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

Monday, 18 May 2009

Nokia's cheapest emerging markets phone vs. El Vergatario

Emerging markets winner? The Nokia 2720 Fold - picture from Cellular News

Just when I'd finally recovered from the side-splitting hilarity of discussing the (allegedly) saucily-named low-cost cellphone recently launched in Venezuela, along came another emerging markets handsets story to remind me of the fun.

The (nudge, wink) Vergatario will cost the man and woman on the streets of Caracas a mere USD15. It's recently been reported in the press that this represents only 25% of the cost of manufacturing and distributing the device. According to the country's state news agency, there is "a long-term project to export phones from Venezuela to the rest of Latin America". It will be interesting to see whether the Chavez Government would be interested in subsidising cheap phones for the masses beyond the borders of their Bolivarian Republic. Last year, I had the opportunity to visit the HQ of Venezuela's renationalised national incumbent wireline operator, CANTV. I learned a little about the company's (and the Government's) desire to use ICT/telecoms as a driver of Bolivarian socialism - but not enough to speculate with any degree of confidence about whether this could include underwriting the cost of handsets in markets where CANTV's mobile unit, Movilnet, would not have the opportunity to recoup the subsidies during the subscription lifecycle of the customer. I suppose it's theoretically possible that an arrangement could be worked out with friendly operators elsewhere in Latin America, or even elsewhere in the world.

Let's assume for a moment that something of that sort does not turn out to be feasible. With which handsets would a non-subsidised El Vergatario be competing on the global low cost devices market?

One suite of such handsets has been launched recently by Nokia, according to a Cellular News item I received today. The Finnish device maker says the new phones are aimed at emerging markets and come preloaded with a range of Nokia's mobile internet services. The Nokia 2730 classic, Nokia 2720 fold and Nokia 7020 each come Internet-ready, and work with Nokia's range of emerging markets services.

The article quotes Nokia's Alex Lambeek, who says "we've seen mobile technologies catalyze the growth of the informal sector across the world, empowering local entrepreneurs and having an immediate and lasting impact on people's lives. Services like Nokia Life Tools and Ovi Mail, combined with the mobile phones we're launching today, bring powerful solutions that can be the gateway to knowledge, entertainment and people, without the need for a PC."

According to extensive Nokia consumer research, states the article, nearly 50% of consumers in emerging markets would indeed rather connect to the Internet over a mobile phone than a PC.

An interesting component of Nokia's service bundle is Ovi Mail, "which has the potential to be the first digital identity for many people in emerging markets" Unlike most other email services, the Cellular News article reminds us, "an Ovi Mail account can be created and used directly on a Nokia device without ever having to use a PC." The article indicates that since the launch of the beta service in December 2008, around 90% of Ovi Mail accounts have been created on a Nokia phone rather than a PC.

How do these devices stack up price-wise against the Venezuelan phone?

The most affordable of the set of three is the Nokia 2720 Fold, a compact clamshell handset expected to begin shipping in Q3 2009 for an estimated retail price of EUR 55 (USD74) before subsidies and taxes. By my maths, El Vergatario comes in at around USD60 when not subsidised by the Venezuelan state, so it does look competitively priced vs. a comparable device from Nokia. The Venezuelan handset, however, is a CDMA standard device. Presumably a GSM version would need to be on offer if the Chavez Government really does mean to export the phone.


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Friday, 8 May 2009

Indian mobile giant continues to diversify and considers reorganisation

Mobile entertainment? Or highly practical applications designed to assist people out of extreme poverty? Last month I pondered the question of which of these is most likely to grow strongly in emerging markets.

In a recent interview with the Economic Times, Bharti Airtel Deputy CEO Sanjay Kapoor made the case for the giant Indian cellco becoming a major player in both areas. Certainly, the MNO is keen to be much more than a provider of highly commoditised voice and SMS. Says Kapoor: "we are moving away from share of telecoms to share of the customer’s wallet. We will do so by being in a position to offer a wide array of services."

Bharti Airtel is, according to Kapoor, "already the largest music company in the country" selling "more music than any other music company - both, in revenues and, volumes".

In terms of services aimed at India's poorer citizens, Bharti Airtel sees "a big opportunity in banking, says Kapoor, notiing that "about 85% of the country’s population is unbanked."

Diversifying the business may call for changes to the way in which the company is organised. In March, Global Mobile Daily noted that the operator is planning to split its business into separate operating units, according to local reports. That article stated that the firm would reportedly appoint new CEOs to each of nine operating units, which would include separate units for its mobile, broadband and DTH businesses.
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Tuesday, 28 April 2009

Rural VAS tipped to grow in India

Late last week, writing about mobile content/VAS in emerging markets, I wondered whether entertainment or highly practical applications offer the best growth prospects. With this in mind, I noticed today that back in February, Kunal Bajaj of BDA (a consultancy business which originated as an advisory firm specializing in China's telecommunications/media/technology sector) was tipping mobile applications that enhance productivity for people living in India's vast rural hinterland.

Kunal was a highly rated 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. I found the presentation he made then (on an unrelated theme) highly compelling - the piece he wrote on February 2nd, which rounds up BDA's 2009 predictions for the telecoms sector is also a good read.

Kunal Bajaj believes that "rural VAS, especially affordable of ad-supported, local language application" of the productivity-enhancing variety "will emerge as a key differentiator in service offerings as operators pursue rural expansion more aggressively."

Kunal feels that a key driver for the development of such services is the already low level of tariffs and margins in rural areas. Basic voice and messaging, it seems, are not enough as operators penetrate the markets beyond the saturated urban centres. Of the applications I mentioned last week, Kunal appears to agree that "information-centric contextual applications, such as information about commodity prices, crop and weather data" look promising.
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Friday, 17 April 2009

Mobile content in emerging markets: Which services offer the best prospects?

In a former role, I hosted a number of conferences and discussion events with a mobile content focus. More times than I care to remember, I grinned politely at the well-worn joke that 3G stood for Girls, Gambling and Games. The premise, of course, was that three areas stood out as being likely to generate decent revenues for anyone involved in the mobile content value chain.

Looking back, it now seems strange that these product areas were emphasised more than, say, mobile music services. My understanding is that while mobile gaming continue to be an important output of the wider mobile entertainment industry, in terms of revenues generated music is a much bigger deal. Gambling, too, continues to account for quite a small portion of overall mobile data revenue. In 2008, my understanding is the global revenue from mobile gambling services was around USD 200 million - vs. USD 10.1 billion for music services.

I always took the 'girls' referred to in the joke about 3G to be the kind of girls prepared to make their living through the provision of adult content. This segment is, of course, not to everyone's taste but I hear that the wider adult entertainment business looks set to be quite recession-proof. While mobile content value chain participants do make money in this space, writers of reports on mobile VAS seem to struggle to provide exact revenue figures and forecasts. This is because adult content revenues seem to be split by format (video, wallpapers etc.) and amalgamated into other categories. I assume this is due to a keenness for big brands not to be too closely associated with something that many customers will always see as morally dubious - while at the same time making money from it. I daresay significant sums change hands, but it seems a little bit tricky to know how much.

It's not something I've studied closely, but I've always assumed that the added value in specifically mobile content lies in... er... mobility, i.e. that the content is deliverable anywhere, anytime to the user's eyeball. This advantage around immediacy and availability was, I thought, why users would tolerate the limitations of the mobile phone form factor, i.e. a very small screen and, until fairly recently, annoyingly slow connection speeds. My own mobile content use is pretty much limited to catching up with real time football (soccer) scores when I am not near a PC or TV. While I am perfectly happy to do that in a public place such as on a train or in a cafe, I can't help noticing that people near me sometimes like to have a crafty glance at the screen to see what I'm up to - much as commuters peek at one another's newspapers. Were I in the market for adult content, I think I'd be a bit concerned about getting caught in flagrante by some curious member of the public. This seems like an inhibitor to revenue growth to me, but maybe I'm unusually squeamish or self-conscious.

It seems fair to assume that the kinds of mobile content likely to gain traction vary across world regions, in line with factors such as disposable income and cultural norms. With reference to the latter, gambling and adult content, particularly, are never going to fly in territories where they are prohibited by law. Even where that is not the case, the mobile VAS space is bound to look a little different from country to country.

The vast, growing Indian market is an interesting example. On a visit to Mumbai in 2007 I was told that the mobile content industry there is all about ABC - astrology, Bollywood and cricket: a trilogy of national obsessions. A company which seems to have taken this on board is Nokia, which started to get more deeply involved in the Indian market early last year by customising its Ovi-branded offering in line with these obsessions.

The international potential of Bollywood is being stifled by "the hefty upfront fees expected by local license holders and the questionable origin of much of the content", according to Informa's Ronan Shields, writing in Mobile Media late last year. Shields notes that "many players in the mobile industry are eager to export this content to the massive number of South Asians living in Africa, the Middle East, North America and Western Europe and offer it on phones in the form of wallpapers, ring tones and video clips." The article contends that the development of a truly international market for the content is being hampered by a handful of India-based licence holders that "are often loath to loosen their grip". According to Shields, this handful includes one particularly powerful player: "digital-content giant Hungama alone holds licenses for 70% of all Bollywood content, according to sources."

In terms of services which sell well within India, a good chunk of the action seems to be in ringback tones - and more revenue potential from this kind of product might lie in other emerging markets. Mindful of this, Vodafone has, according to a recent Cellular News story, signed a deal with India's OnMobile to offer ringback tones across a number of territories. ­"Currently," states the article, "millions of Vodafone Essar customers in India use OnMobile's ring back tone service, which will be rolled out across Vodafone’s other emerging markets from the Spring."

Another sort of service tipped by some to do well in emerging markets is mobile social networking. A Mobile Media article written in Q2 of last year, for example, says that "even as cellcos in developed markets struggle to make money from such services," their counterparts in developing countries are "desperate" for a piece of the action.

In January, while still working with Informa Telecoms & Media, I was invited to make a presentation at a Mobile Monday Istanbul meeting. Offered a few choices of themes on which I felt I could speak, the organiser chose mobile social networking. Drawing on a related Informa report, I shared the view that vastly lower levels of PC and fixed broadband penetration might make specifically mobile networking services grow well in emerging markets. Had I spotted the Mobile Media article before heading for Turkey, I might have added the point made there that while MNOs in the developed world are "fearful of introducing advertising" (the business model upon which social networks depend), "the low profit margins for mobile data services in emerging markets mean that cellcos there are more open to the idea of supplementing their earnings with other sources of revenue, such as advertising." David Dew, CTO of messaging-software company Critical Path, which is branching out into social networking, is quoted as saying that cellcos in price-sensitive emerging markets are less wary of the perceived intrusiveness of mobile advertising, since users there welcome the opportunity to receive discounts and other special offers from brands.

Ringback tones and social networking as hot tips for mobile VAS in emerging markets, then. Is there, however, a good level of solvent demand? In the Cellular News article, a Vodafone spokesman is quoted as saying that ringback tones are an "affordable" way of personalising a mobile device - but in the context of emering markets, what does "affordable" really mean?

Writing in Mobile Media earlier this year, Informa's Guillermo Escofet notes that in relation to the average user's spending power, India has the least affordable mobile content of sixteeen countries surveyed. In the case of mobile games, writes Escofet, "although India is where the cheapest mobile games can be bought on-portal, at US$1.03 each, it is also where they are most expensive in relation to per capita income – even when weighed against the US$9.64 charged by Vodafone Germany, at the other end of the spectrum."

"With a mobile game in India costing most of what the average Indian earns in a day", asserts Escofet, "it could be argued that the market for such products is largely confined to the country's middle- and upper-class minority. The same could be said for other emerging markets."

Perhaps with this in mind, companies such as Nokia have dedicated part of their efforts to the development of services which offer less affluent subscribers much more practical benefits. A Mobile Handset Analyst article written in November describes the Finnish handset vendor's unveiled introduction of seven low-cost handsets equipped with features developed for users in rural communities, "in keeping with its new business model of bundling services with the appropriate devices." According to the article, this has been driven by the company's desire not to compete for a greater share of emerging-market sales "by lowering prices, as Samsung and ZTE have done."

The competition for emerging markets is heating up, contends the article "because the already long handset-replacement cycles in developed markets are being extended by the economic crisis." In this context, Nokia, states the article, "is eager to identify the software and services that will provide it with new revenue streams and protect its share in certain markets." An unnamed Nokia spokesperson is quoted as saying that the company's Mail on Ovi service will give "millions of users the possibility to create their first Internet identity and communicate in new ways." Global Crown Capital analyst Tero Kuittinen is quoted as saying it will serve as "a firewall aimed at preventing BlackBerry from migrating into low-end business and emerging markets.

Despite the global economic downturn, mobile content/VAS in emerging markets seem to present operators, handset vendors and others with some interesting opportunities. I'd be interested to know which of entertainment services and more practical applications is the hotter tip.


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