News, views and commentary from the telecoms sector across emerging markets and developing countries worldwide
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts

Friday, 27 November 2009

Telecoms operators in developing countries are always owned by telcos from richer nations and never the other way round... right?

Bouygues Telecom: eyed by Egypt's Orascom

While the focus DevelopingTelecomsWatch is generally on communications sector businesses in emerging markets and developing countries, a battle between incumbent mobile operators and a proposed new entrant in Canada has been covered here of late.

While events in the vast North American country are clearly beyond the usual remit of this blog, two factors go some way towards justifying the interest of DTW in this particular story.

The first of these is possibly a bit frivolous - simply the observation that despite Canada's G8 membership and status as one of the world's most affluent countries, its mobile communications industry lags behind that of many far less wealthy countries in terms of market penetration. The second factor which justifies spending some time on this story is the fact that the wannabe new cellco in Canada has its roots in Egypt and is affiliated with that country's first multinational corporation. That Egyptian company, Orascom Telecom, has built a global business across a number of developing countries, including Pakistan, Bangladesh, Algeria and Zimbabwe.

I remember sitting in the auditorium at the 3GSM World Congress in 2007 and smiling at the rather direct language used by Orascom Telecom supremo Naguib Sawiris. As Richard Wray of the Guardian also noted a the time, the opening speeches (including those from Orange's then-CEO Sanjiv Ajuha and Vodafone's then-CEO Arun Sarin) were somewhat in line with what conference veterans have come to expect - carefully prepared, lots of positive stuff about mobile communications enriching consumers' lives.

Sawiris eschewed this kind of talk altogether, preferring to announce that he was in the business for the money. While this element of the Egyptian tycoon's speech is what stood out for Richard Wray, it is another remark that interested me and which has informed my thinking about the telecoms sector. Sawiris smiled about three giant multinational mobile groups being represented on stage at the World Congress by two Indians and an Egyptian. The point, I think, was to illustrate the shift of this industry's centre of gravity southwards and eastwards from the developed economies of Europe and North America.

Having grown up with the comfortable notion of European and American countries building operations in developing countries and extracting profits therefrom, it has been interesting to watch Orascom Telecom working in the opposite direction. Weather Investments, an investment vehicle controlled by Sawiris, holds more than 50% of Orascom Telecom, and also owns Italy's Wind Telecomunicazioni and Wind Hellas of Greece.

The current attempt to shake up the telecoms sector of a highly developed economy like Canada is, then, not without precedent for Sawiris.

In Canada, however, as noted here before, however, there is fierce resistance to the arrival of Wind Mobile. For now, the prospect of a commercial launch has been stymied by a Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ruling that the company in breach of rules on foreign ownership and control.

Today, in response to this setback, Wind Mobile has launched a campaign "geared at letting Canadians know that when it comes to wireless service, they deserve more." The goal of the campaign, runs the company's press release, "is to raise awareness about the current state of Canada's wireless industry compared to the rest of the world, and to highlight why more choice is essential."

"The heart of the issue is that Canadians pay some of the highest rates for some of the most complained-about wireless service in the world," said Anthony Lacavera, Chairman of Wind Mobile. "This campaign is about focusing the conversation to the need for real wireless competition in Canada in order to lower prices, increase penetration and finally deliver the kind of customer service that has been sorely lacking for Canadians."

Others in Canada, however, have expressed the opinion that while Orascom Telecom has probably been treated unfairly, and while the country's rules on foreign investment urgently need changing, it would be a mistake to allow Wind Mobile to take part in the Canadian market because the other players in the market have to follow the current rules, so the Orascom Telecom-backed company should as well. This is the view outlined in an editorial piece in yesterday's Globe & Mail.

As stated the last time DTW visited this dispute, more twists and turns seem likely. We will continue to watch developments with interest.

In the meantime, Mr. Sawiris has expressed an interest in participating in the telecoms market of another developed economy. TeleGeography reports that the Orascom Telecom Chairman is eyeing France's Bouygues Telecom. A tie-up with the French operator would make sense the said an anonymous Orascom official, adding: "It would reinforce our presence in the Mediterranean, improve our roaming possibilities, there would be many synergies." Watch this space. Will Egypt's Sawiris continue to make inroads into Europe's highly developed and competitive telecoms markets?
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Wednesday, 12 August 2009

India Week continues at DTW

This is turning into 'India Week' here at DevelopingTelecomsWatch. Today's musings begin by revisiting yesterday's discussion here about the imposition of Mobile Number Portability (MNP) in the country. We will also consider - not for the first time - the ways in which the Indian Government's concerns about national security might lessen the appeal of this vast, growing market for foreign telecoms groups.

The reason we are returning to the MNP debate so quickly is that yesterday saw an open house discussion in Hyderabad on this theme. Hosted by the TRAI, India's telecoms regulatory body. This rejoiced in the snappy title 'Determination of Port Transaction Charge, dipping charge and porting charge for mobile number portability'. The surrounding media coverage provides more information on the range of concerns expressed by India's cellcos.

Speaking to an Economic Times reporter at the workshop was TRAI Chairman SJ Sharma, who said he expects MNP to go live on December 1st. While Sharma is confident that his agency will have its MNP regulations in place by the end of August, he expressed the belief that some of the operators do not seem to have ordered enabling equipment yet, meaning that a delay of 2-3 months is likely.

Yesterday, ahead of the Hyderabad discussions, we considered the estimated cost one operator had calculated for the implementation of MNP. State-owned BSNL had come up with a USD 250 million estimate, complaining about this cost in light of its contention that only 2% of "elite customers" are likely to use the facility.

Today, drawing on an article from K.V. Kurmanath of the Business Line, we can see how BSNL's numbers stack up against the estimates of some of its competitors in the mobile space.

Reliance Communications
, and Tata Teleservices have indicated that they expected MNP-related expenditure to the tune of USD 20.6 million each. Vodafone India has come up with the much larger figure of USD 72.3 million. Much lower numbers than those mentioned by BSNL, then, but still pretty significant sums of money. I invite anyone with a view on this to offer an explanation for why this set of estimates varies so much.

"The regulator asked the service providers to send in their points on these issues by Tuesday," Mr T. R. Dua, Deputy Director-General of the Cellular Operators’ Association of India, told Business Line, whose article states that "keeping in mind the huge expenditure", the telecos want the TRAI to ensure that they are compensated for their "huge investments".

Let's see, then, if December 1st really is the date after which Indian mobile users can elect to switch their cellular providers while keeping their phone numbers.

In the meantime, I want to consider once again how the Indian authorities' concerns about national security are impacting on the telecoms sector.

In a recent piece here about worldwide developments across the footprint of Scandinavian telecoms group Telenor, I noted that the company had been facing difficulties around establishing a controlling interest in Unitech Wireless, the start-up Indian cellco in which it currently has a minority stake. For India's security agencies, the stumbling block was Telenor's presence in Pakistan and Bangladesh - apparently a cause for concern in light of strained relations with both of these neighbouring countries.

Telenor's immediate problem appears to have been resolved with the Indian Home Ministry's suggestion that security clearance for a bigger stake in Unitech Wireless up could be provided on the condition that none of the staff who have worked at the Norwegian firm's Pakistan operation are employed in India. Other security concerns affecting the telecoms sector more broadly, however, continue to be aired pretty regularly.

For example, all telecoms firms present in India may find themselves subject to further personnel restrictions. Late last week, Joji Thomas Philip of the Economic Times wrote that India's intelligence agencies now want all telcos to have a native Indian in the post of Chief Operating Officer. At present, only operators' CTOs need be a resident Indian citizens, while foreigners are allowed to hold all other key positions such as Chairman, MD, CEO and CFO, subject to clearance from the Home Ministry on a yearly basis.

If enforced soon, this proposed new regulation might not make a big impact right away because, as Philip notes, none of the existing telcos currently has a foreign COO.

This is not to say that such restrictions will have no impact, however. An article in today's Financial Times goes as far as stating that such stringent personnel requirements would lessen the appeal of India for foreign strategic investors and will restrict the freedom of companies already operating in India to make use of existing foreign expertise within their global organisations.

The article also contends that such restrictions on management positions could complicate corporate merger and acquisition activity such as Bharti Airtel's planned tie-up with MTN, the South African telecoms firm with interests across and beyond Africa. This would just add to the concerns of some analysts who are already sceptical about the wisdom of that proposed deal for Bharti Airtel shareholders. On Monday, India's Financial Express noted that day's 4.8% drop in the market-leading cellco's share price, which seems to have been triggered by worries that the company will increase by 5-10% its offer to buy a stake in MTN. The article quotes Sonam Udas, VP Research at BRICS Securities, who says: "we don't understand the logic for this deal at all. Why does Bharti want to change from a company with a net cash position of USD 1 billion to a debt-ridden firm? We do not buy the argument the deal is going to add value. There is nothing in the deal to highlight as adding strategic value."

Operators may not be the only telecoms value chain participants affected by the Indian Government's security concerns. Joji Thomas Philip writes that the Home Ministry fears that "suspect vendors may install back-door entries, remote logic facilities and also design Trojan horses in networks and hardware. This could be used to remotely bring down the network or to monitor it." Philip states that the agencies are particularly concerned about Chinese vendors.

One definite casualty of all this worry about national security is Swiss-registered firm ByCell. On Saturday, the Economic Times confirmed that after much wrangling, the company is to be prevented from entering the Indian mobile services market, with security concerns about the company and its shareholders being the deal-breaker.

A busy week for Indian market watchers so far, then. Let's see if the rest of the week has enough action in store to warrant another look here at DTW.
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Thursday, 6 August 2009

Telenor: good news from India; troubles continue in Russia/CIS

Telenor HQ: India, Pakistan and Russia issues on the agenda

A recent DevelopingTelecomsWatch article went into the likelihood of mobile market consolidation in Pakistan. I was prompted to write this by a rumour doing the rounds, according to which Telenor is considering selling its operation in Pakistan to China Mobile, which already has a presence in the market in the form of the MNO Zong. I noted that Telenor's presence in Pakistan was worrying the authorities in neighbouring India - worrying them to the extent that it could make it impossible for the Scandinavian telco to increase its stake in start-up Indian cellco Unitech Wireless. Such is the level of tension between the two countries, it seems.

I moved on to speculate (wildly, I admit) that Telenor's thinking might be along the following lines:
  • We can't play in India and Pakistan...
  • India (population 1.15 billion, mobile penetration 34.47%) presents massively richer opportunities than Pakistan (population 173 million, mobile penetration 55.58%)...
  • so, if being in Pakistan prevents us from maximising the opportunity in India, let's get out of Pakistan...
Last week, however, came news of a possible way for Telenor to maintain a presence in both markets. An Economic Times article of 30th July indicates that India's Home Ministry is set to give security clearance for Telenor's hiking its stake in Unitech Wireless up to 74%, but on the condition that none of the staff who have worked at the Norwegian firm's Pakistan operation, are employed in India.

The Indian authorities are not only concerned about Telenor's Pakistan connections, it seems. Security agencies apparently also had reservations regarding the Norwegian company's presence in Bangladesh, where Telenor is the largest shareholder in market-leading cellco Grameenphone. The Economic Times article notes that both the neighbouring countries not only have a history of strained ties with India, "but have also served as a launchpad for various terror attacks". In the case of Bangladesh, investigations into serial terrorist blasts that killed 80 and injured 216 in the northern Indian tourist city of Jaipur last year pointed to the involvement of Bangladesh-based terrorist group Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami, according to local reports.

The Economic Times piece notes that Indian authorities have had to take into account the concerns of the security agencies while also keeping in mind the reputation and stature of the Norwegian firm and how it has revolutionised rural telephony in Bangladesh via Grameenphone. The Bangladeshi MNO takes its brand name from that of Telenor's local partner Grameen Telecom, a non-profit sister concern of the internationally acclaimed microfinance organisation and community development bank Grameen Bank. A Grameenphone-Grameen Telecom partnership operates the national Village Phone programme, which puts mobile phones in the hands of very poor women who then operate a business, offering access to communications services to their neighbours.

This programme is not purely altruistic and has been an important component of an encouraging growth and profitability story for Grameenphone - and in a market where other cellcos have struggled to succeed. In this blog's most recent previous article, we heard from the CEO of rival Banglalink, which is owned by Egypt's Orascom Telecom. Ahmed Abou Doma explained in a recent statement that apart from the market leader (Grameenphone), "others are continually posting losses".

The Economic Times article also states that the Indian Government is keen not to send out the wrong message to foreign investors and has therefore "come around to the view that the Norwegian giant should not be held back from picking up up to [a] 74% stake in Unitech Wireless simply because it has a successful presence in Pakistan. " Keeping the human assets of the Indian and Pakistani arms of Telenor separate is expected to take care of risks such as spying and subversion, the article suggests.

For Telenor, good news from India comes at the same time as much less encouraging news from Russia. Within the last few hours, Reuters has reported that the Norwegian group has lost another round of its legal battle over its stake in Russian cellco Vimpelcom. The latest development in a long-running and acrimonious saga sees a Moscow appeals court rejecting Telenor's latest attempt to delay the enforcement of a USD 1.7 billion fine owed to Vimpelcom. Telenor faces the prospect of losing its stake in the Russian company after bailiffs ordered the sale of its shares to cover the fine that a Siberian court imposed for allegedly holding back Vimpelcom's expansion in Ukraine. Maria Kiselyova of Reuters writes that the case is being closely watched as a guide to the climate for foreign investors in Russia, coming after the shareholder battle last year that forced management and personnel changes at BP's Russian oil joint venture, TNK-BP. Kiselyova asserts that analysts watching the case, brought by Farimex, a small shareholder in Vimpelcom, say the forced sale of Telenor's stake in Russia's second-biggest mobile phone company by subscriptions "would further undermine confidence in the rule of law in Russia." She continues by saying that Telenor views the case as part of a protracted dispute with the powerful conglomerate of Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman, Alfa Group, the other strategic investor in Vimpelcom. Alfa, as Kiselyova notes, has denied any links to Farimex.

These developments follow a Q2 performance which beat the expectations of analysts polled by Reuters. The Norwegian telco posted a bigger-than-expected 6.8% rise in Q2 core earnings and curbed investments to protect against a potential fall in mobile revenues amid global economic hardship. EBITDA rose to USD 1.24 billion.

Telenor also cut its CAPEX target, excluding investments in India, to 13-15% of its revenues from an earlier prediction of 15-17%. An impairment charge for its Serbian operation, linked to a poorer outlook for that country, hit its bottom line, driving earnings per share down from last year's figures.

It remains to be seen, though, how a bigger stake in India's Unitech Wireless and possibility of losing its foothold in Russia and the wide CIS (where Vimpelcom has numerous subsidiaries) will affect Telenor going forward.
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Thursday, 23 July 2009

Pakistan: 5 (really 6 [or 7?]) becomes 4 (or 5 or 6?)?

China Mobile: keen to drive consolidation of Pakistan's mobile market?

With a population of around 173 million and a mobile penetration rate of just 55.01% (according to WCIS), Pakistan would appear to be an attractive place to be for multinational telecoms groups. Some very significant individuals, however, have recently expressed the belief that market conditions are too tough to support the current number of mobile operators competing in the country. A specific suggestion about a possible merger between operators has also surfaced in the last few days.

According to Pakistani news portal Dawn.com, Telenor is considering selling its operation in Pakistan to China Mobile, which already has a presence in the market in the form of the MNO Zong. The Dawn.com article contends that the Norway-headquartered international telcoms group has been deliberating a withdrawal from Pakistan for some time because of "security issues".

Shortly after this report surfaced, Reuters was carrying a 'no comment'/denial from Telenor. The Reuters snippet notes that ARPU at Telenor Pakistan was the lowest of all its operations around Europe and Asia but that the number of subscribers grew by nearly 20% year-on-year. Why, then, would the Norwegian group consider this move?

Let me put forward a possibly outlandish theory, which also relates to security concerns - but security concerns in India rather than in neighbouring Pakistan.

A few days ago, the Economic Times ran an article about how the Indian Government has withdrawn approval for ByCell, a company "promoted by Russian businessmen", to offer telecoms services in the country. The company had planned to set up as a GSM mobile operator in areas including Assam, Bihar, Orissa and West Bengal, but seems to have endured a long struggle to get the green light to do so. As far as I can make out from this and other articles, the Indian Foreign Investment Permission Board (FIPB) has been concerned by the security implications of ByCell's ownership structure and its sources of funding for some time.

The same Economic Times piece also indicates that the FIPB is uncomfortable with the idea of Telenor increasing its stake (currently 49%) in cellco Unitech Wireless. Again, "security concerns" are the cause of the problem - in this case to do with the fact that Telenor operates in Pakistan, with which India has long had an uneasy relationship.

This, then, is my possibly highly simplistic and implausible theory: Telenor sees India as a far richer prize than Pakistan and therefore considers selling its Pakistani operation to China Mobile in order to pave the way for establishing a full controlling stake in Unitech Wireless. Crazy? Maybe. Or maybe I'm onto something. This is just a wild stab in the dark, so who knows?

Either way, China Mobile certainly seems keen to accelerate the growth of its share of Pakistan's mobile subs (currently estimated at 7.20% by WCIS) by acquiring a rival player and consolidating the market. Well, certainly if the Dawn.com article is to be believed. This contends that "before the merger talks with the Telenor group... China Mobile had offered to buy the management shares of Warid Telecom Pakistan" but could not settle on an acceptable price.

The article also claims that Pakistan's five leading mobile operators - Mobilink, Telenor Pakistan, Ufone, Warid Telecom and China Mobile's Zong - have reportedly all told the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) that there is room for only four players. The further claim is made that a PTA official has said that by 2010 the country may indeed have just four mobile operators.

I have no idea of the source of this assertion, but it does now seem clear that Telenor Pakistan, at least, feels that the market is currently split too many ways. According to Mehtab Haider of the Pakistani newspaper the News, writing today, the cellco's CEO Jon Eddy Abdullah predicts market consolidation. In an interview with the News, Abdullah said Pakistan had the lowest call rates in the world and a continuous reduction in charges, as seen in the past, to attract customers was no longer viable. "This means that in the long term, having five operators in a market with intense competition and low prices may not remain feasible anymore," said Abdullah. "This can result in anything from mergers and acquisitions to [players] dropping out of the market," he added.

Abdullah mentioned two other significant challenges faced by operators in Pakistan - double-digit inflation affecting consumers' ability to afford services and the "overall law and order situation" limiting network expansion, restricting maintenance activity, increasing security-related expenses and dampening investor confidence.

The security situation in the country certainly does seem to present challenges for cellcos. Orascom Telecom-owned Mobilink, for example, has suffered damage to its network due the military opetation in Swat and Buner, where the army has been fighting with militant insurgents.

The Telenor Pakistan CEO was a little more upbeat about recent tax measures made by the country's Government - lower General Sales Tax; SIM activation tax slashed by 50%; the elimination of regulatory duty on handsets; lower customs duty on imported handsets.

"Although we consider these tax measures positive," said Abdullah, "we feel that there is more to be done. We are all aware of the impact of high tax rates on the industry, which depress growth in subscriber numbers, divert investments and ultimately discourage mobile usage."

"We also understand that when this industry flourishes," he continued, "it helps the economy by attracting foreign direct investment, contributing heavily to the national exchequer, generating employment and increasing productivity of almost every sector. Therefore, it is imperative that the taxation structure for the mobile industry is rationalised further."

Another telecoms industry leader seeminly keen to see cellular sector consolidation is Walid Irshaid, President and CEO of PTCL, Pakistan's incumbent wireline operator, in which the UAE's Etisalat owns a minority stake (but with management control), and of which MNO Ufone is a wholly owned subsidiary.

Farhan Sharif of Bloomberg, writing late last month, states that PTCL is in talks with several domestic companies to make acquisitions this year. "We’re already in discussions with various carriers and operators," Walid Irshaid said in an interview with Bloomberg News on June 16th during the CommunicAsia 2009 conference in Singapore. "The market must surely consolidate", continued Irsaid because he feels that Pakistan doesn’t need more than three GSM operators. He declined to name the companies with which he is in talks.

Between the Zong-Telenor takeover rumour and the comments of the CEOs quoted here, there does seem to be a body of evidence to suggest Pakistan's mobile market is set for consolidation.

So, how many cellcos would that leave? Thus far, this article has mentioned five currently in operation. There is, however, at least one more doing business in the country (which is why this article has a title that looks like a confusing equation).

One of these is rather unusual - the Special Communication Organisation (SCO), set up by the Government of Pakistan to provide services in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and Northern Areas. According to one article I found, Pakistani army officers, both serving and retired, hold critical positions in the SCO.

One other cellco confuses me. Instaphone, a US TDMA network operator, was once part-owned by Millicom International Cellular (as was Paktel - sold to China Mobile and rebranded Zong). A slew of articles going back at least as far as January 2008 suggest the MNO had its licence terminated some time ago by the PTA for failing to make outstanding payments. However, the operator's website remains live and it still seemed to be fighting the PTA as recently as April this year. According to WCIS, the US TDMA operator currently has around 50,000 subs on its network - a market share of just 0.05%.
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Thursday, 16 July 2009

Bridging the digital divide between the provinces and regions of Pakistan

Pakistan is the world's sixth most populous country. It is also one which features regularly in TV news broadcasts that remind us of the country's strategic importance - as a state armed with nuclear weapons; as a country whose long history of troubled relations with neighbouring India took a new turn after the Mumbai terrorist attacks of November 2008; as a country with a porous border with troubled Afghanistan.

The country, however, has not featured very heavily here at DevelopingTelecomsWatch - before today, just five of the our first 100 stories even mention Pakistan. Today's short essay will, I hope, go some way towards making up for that glaring omission.

That I was able to round up a few interesting recent stories from the country is due mainly to my knowing of a very useful blog/news site - TelecomPK.net, set up and maintained by Babar Bhatti, a a senior IT professional now based in Dallas, Texas. Most of the news items, articles and reports referenced here today came to my attention via Babar's site and his tweets.

One item I found interesting was written by Babar himself, and concerns how the takeup of mobile telephony in Pakistan has been very uneven across the country's different provinces and regions. Mobile penetration in Pakistan currently stands at 54.11%, according to the World Cellular Information Service from Informa Telecoms & Media. Babar cites figures from the country's telecoms regulatory agency, which indicate a wide variety of cellular penetration rates in the four provinces:
Sindh, in the southeast of the country, is a major centre of diversified economic activity - heavy industry, finance and agriculture. The second best performer in terms of mobile penetration, Punjab, is the county's most populous region and its most industrialised. The two other provinces, where mobile penetration is well below the 50% mark, are places whose share of the national economy is much smaller.

Babar writes Balochistan's low cellular penetration rate is most likely attributable to the province having few urban areas and, as a result, high costs for the roll out of telecoms infrastructure. He feels, however, that recent Universal Service Fund (USF) projects may improve the situation in the provinces. I assume these include the three contracts recently signed by the USF and the country's incumbent fixed line and broadband provider Pakistan Telecommunication Company Ltd (PTCL), as reported on 3rd July by TeleGeography. These include arrangements to bring fibre-optic connectivity to all tehsils (administrative divisions) in southern Balochistan, involving the installation of 1166km of fibre-optic cable in the region.

Much of Pakistan's population is denied access to the range and quality of vital services taken for granted in highly developed countries. Two obvious examples are the provision of health care and education services. Canada-based technology journalist Jerry Blackwell, a regulator contributor to Wi-Fi Planet, wrote an interesting article earlier this month about how communications technology is making an impact with regard to the first of these.

Blackwell's article quotes Phil Cruver, President of KZO Education, an American company that develops content and technology for online interactive learning, who points out that "the literacy rate in Pakistan is only about 50%, and for girls, it’s lower. The country has about 1.3 million teachers now, but it needs double that number in order to meet the standards [in education] that are needed."

The article is part of a series which examines the state of the worldwide WiMAX industry in 2009. According to Phil Cruver, WiMAX will be "absolutely critical" in ongoing efforts to pull Pakistan's public education system up by the bootstraps. Cruver's plan is to deliver interactive streaming video-based learning over WiMAX networks and KZO has already launched pilot projects in Islamabad. This has involved connecting two schools to a WiMAX network operated by Wateen Telecom, a provider of telephony, broadband and multimedia services that is part of the Abu Dhabi Group, which also owns Pakistani mobile operator Warid Telecom.

Comments about technical issues and allegedly poor service for Wateen Telecom WiMAX customers were aired by Chris Cork, a British social worker settled in Pakistan, in September last year. Writing in Pakistani newspaper the News, Cork provided a personal history of the frustrations of getting a reliable Internet connection in the country during his time working there. This concludes with a none-too-complimentary account of dealing with a company whose "name begins with a 'W' and ends with 'n'" when he asked for an externally-mounted receiver to get full benefit of their service.

One Pakistani blogger, writing in December, also reported that the Wateen Telecom WiMAX service, the first such offering for consumers in the country, was facing bad press and suffering reliability problems. That writer's feeling seemed to be that this created opportunities for the providers of two other WiMAX-based services. One of these is Infinity from Orascom Telecom-owned mobile operator Mobilink, the market leader in the cellular space with an estimated market share of 29.74% according to WCIS. The other is wi-tribe Pakistan, part of an international collection of wireless broadband operations owned jointly by Qatari incumbent telco QTel and Saudi firm A.A. Tukri Group of Companies (ATCO). According to TeleGeography, wi-tribe Pakistan began commercial operations earlier this month.

Gerry Blackwell writes that according to the WiMAX Forum, at least two other operators, including Supernet (owned by Telecard, a fixed wireless operator known for its CDMA service) and Burraq Telecom, also plan to launch WiMAX services in Pakistan. The Supernet/Telecard offering, however, may be in doubt if nothing has changed since Babar Bhatti wrote in March about a dispute between wi-tribe and Augere, a European company that was planning to offer WiMAX services in Pakistan via the acquisition of spectrum in the 3.5Ghz band from Telecard.

Although some have raised concerns about Wateen Telecom's WiMAX service, Blackwell reports that Phil Cruver of KZO Education has no complaints: "It was so quick to get service," says Cruver. "We paid for it, and it was up and running within 24 hours."

Blackwell writes that when KZO first got involved in Pakistan, WiMAX wasn't on its radar. "To be very honest, we didn't know there was a WiMAX," Cruver says. "It's just serendipity that Pakistan has the first nationwide WiMAX network."

Cruver's last comment might not be accurate. Gerry Blackwell writes that Pakistan is really just "on its way to having a nationwide network", with service is only available in major population centers, and coverage spotty outside city centres.

As discussed, the second area of vital services in which WiMAX could potentially make a very valuable contribution in Pakistan (and other developing countries) is healthcare.

Earlier this year, Monica Paolini of Senza Fili Consulting (from whom I once sought advice about the agenda content for a Fixed-Mobile Convergence themed conference I hosted in Miami many moons ago) wrote a paper on the theme of expanding the reach of healthcare in developing nations with WiMAX. Sponsored by Intel and Cisco, this paper notes that today, in developing nations, patients have to travel to their nearest clinics or hospitals to receive even basic treatment and to more distant institutions for specialised or emergency care. Monica argues that this model does not provide comprehensive and efficient access to healthcare and suggests that reliable, always-on broadband wireless connectivity makes a new healthcare model possible -medical professionals reaching out to patients where they live and when they need care, bringing access to a range of medical resources through voice, data and video applications.

In her paper, Monica discusses an example from Pakistan - a Cisco trial combining satellite and WiMAX connectivity to mobile units that provide early oncological screening for patients in rural areas.

Overall, Monica uses her paper to make a case for why WiMAX stands out as an ideal technology to support telemedicine initiatives. Rather than focus on the capabilities of the technology, however, I'd like to consider the business models needed to make such initiatives a success.

Monica quotes Debra Sloane, Global Healthcare Solutions Partner Manager at Cisco, who says that "extensive cooperation among public agencies, health care providers and [telecoms] operators is necessary for the creation of new business models that can address the specific
needs of communities."

Just as we have noted that WiMAX networks in Pakistan are currently confined to urban centres, Monica notes that wireless networks tend to be initially deployed in high population-density areas and suburban business districts where the highest-paying subscribers can be found. Monica argues, therefore, that governments, health care agencies, and NGOs need to work together with network operators to ensure that operators see a business opportunity in under-served urban and rural areas. Perhaps Pakistan's Universal Service Fund could be used to intervene in this way. As far as I can tell, however, the USF's activties do not yet include any such initiative.

To conclude, while it seems that a number of worthy initiatives are improving the currently uneven access to telecoms and Internet services and to other vital services, Pakistan continues to be notable for a marked digital divide between its various regions.
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Wednesday, 22 April 2009

Mobile operators - low TCO, smaller carbon footprint: the answer is blowing in the wind?


Wind/solar hybrid powered base station deployed by Avea: pic from Cellular News

By March this year, according to Informa Telecoms & Media, there existed over 4.1 billion mobile subscriptions globally. At the start of this decade, the number of global subs was just 482 million. Ten years earlier than that, there were fewer than 5 million subscriptions worldwide.

I feel proud to be associated with an industry that has grown so impressively, but am mindful of the challenges ahead as mobile operators seek to connect the next billion customers. These prospective subscribers are poor people with very restricted spending power. A popular argument put forward to explain factors responsible for keeping such people locked into poverty can be exemplified thus:
  • The earning potential of a semi-skilled handyman living in a shanty town on the fringes of a large African city is hampered by his not being able to advertise how he might be contacted by anyone wanting his services. He spends more time walking the streets asking for work than he does working and getting paid.
  • A farming community lives a largely subsistence lifestyle, growing crops to meet its own needs and selling the surplus to buy other vital goods and services. The farmers routinely fail to get the best price for this surplus because they have no way of finding out at which markets they they will find the highest levels of demand.
  • A person living in a remote community needs to register a birth or death in the family. The state bureaucracies have no touchpoint in the community so completion of this routine paperwork involves taking time away from productive activities to travel to a bigger population centre.
All of these problems can be resolved through access to telephony and/or the Internet. The handyman can write his mobile number and details of the services he offers on signs, placing these at road junctions or other prominent locations. I saw a lot of this kind of hand-made advertising on my recent trip to Kenya. With (mobile?) Internet access - or even just by making a few calls - the farming community can review market information and send its produce to where the best price can be commanded. In a small, isolated community provided with some form of Internet access, e-government solutions may obviate the need for long, expensive, time-consuming journeys.

Communications services, then, look set to have a vital role in alleviating this poverty. This role has been quite neatly explained by The Next Billion Network, an initiative incubated at the MIT Media Lab. The phrase used in the this group's mission statement is about deploying innovative mobile technologies which help poor people in developing countries to "reduce friction in their local markets from the bottom up". The Next Billion Network's founders believe that these new waves of mobile subscribers will make their voices heard—and connect to the global information network. "This will unleash a wave of entrepreneurship, collaboration and wealth creation, turning the newly connected into a powerful force in the world economy," the founders say, adding that "the kind of world that emerges from this transformation will depend on our ability to recognize it as an opportunity."

For mobile operators to continue to act as a catalyst for developments of this kind, they will need to resolve a number of challenges around keeping the total cost of service ownership low for poorer people in developing countries. These challenges are many and varied. The one referred to in the title of this post is around powering mobile networks in locations lacking reliable electricity grid infrastructure.

In emerging markets, cost-conscious operators have long been concerned about the OPEX implied by running diesel-powered generators to power off-grid base stations. The fuel itself must be bought and operators must also take fuel transportation costs into account - significant costs when fuel must be supplied to remote areas with poor roads

Solar power and wind power look like good alternatives - the power sources themselves are free and inexhaustible. Added to that, CSR-conscious telcos can bask in positive press coverage of their reduced carbon footprint.

In September last year, however, I read that trials of these technologies have largely been quite disappointing. My former Informa Telecoms & Media colleague Matthew Reed, the editor of Middle East and Africa Wireless Analyst, reported disatisfaction on the part of the GSM Association with the trialing of base stations powered by the sun and wind. The GSMA's Development Fund Director Dawn Haig-Thomas said: "There have been a number of trials that have failed, and we've been digging into the reasons," adding that "we've seen trials where the geography hasn't been correctly considered – where solar panels and wind turbines have been placed in inappropriate places, or not in optimum places."

In addition, Matt Reed reports, "many sites are also missing electronic control devices that manage power fluctuations or alert systems that tell operators to switch on backup diesel generators, if the base station is low on power, perhaps because it has not been windy or sunny enough."

Further, Matt writes, a big reason for the lack of take-up of alternative energy sources is that although operating costs might be low, the solar panels and wind turbines have historically been too expensive. In addition, notes Matt, "lots of solar panels were needed to power a base station, which would force operators to buy more land on which to site them." Wind generators, until recently, he notes, "were only manufactured with massive turbines that were more appropriate for wind farms than for small base stations."

Matt observed, however, that better solutions are becoming available. A number of deployments of wind and solar powered base stations have been announced in the month's following Matt's article. I have to assume that these deployments involve solutions to the kinds of problems Matt raised.

The most recent one that I know about is the deployment by Turkish mobile operator Avea of what it claims is the first hybrid wind/solar powered base station in the country - manufactured by Scottish firm Proven Energy. A Cellular News piece on this story this week quotes Erol Barendregt, Director of Turkish reseller Girasolar Türkiye, which installed the equipment: "The hybrid solution is the best option because the sun and wind resources have opposite cycles and intensities during the day. Wind and solar power are understood to be among the best natural alternatives to fuel based electricity generation. By using both in a system that is designed to supplement each other you get a continuous and reliable power supply."

Major telco sector vendors want a piece of the action in this space. In October, Ericsson, for example, unveiled a wind-powered 'Tower Tube' base concept developed in partnership with Vertical Wind and Uppsala University in Sweden. According to a Global Mobile Daily article at the time, vertical rotor blades work silently, minimising the load on the tower during operation.

A more recent announcement by the Swedish vendor, made in February, concerns its involvement in the development of solar-powered base stations. A GMD article dated February 18 notes that the Orange-branded mobile operator in Guinea is to deploy 100 solar powered base stations across the African country, in partnership with Ericsson. The base stations, says the article, make use of Ericsson's energy-efficient hybrid diesel-battery solution and solar panels, which will replace one of a base station site's diesel generators with a bank of specially designed batteries capable of handling a large amount of charging and discharging.

Chinese vendor Huawei also has solar powered solutions on offer. GMD reported in September that the company had deployed Pakistan's first solar powered base station for Warid Telecom, thereby enabling the operator to extend its network reach into remote areas of the country with limited access to the electricity grid.

Sri Lanka's Dialog Telekom has opted for a mix of solar and wind-powered base stations in trials designed to investigate the uses of several forms of equipment from eight different vendors. This was reported by GMD in February.

So there seem to be a few renewable energy developments going on in emerging markets worldwide. I could not comment to what degree these recent deployments and trials have addressed the concerns raised last year by the GSMA.


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Friday, 17 April 2009

Arab world and India: investments to flow in both directions?

Towards the end of February, I asked here whether 2009 would be the year that a prominent Indian mobile operator will make major moves on the world stage. I noted that the cellco I had in mind was facing a number of competitive pressures on the home front that might soon drive international expansion.

The operator I had in mind was Bharti Airtel, the country's mobile market leader (with 26.24% of the subscriptions on a highly fragmented market, according to WCIS). To date, the company's only significant foray beyond India has been the recent establishment of a subsidiary in Sri Lanka. In the February discussion, I noted that Bharti Airtel had failed in a previous bid to acquire South Africa's MTN. With no particular evidence to support it, I'd developed the gut feeling that if the big Indian cellco were to make a bold move into new territories, somewhere in Africa would be the likely target.

I was surprised, therefore, to read in a recent TotalTelcom article that a quite different Indian operator has turned its gaze to the African continent.

Apparently, state-owned BSNL (Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd.), India's oldest and largest communication service provider is likely to get involved in a bid for a telecoms licence in Tunisia. The operator's partner in the proposed bid is consultancy firm TCIL, a fellow state sector enterprise.

The TotalTelecom article contends that BSNL sees overseas expansion as an opportunity to increase revenues, having lagged behind private sector operators on the domestic market. The Tunisian licence, says the article, is of the unified variety, enabling a new entrant to offer mobile and fixed-line services.

A degree of skepticism is reported, with Jithesh K. Gopi, Head of Research at Bahrain-based investment bank Securities & Investment Co. B.S.C. saying "with the current level of penetration [in Tunisia], it won't be an easy market for a new entrant."

In the African context, Tunisia does have a high rate of mobile penetration - currently at 82.73% according to the World Cellular Information Service (vs. 40.16% for the continent as a whole).

In the cellular arena, any new entrant will be seeking to shake up a duopoly situation. The mobile market is presently split very evenly between state-owned Tunisie Telecom and Tunisiana.

My understanding is that it will become known quite soon whether BSNL will take the plunge in the possibly quite challenging Tunisian market.

In the meantime, I spotted news of monies being set to flow in the opposite direction, i.e from the Arab world into India.

I have, of late, been taking advantage of an excellent newsletter from Blycroft Publishing - Africa & Middle East Telecoms Week. The latest edition carries an article about the UAE's Etisalat, currently a minority stakeholder in Swan Telecom, planning to invest a further USD 1 billion in India's telecoms sector. The Etisalat Chairman is quoted as revealing that the company's investments in India "would complement its investments in other countries having growth potential, such as Pakistan, Afghanistan and Indonesia" and that "the current economic meltdown has provided an opportune time for investing in different areas, and Etisalat is ready to exploit the situation and bolster its global presence." For some time now, I've held the belief that the current downturn is set to stimulate acquisition activity on the part of well-funded telecoms groups from the Middle East. This latest tip about Etisalat's plans seems to be in line with that.
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Saturday, 14 March 2009

South Asia: cellcos contend with tough trading conditions but continue to record subscriber growth

According to a short note published by Telecompaper this week, the mobile market in Pakistan returned to growth mode in January, with overall subscription numbers rising to 90.703 million vs. the 89.907 recorded in December. I am not sure where these numbers come from. The WCIS databsase maintained by Informa Telecoms & Media logged a slightly different figure for December, 90.162 million, so it seems reasonable to think that estimates for January may vary as well.

WCIS did record a fall in subscriptions from November to December, although the exact numbers did not match those mentioned in a brief Global Mobile Daily report of 20th January, which noted that Pakistan's total mobile subscription base declined 0.6% at end-December to 89.9 million from 90.4 million in November, according to the telecoms regulator the PTA.

I looked around for an explanation for the contraction in market size late last year. The neatest seems to be the one outlined briefly at the Pro Pakistani telecom & IT news blog earlier this week. The reason given there for that fall in numbers is the loss of subscribers who had failed to register and verify their SIMs. SIM verification is currently quite a contentious issue, the MNOs apparently contending that a new system could compromise privileged information and "hurt the credibility of the cellphone industry."

Mobile operators in Pakistan may not sell active ready-to-go SIMs. Instead, new users purchase an inactive SIM and must then register their details. What is newer is the requirement for operators to furnish the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) with their subscribers' mobile phone numbers before the activation of SIMs. The operators reportedly had no objection to providing other data about their customers, e.g. parents' names, address, place of birth etc. This newer requirement, however, has not gone down well with the MNOs, whose leaders are reported to have said that the new clause clashes with their contracts with the PTA, which had allowed them to keep their clients' information secret.

When the Dawn newspaper contacted senior executives of Mobilink, Telenor, Warid Telecom, Zong and Ufone, the responses were strongly worded. "Why does NADRA need our customers' numbers? It's ridiculous. This information is privileged and is only to be provided to the government...if there is a (credible) national security concern as mentioned in the terms and conditions of our licences," said a Mobilink executive. "How will this information be used? It is equally detrimental for companies and subscribers," said another top executive, adding that the new clause might jeopardise the entire mobile industry.

"This was not part of the agreement when we paid Rs291 million licence fees," said a Zong executive. "Licence terms cannot be changed just like that. We are providing [a] public service. We hired more than 300 people, trained them, set up new call centres and brought in expensive new equipment just to make the SIM verification system a success," he said.

From Telenor Pakistan, Dawn's reporter learned that both the PTA and NADRA came down hard on the cellcos, leaving them with no choice but to sign the new agreement. "We were told that this agreement was not negotiable. Without signing it, we will not be allowed to sell SIMs. It's a question of compromising an industry that generates Rs2 billion annually," said a source within the Norwegian-owned MNO

"Unjustifiably, NADRA had earlier raised the verification fee by almost 200 per cent," said a representative for Warid Telecom.

After all this fuss in January, the operators appear to have been working quite hard to win back lost custom. Reduced rates have been a quick remedy.

Naeem Pani Wala, a Pro Pakistani contributor, wrote last month about the resulting 'Paisa war', taking note of Zong's especially aggressive undercutting of market-leading Mobilink. "Despite the fact that current economic situation doesn’t allow low pricing," writes Naeem, "we know that this doesn’t matter much for [the] Chinese and they beat the competition with low rates."

Naeem analyses the various TV advertisements run by Pakistan's MNOs. His view seems to be that, being unable to compete with Zong purely on price, Mobilink has decided to focus on coverage and quality of service, as in this ad:



Naeem feels this is a good approach, enabling Mobilink to remain highly visible to consumers "without investing much on packages." According to Naaem's article, Telenor Pakistan seems to be staying out of the hottest price war action and focussing its efforts on dominating the high value post paid space, as explified by this advertisement:

Over time, I assume we will see figures indicating that while Pakistan's cellcos have managed to get back onto the subscriber growth path, the price war reported by Naeem is affecting earnings.

A South Asian market where there already seems to be confirmation of this is Sri Lanka. Cellular News reported earlier this week that market-leading Dialog Telekom has suffered a sharp drop in prepaid ARPU, which fell by 22.6% from Q4 2007 to Q4 2008. "Sri Lankan consumers may have been unpeturbed by local or global economic circumstances in 2008", says the Cellular News artcle, "but Dialog was not. Despite the strong customer growth, annual revenues grew by just 1.0% to SLR 33,108m. A 48.4% rise in costs saw gross profit down 26.0% to SLR 15,478m, while EBITDA fell 41.6% to SLR 8,370m. Fourth-quarter EBITDA was even worse hit, a massive 75.6% decline taking the figure to SLR 740m from SLR 3,027m in Q4 07. This was partly due to exceptional items, but even on a normalised basis there was a fall of 51.6% to SLR 1,466m."

While subscriber growth looks good in principle, it does seem that South Asian markets are at the stage where operators have realised that extending the availability of services to ever less affluent population segments will mean higher costs and steadily declinding ARPU. Let's see how many of the region's operator suffer significant hits to EBITDA as a result.


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Saturday, 21 February 2009

Views from MWC: WiMAX to gain traction in emerging markets?

I recently discussed here the relative merits of and prospects for 3.5G mobile and WiMAX networks in India. A number of news items emanating from this week's Mobile World Congress prompt me to widen the discussion out to the question of how much traction WiMAX backers can expect the technology to gain in emerging markets worldwide.

The first of these items comes courtesy of the telecoms.com, whose correspondent caught up with Wei Yuan, Senior Director of Global Marketing for ZTE in Barcelona. "We anticipate a boom in WiMAX take-up for fixed applications in emerging markets this year," says Wei Yuan, who believes that Russia, the CIS, the Middle East and Africa hold out the best prospects for WiMAX growth for the Chinese telecommunications equipment and network solutions firm.

In terms of serving mobile operators, Wei Yuan believes the '4G' market share will be 80/20 in LTE's favour, but feels that the WiMAX opportunity is still a sizeable one, especially in light of recent announcements by Alcatel-Lucent and troubled Nortel that they are no longer focusing on WiMAX mobility. The article adds weight to this last point, noting that ZTE's WiMAX momentum is highlighted by In-Stat, a market research firm whose recent report states that out of the 94 new WiMAX 16e commercial networks deployed last year, ZTE had 15 of them or 16% of all the networks established worldwide. This apparently sets the Chinese company among the top two WiMAX equipment vendors in 2008. According to the telecoms.com article, the report goes on to say that with ZTE's industry-proven WiMAX terminal solutions and a significant number of commercial WiMAX networks the company is planning to install in the years to come, "there is a high probability that the company can assume the number one spot as WiMAX equipment vendor worldwide."

Just before the Congress, Sean Maloney, Chief Sales and Marketing Officer of Intel provided an update on recent WiMAX developments, a summary of which you can read at WiMAX.com. "WiMAX is a global story," said Maloney. "The technology is real, here today and has a 2-3 year advantage over other competing technologies."

What stood out for me was Maloney insisting that big deployments in the most highly developed markets are only part of the WiMAX picture. "Too much focus has been placed on developments in the US and Clearwire," said Maloney. "This is a global story; to understand how it is doing you must take a global perspective. From the very beginning, we wanted to have a global, ultra-fast, low-cost wireless internet solution that would help bridge the digital divide and last mile."

Maloney flagged up some of the more notable deployments, including Scartel and Comstar launching services in Russia with up to 10Mbs performance. For Intel, Moscow and St. Petersburg have leapfrogged 3G services to 4G. In the case of the Russian capital, I wonder how damaging this will be for the country's three leading mobile operators MTS, Vimplecom and MegaFon, which have all rolled out 3G services in major cities except Moscow. There have been long delays with the the Russian military freeing up UMTS frequencies and I have discussed here in previous posts the argument that this frustrating 3G launch delay in the country's most lucrative market has created a window of opportunity for the likes of Scartel and Comstar. In the case of the latter, however, it is worth mentioning that the Comstar-UTS group, a leading provider of integrated telecommunication solutions in Moscow and other cities, is controlled by Sistema, which is also the parent company of mobile market leader MTS.

Scartel, says the WiMAX.com article, plans services in over 40 Russian cities and launched the world's first GSM/WiMAX phone with HTC. This has not remained the sole GSM/WiMAX device on the market for very long. WiMAX.com reported on Tuesday this week that Quantum Telecom had unveiled at the Mobile World Congress in its first Ultra Low Cost GSM-WiMAX handset. I assume this is aimed primarily at emerging markets.

Other emerging markets and middle income countries which have seen WiMAX deployments include:
  • Pakistan, where Wateen Telecom has launched the largest WiMAX network in the world covering 26 cities with plans to grow to over 70 cities; mobile operator Mobilink also launched WiMAX services in August 2008.
  • Venezuela, where MobileMax has deployed WiMAX in Caracas in June 2008 with up to 20K users
  • Brazil, where Embratel, part of Telmex, is operating a WiMAX network covering over 20 cities
It will be interesting to see which emerging markets are home to further WiMAX deployments. I know less about developments in Africa and SE Asia, but Intel and ZTE certainly seem to be vocal, powerful backers of WiMAX as a useful option for service providers in developing countries.
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Sunday, 8 February 2009

Delays notwithstanding, 3G to outpace WiMAX in India

On Friday I spotted an article in the Economic Times which quoted a familiar name: Kunal Bajaj, the India MD of BDA, a consultancy business which originated as an advisory firm specializing in China's telecommunications, media and technology sector. Kunal was a very useful contributor to one of the first Com World Series events it was my pleasure to host while working with Informa Telecoms & Media - the COAI-endorsed GSM>3G India 2007 conference and exhibition in Mumbai.

This event, now known as India & South Asia Com was, in those days, a useful place for telecoms tech vendors to mingle with a large, senior and diverse crowd drawn from India's numerous mobile operators. The event has since become rather more than that, having grown simultaneously in two directions.

One of these directions, in common with all the equivalent Com World Series shows in other regions, is about extending the appeal of the conference beyond the cellular sector and into the wider telecoms world. At any Com World Series event now, you can expect to meet representatives of a very broad range of telcos: MNOs, incumbent and challenger wireline operators, cable MSOs and all kinds of broadband service providers. While it is true that the mix varies depending on the relative value of each of these segments in the part of the world concerned, I am ending my involvement in the Series with a sense that the team are doing an ever better job of providing the exhibitors and sponsors (largely tech vendors: network equipment, OSS/BSS etc.) with high-value one-stop-shops of potential customers from across huge regions. The tricky part is ensuring that the conference element is genuinely useful for the telcos' delegates, i.e. providing them with meaningful peer networking opportunities and insightful presentation material from genuinely influential speakers. I believe the Com World Series team pull off this trick remarkably well.

In the case of the Mumbai event, the other change which I was responsible for driving was to do with marketing the conference to delegates from India's neighbours across the rest of South Asia, namely the Maldives, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Pakistan.

Securing speakers and delegates from the last of these is not without challenges. One scarcely needs to be an especially diligent student of South Asian affairs to be aware of the tensions between Pakistan and India, two countries which have gone to war with each other three times since the partition of India in 1947. In terms of how these tensions have affected my work in that part of the world, I remember our team assisting the then-CEO of Pakistan's Ufone GSM, Mubashir Naqvi, whose participation we had secured as one of the key speakers. It was clear that the paperwork and delays around arranging a visit to India were rather more arduous for Pakistanis than for citizens of any other country. Along the way, I also realised that roaming agreements did not exist between mobile operators in the two countries, meaning that Pakistani visitors to the Mumbai conference would need to go to some trouble in order to keep in touch with colleagues and families back home.

These difficulties notwithstanding, I am convinced that Pakistani delegates can be attracted to the India & South Asia Com World Series event, even in the context of tensions raised yet higher by the November terrorist attacks on Mumbai. I noted in my end-of-year post on my former Com World Series blog that the timing of this terrible incident made a postponement of the India & South Asia Com 2009 unavoidable. The event was set to go ahead in January, and is now rescheduled for mid-May.

The main reason for my feeling sure that the Mumbai conference can successfully gather participants from all over South Asia is what I learned when I travelled to Bangladesh in July 2007 with the specific intention of gauging the appetite for a whole-region event. My trip to Dhaka took in a meeting of the South Asian GSM Forum and a conference which Informa Telecoms & Media ran in conjunction with Singapore-based colleagues at sister company IBC Asia. Dubbed Mobile South Asia, this event had previously been held in Sri Lanka and Pakistan as well as Bangladesh. The 2007 iteration, which I attended, seemed to be well-received by delegates from the operators, but it did prove rather harder to persuade sponsors that any of these venues would work well. That was part of why it seemed attractive for us to merge the Dhaka event into the Mumbai conference in 2008 and beyond. The Mumbai audience, when polled on site, were actively supportive of the move, but I travelled to Bangladesh less sure of whether the Mobile South Asia crowd would welcome being bundled together with their Indian colleagues. Again, I conducted a poll on site and came away feeling sure that the combined event would be successful. I would like to think that in my new role I will be able to attend this gathering, if not this year then at least in the not-too-distant future. I expect to see it evolving positively.

The article in which Kunal Bajaj's name cropped up concerns the idea that India's telecoms operators are worried that the further delay of 3G and WiMAX auctions (which I was writing about here on Friday) will significantly dampen the development of services. Kunal and his colleagues at BDA seem to be more optimistic. A report which they have prepared, in conjunction with the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), predicts that by 2011, 25% of 3G revenues will come from non-voice services, a half of which will be data access. Kunal Bajaj says "while this seems like a modest estimate, it is to be noted that data comprises less than 1% of present 2G revenues."

I suppose BDA's estimate only appears modest to those who did not adjust their expectations down to realistic levels in the wake of relatively lacklustre 3G debuts in markets around the world. I remember a very good article written in 2006 by Neil Montefiore, who recently stood down as CEO of Singaporean cellco M1 after a stint of nearly thirteen years at the helm. Writing for the Informa Telecoms & Media Global Mobile fortnightly research service, Montefiore argued that "the basic problem with all technology lies in its marketing." He observed that "clever stuff is developed and launched and sometimes catches the imagination of the masses without too much effort from the marketing experts," and that "it's when the clever stuff gets complicated that the marketing becomes the catalyst for success, or the point of failure." Montefiore argued that when compared to products such as the iPod, SMS or mobile voice, "3G is a complex proposition... [requiring] new technology and new handsets [and enabling] the mobilization of familiar experiences." Montefiore noted that most operators had targeted 3G launches at the mass market, "focusing on expensive, high-profile content downloads and mobile TV", had spent significant sums on mass-media advertising, and had offered "huge voice-tariff incentives for people to switch to 3G." He observed that handset makers had launched wide "ranges of cheaper handsets in an effort to fire up the market, losing sight of the fact that the success of 3G is based on the sale of the service itself." This last point is surely familiar territory for us all. How many of us are currently using anything like the full range of functionalities offered by the mobile devices in our pockets? Perhaps it's even more pertinent to ask about the handsets in the pockets of our friends and family members who do not earn a living in the mobile sector.

Writing in 2006, Montefiore argued that "the results have been mixed, the adoption rate is slow and there is no mass-market take-up... because the mass market believes the hype and assumes the service will be as good as the advertising says it is." He insisted that "when the experience doesn't live up to the expectation, the momentum quickly dissipates" and that "ultimately, the marketers are trying to sell the service to the wrong people."

Montefiore argued that "as an industry, we need to relaunch 3G. We need to communicate specifically with early adopters and develop targeted marketing propositions to cater to their expectations. That means thinking outside the box in terms of media, looking at ways of reaching our target markets in a structured rather than scatter gun approach. It means treating 3G as a niche market with identifiable and quantifiable applications that have a value and purpose. We need to turn our perception of 3G on its head, stop treating it as the cure-all for falling ARPU by assuming that every user out there actually wants streaming video, and revert to proper, old-fashioned marketing by building a proper business case for its adoption."

My feeling is that these lessons have been learned in the two-and-a-half years since Neil Montefiore levelled his criticisms at operators and handset vendors. We are, finally, living in a mobile data market showing clear signs of explosive growth after years of slower progress. The Informa Telecoms & Media report, Mobile Networks Forecasts: Future Mobile Traffic, Base Stations and Revenues (published June 2008), quotes network vendor Ericsson as stating "that on the W-CDMA networks it has deployed worldwide, total data traffic overtook total voice traffic in May 2007" and that "by December 2007 total data traffic was 3.7 times the level of voice traffic."

In his article, Neil Montefiore argued that "the way to build a market for a new technology is surely to focus on the people who understand the way that technology evolves, who are excited by its potential and who are forgiving of its teething problems." He said that computing, Internet services, DVD, VCR, MP3 "all started as expensive, complicated, sometimes unreliable technologies, but the mass markets they enjoy today have been built on the belief and understanding of those early adopters who disregarded the hype and focused on the capabilities."

To me, drawing on my daily experiences of living in the UK, it seems intuitive to believe that the remarkable growth in data traffic reported by Ericsson has been driven more by tech-savvy/time poor business users of HSPA dongles than by trendy consumers playing with funky phones. Beyond people working in the industry, I still seem to know very few people with 3G handsets and even fewer who are using them to do anything very bandwidth-hungry. However, for MNOs looking for a return on their 3G network investments, we possibly should not suppose that the mobile phone form factor and consumer services will always contribute less than dongles and corporate data subscriptions. The Informa Telecoms & Media Non-SMS Data report (published June 2008) notes that even the 2G version of the iPhone has significantly boosted the take-up of mobile Internet browsing, citing the case of T-Mobile's German operation, which announced in 1Q08 that average mobile data consumption, mostly for mobile Internet browsing, was up to 30 times more than for users of other handsets. Maybe a disruptive player shaking up the devices market is one of the more significant factors moving us towards the tipping point for mass-market mobile data use.

Devices also get a mention in the Economic Times article in which we saw Kunal Bajaj being relatively bullish about mobile data in India. The article flags up doubts about the practicality of 3G arising from "the unaffordability of 3G-enabled devices in the market and the costs involved in setting up a 3G network." In the same piece, these concerns are swiftly dashed by COAI supremo T.V. Ramachandran: "Even though most 3G enabled phones in India today are priced above Rs.8000, LG has launched a $100 phone which is enabled for 3G services but does not have any multimedia capabilities. These will flood the Indian market for 3G voice services [once the spectrum auctions are concluded]." Ramachandran continues: "nearly all of the existing telecom networks, which have been set up in the past two years, are 3G enabled."

According to the article, Kunal Bajaj estimates it will take only six months to deal with the need to build the additional capacity building to run commercial 3G services on these networks.

The thrust of the Economic Times article is that the prospects for 3G in India are rather better than for WiMAX, hence the title of my blog entry. Remember that the spectrum issues which have delayed the onset of the 3G era in India have also affected those seeking to deploy WiMAX, so I would not expect to see a situation similar to the one I've heard described in the Russian Federation. There, the three leading mobile operators (MTS, Vimplecom and MegaFon) have rolled out 3G services in major cities but not in the nation's capital. As recently as December 12th, Global Mobile Daily was reporting that the rollout of commercial 3G services in Moscow faces further delay because the Russian military has not yet freed up UMTS frequencies. I have heard the argument that this frustrating 3G launch delay in the country's most lucrative market has created a window of opportunity for broadband providers offering WiMAX-enabled services and has been the catalyst for some fairly enthusiastic hyping of the prospects for WiMAX in Russia.

Not only will prospective Indian WiMAX deployers not gain from any significant first-mover advantage, Friday's Economic Times article also makes the case for how 3G enjoys two advantages over the rival access technology, one of which is probably true worldwide, the other of which has to do with the specifics of the Indian market.

The first of these points in favour of 3G is that "there is no such truly affordable counterpart [of the above-mentioned low-cost 3G phones] available for accessing WiMAX." The second concerns market maturity. "National penetration of mobile telephony," the article states, "is expected to cross 50% through 3G in 2011, thrice as fast as it would with 2G, as the capacity of a 3G network is thrice more than that of a 2G equivalent." The argument goes that whereas in developed countries 3G was developed only when 2G penetration was saturated and telcos wanted to grow their revenues through more value added services (VAS), the case is very different in India. Says Kunal Bajaj: "In India, we are already on a 2.5G platform in terms of technology; but our services are still poorly developed owing to spectrum constraints. In this context, 3G will definitely mean better voice services and data access for the first time in many segments, rather than increase in other VAS."

This is not to suggest there is no business case for WiMAX in India. I think I understand from the Economic Times article that Government policy has a place for WiMAX, favouring the technology as a provider of data access, particularly for last mile connectivity in rural areas. Additionally, the BDA report says that "WiMAX is expected to be used for fixed residential and enterprise broadband access in cities."

This all makes it sound as if there is a reasonable case for WiMAX and a stronger one for 3G in India. Let's see.
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