate ways that
consumers and businesses will benefit. These trends include
widespread use of mobile social networks, greater choice in
multi-function devices and more wireless home entertainment
options.
Over the past few years, consolidation rationalized
and stabilized most wireless markets, said Bengt Nordstrom
( inset ), Chief Strategy Officer for inCode. Now were
ready for the next level, where Internet services are mobilized
and deeply woven into our everyday lives, whether were
at home, work or play.
In 2007 affordable handsets and service bundling will make
mobile data a more attractive offering in established markets,
where third-generation (3G) networks could become the preferred
choice for most customers. Flourishing infrastructure and
handset businesses in Asia will help bring low-cost wireless
to emerging markets, enabling many small businesses to join
the economic mainstream.
Here are some highlights of the 2007 Predictions (full text
follows this release):
Compelling Internet brands, such as Google, Yahoo and Skype,
give wireless operators a run for the money
Prices of multi-function 3G handsets with various combinations
of music, location, video and other capabilities dip below
$90 USD
A seismic shift occurs as wireless technologies are developed
and deployed first in China and India, rather than Europe
and North America
To own mobile marketing channels, global brands may subsidize
handsets and services for target demographics
In 2004, 2005 and 2006, the inCode Top 10 Predictions proved
more than 80 percent accurate.
inCode 2007 Top 10 Predictions for the Global Wireless Market
Operators
1) Social Networking Gets Mobilized. Mobility is added to
existing Internet business models, services and behaviors,
driving traffic for wireless operators. Teens and twenties
accustomed to constant connectivity and habit-forming Web
sites, such as MySpace and Facebook, lead a wave of membership
in mobile social networks. Location social networking including
friend and event finder services gain popularity, even in
the professional and over-50 segments. Google, Yahoo and Skype
are more compelling for users than wireless brands, which
are hard-pressed to compete. As customer appetites for social
data and video services spike, wireless operators offer more
all you can eat pricing for high-end data packages.
Social networking applications initially are preloaded on
many mobile devices sold and later become downloadable.
2) Mobile TV Now Showing for Early Adopters. In the
short term, wireless users are unlikely to plunk down US $5.99-9.99
per month for mobile TV service. Instead, look for per-view
or per-minute pricing for sneaking, a consumer
tendency to watch key minutes of a sports event or drama while
engaged in another activity. Sneaking leads to more regular
viewing, and within 3-5 years, mobile TV becomes an indispensable
service. When Verizon Wireless and MediaFLO launch early this
year, expect both user-generated and professional content
consumed and shared in many ways. Broadcast TV is the primary
driver of revenues and consumer adoption, but peer-to-peer
video gains interest, too. Operators square off with content
providers over control of the subscriber relationship and
user experience.
Devices
3) Multi-Function Devices Become Cheaper and More Versatile.
Intense competition and margin pressure continue in the handset
market, forcing prices of third-generation (3G) handsets below
US $90 and making them affordable for a wide range of users.
Seeking to replicate the success of camera phones, device
manufacturers produce more multi-function units with music-playing,
location, video and other capabilities. These lower-cost,
multi-function handsets help wireless operators increase traffic
and margin. However, like swimming pools at hotels, some functions,
such as music, are must haves used only by a few.
Still, inCode estimates that 20 percent of all handsets sold
in North America are application specific built for
a usage proposition, such as music or video consumption or
business productivity. WiFi handset capability could become
the Trojan horse that allows Internet companies to bypass
revenue from mobile subscribers.
4) Location-Based Services: And the Winner Is ... GPS! Yes,
GPS is the location technology of choice for the wireless
industry. Handset manufacturers continue to push GPS-enabled
handsets as the technology evolves from popular in-car satellite
navigation systems like TomTom to a broadly accepted feature
in wireless phones. With Nokia having launched its first GPS-enabled
handsets in early 2007 and bandwidth available to support
new multimedia services, location-based service providers
build critical mass. Since there are 10 to 20 times more mobile
phones sold than any other consumer electronics device, wireless
is a huge driver for GPS adoption. Thats great for users
and handset vendors, but the benefit to operators isnt
clear.
Equipment
5) AOL, Yahoo! and Google Multimedia Platforms Challenge
IMS. As multimedia service platforms emerge, Internet service
providers build their own media architecture. That poses a
risk to telecom operators adopting an IP Multimedia Subsystem
(IMS) approach. However, IMS needs a flagship application
and develops slowly until entrepreneurs and venture capitalists
create innovative IMS services as they did with the Internet.
YouTube demonstrated the two key success factors for these
services: 1) Access to millions of users and 2) Inexpensive,
peer-to-peer marketing. Intelligent Networking (IN) in the
mid-1990s provides another useful example. IN took off when
operators discovered they could use the technology for business
800 numbers and prepaid wireless.
6) China and India Tilt Equipment Market. Together, China
and India connect more than 10 million wireless customers
per month in 2007, creating a subscriber base that is larger
than Vodafones at 200 million customers. By the end
of the year, China finally starts issuing 3G licenses. Wireless
technologies are developed and deployed first in China and
India, rather than Europe and North America as in the past.
The result is a significant shift in industrial influence.
Although Chinese infrastructure vendors may be viewed as the
Wal-Mart of wireless, thats more perception
than reality. Chinese manufacturers make rapid technology
improvements and aim for long-term strategic advantage. Expect
intensified focus to ensure a strong Asian influence in the
4G market.
Media and Advertising
7) Mobile Advertising Breaks Loose. Major brands shift from
basic SMS marketing to more sophisticated multimedia advertising.
RBC Capital Markets expects mobile marketing revenues to balloon
from $45 million in 2005 to $1.5 billion by 2010. With the
technological ability to target and measure the effectiveness
of mobile advertising, brands are more strategic in their
approach. Operators under increasing price pressure set limits
on current handset subsidization. Brands take up the slack,
subsidize handsets and services for target demographics and
take direct ownership of marketing channels. Rich 3G content
and video services and accuracy advancements in GPS-based
location services deliver further value to brands targeting
existing and potential customers in innovative ways.
8) Wireless Providers Move into Home Entertainment. This
year, mobile makes headway against fixed broadband operators,
who have dominated Internet and cheaper voice service provision
in the home. WiFi remains the primary wireless access technology.
Low cost femtocells and combined WiFi/High-Speed Packet Access
(HSPA) routers emerge as attractive alternatives to VoIP over
WiFi. The fixed operators may be strengthened by WiFi capabilities
in consumer electronics devices (set-top boxes, game consoles
and MP3 players) that enable cost-effective content downloads.
However, innovative business models for HSPA give mobile operators
a real way to fight back, particularly in emerging markets.
Enterprise Wireless
9) Wireless Security Moves to the Forefront. Put strong security
measures in place. This could be the year that hackers really
start paying attention to millions of wireless devices, the
growth in mobile data usage and vulnerable points between
mobile and fixed networks. CIOs consistently cite security
as their number one concern in extending network access to
wireless devices. Attacks, viruses and data security now exceed
device loss or theft as concerns. Emerging services, such
as VoIP and mobile payments, provide additional challenges.
Vulnerabilities directly affect the bottom line, corporate
image, regulatory compliance and competitive advantage. In
the consumer segment, seamless mobility, off-portal content,
IMS and convergence evolution continue to create new business
needs for end-to-end security solutions.
10) Enterprise Mobility Its for Real Now. Enterprises
cant resist the convenient, reliable, attractively priced,
bundled mobile solutions entering the market. Corporations
switch from phones to mobile computers for transactions, data
collection and messaging for a wide variety of employees.
Many voice communications processes, such as order placement
and delivery notifications, dispatch operations and remote
asset monitoring, continue to shift to wireless data to increase
information access and field transaction volume across organizations.
Many corporations completely replace their cellular handsets
with a combined voice/data device or a data-only device.
The inCode Wish for 2007:
While inCode predicts the above trends, it also sees a subject
that the global wireless industry should address this year:
Operators Go Back to Basics and Finally Get Them Right. Battery
life. Coverage holes. E911 access. Confusing bills. Frustrating
customer service. Wireless consumers have heard all about
new high-end services that add to their monthly charges. But
theyre still beefing about niggling problems that detract
from the user experience. With penetration higher than ever
worldwide, the wireless industry needs to make big strides
in quality, efficiency and customer service. inCode wants
improvements in device component technology and an intense
focus on smoothing and simplifying the entire wireless value
chain.
About inCode
inCode (www.incodewireless.com), a VeriSign company, is a
global wireless business and technology consulting firm. inCode
develops and implements high-impact strategies and solutions
to help increase the profitability and performance of wireless
networks. inCode also helps guide enterprises in harnessing
the power of wireless communications for productivity and
competitive advantage. inCode understands where the wireless
world is going and how to get there first. On Nov. 30, 2006,
VeriSign, Inc. (NASDAQ:VRSN) acquired inCode. VeriSign operates
intelligent infrastructure services that enable and protect
billions of interactions every day across the worlds
voice and data networks.
Back to
News Reports
|