Saturday, February 5, 2011

Y! Alert: Telecom-Funda

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The latest from Telecom-Funda


Steered Roaming - Found A Benefit Top
Many network operators are using some form of steered roaming, i.e. the mobile is actively discouraged to use a network it tries to attach to so it searches for another one that is potentially more attractive to the home operator of a customer. From a usability point of view this has one major downside which is the longer initial waiting time if the mobile is steered away from a network. But recently I have found at least one advantage: Every now and then, I use Vodafone Websessions for Internet connectivity when roaming which is usually only available in one of the networks in a foreign country while the voice service is available in several. So with steered roaming, the home network operator can increase the chances the 3G stick ends up in the right network without my help.
 
OS Watch: Will Nokia Embrace WP7? Top
 
Telehealth's Progress Should Make Us All Feel Better Top
 
Verizon Sells Out iPhone Pre-Orders, Throttles 3G Top
 
Nokia's Flagship E7 Delayed in the UK? Top
 
Nortel Patents Sale's Pending Top
 
Mobile Data's Doomsday Scenario Top
 
PocketGear Goes White Label Top
 
Android's Very Good Week Top
 
What will be the business model for free NFC-based interactions? Top
One of the mobile operators' big problems at the moment is their inability (or unwillingness) to deal with Freemium-style business models. The sheer "weight" and complexity of operator infrastructure and bureaucracy makes it ill-suited to managing events that are unbilled and non-monetisable. This is especially true in circumstances where free calls/sessions/events massively outweigh paid ones. It's a problem exacerbated by many vendors selling them boxes or software based on usage tiers. This is almost certainly going to be a problem for operator appstores. A large % of Apple downloads, and a huge % of Android downloads are for free applications. People wanting clients for Facebook, Twitter or a million advertising- or brand-led apps. The implicit (and irretrievable) costs of managing, uploading, storing and delivering free applications is likely to be a significant part of the business model for Apple, Google and others. It will be interesting to see how telcos cope with this challenge. This problem is likely to arise again with NFC. I suspect that once Apple and Google and RIM and Nokia expose NFC/contactless APIs to their developer communities, there will be a huge rise in the number of transactions that don't involve any form of payment. Many of these will not need the "secure element", which is the focus of much of the political wrangling around NFC. If someone walks out of a restaurant, and taps their phone on a theoretical Facebook-branded "Like" terminal on the way out, there isn't really a need for an uber-secure back end system. Same deal if I tap my phone at a gig, to get added to a band's mailing list. Or a million other applications and use cases. The net result is that an overwhelming % of all NFC connections will probably be non-financial. Not mobile payments. Not mobile ticketing with a pseudo-Oyster. Not peer-to-peer money transfer. They will be inter-actions, not trans-actions. Not only that, but these apps will appear much faster, assuming that readers are affordable and easy to use (more on that in a moment). I know I've been very skeptical about NFC in the past, but that's because the focus was on payments or convoluted operator-inclusive value chains. Not just simple "tap to do stuff" apps - basically similar to 2D barcode use cases but much simpler and far less geeky. In other words, it finally looks like we'll get offline applications for NFC - something that's been key to virtually every handset innovation in recent years. All of which makes the operator business model around NFC rather tricky, in terms of justifying any additional subsidy or promotion, or somehow taking a margin. All the complex mobile-money, transportation ticket and government projects are huge systems integration and IT minefields, likely to need $$$ being spent with IBM or Accenture and taking years to implement. The big question is around readers and how they are connected. For big complex projects (eg integration into retailers' point of sale terminals), telcos may have a role to play. But for the Facebook-style touch-to-like concept I mentioned above, it should be possible to get USB-connected standalone readers hooked into a PC for a few 10's of dollars. I have a hunch about this. Sooner or later (sooner?) Apple will put not just the NFC chip into phones, it will put the *readers* into next-gen iPads. I've already had an experience in a restaurant where the host came around with an iPad for people to enter their email addresses for the mailing list. Touching the phone could be to a tablet (or a USB-connected reader to a PC) should be a no-brainer, especially if it allows the user to decide whether to provide specific information sets (name, email, phone-number.... or just a Facebook ID or even a pseudonym). The question will then be how operators manage to regain relevance for their role in NFC trans actions (which will come later, if at all), when the first trillion NFC inter actions will have bypassed them. My guess is that Apple and Google will (initially at least), focus on using NFC as just another tool to entrench their developers and extend their ecosystems. Apple isn't especially bothered about really monetising apps - its own profit on the Appstore is peanuts - it just uses it as a way to add utility to its hardware and sell more units. If NFC-capable iPhone 5's and iPad 2/3's help it sell another 50 million units @$300 gross margin a time, it really doesn't need to care about slicing 2% off of the handful of financial transactions it might facilitate. And Google, Facebook or others could subsidise readers for a variety of advertising / marketing purposes. So what should operators do about this? One thing is to have some "skin in the game" in terms of interactions as well as transactions. That will mean acting just like all the other developers and exploiting the NFC APIs on all the various handset platforms. Potentially, they could act as an interaction clearing-house, or even adding value through other internal APIs and assets. They should NOT assume that the key identity layer is around the SIM card, but should look to develop OTT-style applications that can be downloaded to any handset running on any operator's network. I have other thoughts on this as well, but I'll reserve those for other channels and paying clients. This is my own freemium strategy....
 

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