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Archive for July, 2009

Mobile Minute Newsletter - Keeping Capacity Ahead of Traffic: The Perennial Challenge

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Keeping Capacity Ahead of Traffic: The Perennial Challenge

The recent edition of our quarterly newsletter was released this week and focuses on network evolution and the ensuing data crunch, with traffic expecting to double in volume every year through 2013. In addition to this headline topic, there’s coverage on the Widget Bar and the new widget applications it includes, how we’ve partnered with operators such as Sprint to help drive their success in the marketplace, and our continued Mobile Minute webinar series with its relevant discussion of the mobile internet ecosystem.

Read the newsletter in detail here or contact us at feedback@bytemobile.com to subscribe.

- Dan Fisher

Mobile Multimedia - A Report on the July 15 Mobile Minute Webinar

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

fierce-live-webinarsThe third webinar of the year – “Mobile Multimedia: Minimizing Congestion, Maximizing Quality” – was held on July 15. You will find a full replay of the webinar here and will be able to access it later on the Mobile Minute page of our website.

The July 15 drew event visitors from Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia, Latin America, the U.S., and Canada. FierceWireless Editor Mike Dano moderated a panel consisting of Craig Mathias, principal of Farpoint Group; Adrian Hall, our Chief Marketing Officer and Joel Brand, our vice president of Product Management.

Craig Mathias opened the session with comments on the central role of video in consumers’ lives and the corresponding market opportunity for mobile multimedia – especially video on demand. He cited a number of mobile applications that are proliferating in our ‘video-driven culture’, including company updates to employees, real-time distribution of business and consumer news, sharing of personal events among family and friends, and marketing and advertising campaigns. He stated Farpoint’s forecast that by 2014, 40% of all mobile consumers will be accessing video on their devices. Craig added that given the current economics of data pricing, capacity and throughput – plus the continued evolution of mobile handsets and multimedia content – wireless carriers will need to build escalating demand for video into their network evolution plans.

Against this backdrop, Joel Brand presented a number of compelling industry and anonymous customer statistics on mobile internet usage today. Multimedia streaming accounts for 30-40% of network data throughput, which is generated by less than 1% of users. Today mobile video constitutes approximately 35% of the total traffic mix and is expected to grow at a compound annual rate of 131% through 2013. Smartphones are approaching laptops in percentage of video traffic generated, and in certain tier-one networks, video consumption has overtaken web browsing on Apple iPhones. Joel then showed how web and media optimization could reduce peak throughput by up to 50%. Operators can effectively manage excessive data consumption and abusive video usage by a small percentage of users through the intelligent enforcement of fair use policies, which protect network resources without damaging customer relationships.

Adrian Hall pointed the divergence between data growth and data revenue growth and its impact on operators’ profitability as cost per bit continues to rise. Adrian focused on the unique attributes of our Media Optimization solution: just-in-time video delivery that maps streaming to actual consumption, data reduction that downsizes traffic while maintaining high quality, and intelligence that adapts optimization to constantly changing network conditions.

Following Craig Mathias’ presentation, Mike Dano polled the audience on the question of whether operators should enforce fair use policies with their subscribers. The results of the poll were as follows:

Whether operators should enforce fair use policies with their subscribers

Additional Mobile Minute events are being planned for later this year. We will keep you apprised of these and other developments in our ongoing efforts to provide thought leadership and consultative education to our customer and prospect base and the mobile internet industry at large.

-Jaishree Subramania

Mark Newman Talks Mobile Strategies for Network Operators

Friday, July 17th, 2009

As part of our ongoing Q&A series with mobile and wireless industry influencers, we recently caught up with Mark Newman, chief research officer at Informa Telecoms & Media, to get his take on the latest issues facing mobile operators.                                                         

                                                           

1) Your area of expertise is analyzing mobile operator strategies. From your point of view, what are operators doing well right now and what are the main areas in which they need to improve?
Mobile operators are managing their profit margins pretty effectively by trimming their cost base. This takes a number of different forms – from taking a more selective approach to handset subsidies to outsourcing a range of different network and service functions. Pan-regional operators seem to be getting a lot better at removing duplication across their different businesses.

I still believe that they need to develop a clearer, more coherent strategy with regard to their content strategies. The success of mobile broadband has demonstrated that there is a massive pent-up demand for portable and mobile access to the Internet. We believe that there is huge potential for operators to introduce different payment and access options rather than accepting that flat-rate pricing is going to be the dominant business model.

2) In the late 1990s and early 2000s, as adoption of wireless devices went mainstream, operators put tremendous focus on marketing to and acquiring new subscribers. We’re at a point now where operators have to focus on retention and luring non-subscribers away from competitors. How can operators differentiate, stay relevant and build competitive advantage?
During the 1990s – and even in the early years of the current decade in some countries – coverage for basic voice services was a key differentiator. New players tended to be more aggressive in their pricing because they had worse coverage and network quality than the incumbents. But over the last five years, voice coverage has ceased to be a differentiator and operators have attempted to develop their own new services and strong brands to differentiate themselves.

Now we may be about to see a swing back to coverage and quality being differentiators. Operators are at different stages of building out mobile broadband networks, and coverage and quality levels vary. We have seen Vodafone launch femtocells because they believe that offering better indoor coverage can be a strong lure for mobile users. They have stolen an important lead on their competitors, and their femtocell launch this month caught the industry by surprise.

This is not to say that operators are not continuing to invest in new services to provide these key differentiators. But their track record in building and bringing to market new services and applications is not great. However, some are beginning to realize that the mistake they made in the past was trying to generate significant businesses in their own right from these services rather than, for example, offering them for free and using them as a tool to retain customers.

3) Operators continue to report lucrative data revenue growth. What are the implications of this growth on networks and how might this affect subscribers down the road?
The introduction of flat-rate data pricing – and more importantly the launch of the dongle – has resulted in a colossal surge in data traffic on mobile operators’ networks. For the time being they are coping reasonably well – 3G networks have been sitting idle for several years and it is only now that they are being truly utilized. However, within the next one to two years, operators are going to face capacity bottlenecks. The problem will be in the home, where many mobile broadband users are using their connections to access high-bandwidth video services and in the backhaul where many mobile operators will need to upgrade their microwave links to DSL or fiber. This clearly involves substantial investment, and the price war that has broken out in the high street for mobile broadband services means that this investment is not always easy to recoup.

4) What other revenue opportunities are operators looking at - or should they be looking at - to help offset falling voice revenues?
Gone are the days when operators believed that non-voice services (beyond SMS) were an important new revenue stream in their own right. Operators have learned that they can monetize access to broadband networks, but charging for games, music or video has had only limited success.

Many operators are now looking to open up their networks to allow third parties – Internet or entertainment companies – to develop their own services. Operators hope that these companies will use some of their network assets - for example, location technology or core communications capabilities such as voice or SMS - to build into their applications. Operators can monetize these services either by charging for access to these “APIs” or sharing in the advertising revenues that can be generated off the back of these services.

Even if revenues are modest, operators believe these strategies and investments are worthwhile if they help to reduce churn.

5) From our point of view, it appears that European operators are more likely than their U.S. counterparts to deploy solutions that allow for a better user experience (e.g., multimedia content adaptation, optimization, etc.). Why do you think that is? Can you point to other notable differences between the U.S. and Europe in terms of operator strategies?
I think it’s a question of maturity more than anything else. European mobile operators have been focusing on new services for longer than their U.S. counterparts because the focus of their business has long since shifted away from building out their network coverage.

That said, if you look at the financials of European and U.S. operators, you will find that U.S. operators tend to have higher ARPU for non-SMS data services than European ones. ARPU levels in the U.S. are higher generally, and most mobile users are postpaid customers who are seemingly happy to pay $50 per month or more for a large bundle of services including voice, SMS and data.

If you have any questions you’d like us to ask in the future, feel free to leave a comment or send an email to sinfantino@bytemobile.com. 

-Stacey Infantino  

Customer Success Is Job #1

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Recently, PC World tested the performance of the top 3G networks in North America, and FierceMobileBroadband reported on the results:

Sprint’s 3G network delivered on its promised speeds in 90.5 percent of the tests in 13 cities. Average download speeds were 808 kbps. “The Sprint network performed especially well, both in speed and in reliability, in our test cities in the western part of the United States,” said PC World.

Sprint, a Bytemobile customer since 2001, just launched its next-generation SmartView mobile broadband acceleration client. The product consists of Sprint connection manager software integrated with the Bytemobile Optimization Client. This works with the Optimization and Services Node (OSN) deployed in Sprint’s 3G/4G Now Network to reduce data traffic and speed up web browsing for laptop applications.

The Bytemobile and Sprint marketing teams have collaborated to develop and execute a joint plan for the launch of the new SmartView client. One component of this plan is a video demo, produced by Bytemobile, that visually showcases the product to Sprint mobile broadband customers.

You can view the video on this post and on the Sprint customer website - see the link labeled ‘Learn more about Mobile Broadband Acceleration’ under ‘Devices & Coverage’ on the right-hand side of the page. The joint marketing program – which also includes an ongoing customer awareness campaign, as well as FAQs and a video demo for internal audiences – is one of many examples of how Bytemobile works cross-functionally within customer organizations to deliver strategic value and ensure customer success.

-Jaishree Subramania

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