Last year I had the pleasure of visiting Nairobi, Kenya for the first time, building meetings around the excellent East Africa Com conference and exhibition.
This year, given that my day-to-day commercial activity now does not give me much exposure to Africa, I will not attending. Were I still more active in Africa, however, I would certainly want to be there - and I would encourage anyone who does business with the telecoms operators of the East Africa region to head for the Kenyatta International Conference Centre on 27th-28th April.
This year's event will be graced by the presence of the Hon. Samuel Poghisio, the host country's Minister for Information & Communications and by Charles J.K Njoroge, Director General of telecoms regulatory agency the CCK (Communications Commission of Kenya). I don't recall the Kenyan Government and authorities being represented at such a high level at the 2009 event, so the organisers are to be congratulated for the upgrade.
Sponsors and exhibitors will doubtless also be impressed by the number of operator CEOs to whom they will have access during the two days of discussions. Of these, two of the biggest hitters are Michael Ghossein, CEO of France Telecom-controlled Telkom Kenya, the country's incumbent fixed-line operator and Michael Joseph, the long-standing CEO of Kenya's dominant (78.8% market share, according to WCIS) mobile operator Safaricom.
This may be one of the final conferences appearances for the latter, Joseph having announced his impending retirement. He joined the Kenyan operator in mid-2000, when Vodafone first invested in the company. Since then, he has guided the company from a subscriber base of fewer than 20,000 to over 15 million today. Along the way, Safaricom has become renowned for its M-Pesa mobile money transfer service, which has brought the advantages of financial services to very large numbers of Kenya's largely 'unbanked' population. Safaricom also attracted praise this week from Alexander Grouet of Mira Networks, a leading provider of connectivity and billing tools between business and mobile networks in Africa.
Grouet asks: "Would you plan a trip to a foreign destination if you didn't know what the place looked like, what there was to see, how much a hotel room cost and what local transportation was available?" Having concluded that most readers would not, Grouet then invites us to imagine that what we’re talking about is not your vacation, but your business. "Well that’s pretty much what it’s like for most content providers wanting to penetrate the SSA [sub-Saharan Africa] market", he continues. "Despite the hype, the market metrics WASPs crucially need in order to make the next step, such as data ARPU or WAP traffic, are virtually inaccessible. Even traditional market data resellers don't offer it, as optimistically named Africa VAS reports almost exclusively include blended indicators rather than content-specific ones." I don't recall if this is a fair accusation to direct towards the good folks at the reports business of Informa Telecoms & Media, the organisers of East Africa Com.
Even if it is, Grouet suggests that the fault for the scarcity of these vital data lies with operators. "Out of the 26 operators in the 5 countries I worked on last year (Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, Senegal and Cote d'Ivoire) only 2 to my knowledge," he writes, "publicly released their data ARPU." The two cellcos in Mr. Grouet's good books are Safaricom and Starcomms, a Nigerian CDMA carrier.
"The most likely explanation for this", ventures Grouet, "is that the data figures are still so low on most networks that operators simply don’t want to release them at this stage." According to Grouet, even Safaricom's data ARPU, including M-Pesa, stands at just USD 1 monthly, while the figure for Starcomms, including EV-DO dongles, is just under USD 2 per month. "But at least, we know where they stand, and we will be able to measure their progress when they next update those figures," Grouet continues.
Grouet hopes that other African operators will break their silence on the topic of data revenues, not least because that unwillingness to share data "only has the counter-productive effect of making it harder for international content companies, who precisely could help operators boost their data traffic, penetrate their markets."
Let's see how many cellco attending East Africa Com agree with these sentiments. Were I to attend this year, I would probably like to pursue that line of questioning, not least because I have received marketing emails from Informa which suggests that the region's operators are somewhat focused on data services.
One speaker for whom it could be challenging to stay 'on message'? Bashar Arafeh, the COO of the East Africa Region for MEA mobile group Zain.
This might arise as a result of delegates' curiosity about the future of Zain's African operations. Subject to takeover speculation for many months now (see DTW articles passim.), these assets could well be the property of giant Indian cellco Bharti Airtel before too long. The most recent developments in this long-running saga may soon prompt a revival of the popular mini-series (well, it generated more hits than usual) which appeared here on-and-off for much of 2009, rejoicing in the clunky title 'Zain Africa Speculation Watch' (and variations thereon).
Other CxOs appearing on stage at next months event include:
- Hans Paulsen, CCO, Uganda Telecom
- Themba Khumalo, CEO, MTN Uganda
- Ali Bin Jarsh, CEO, Canartel, Sudan
- Julius Kinyua, CEO, Flashcom, Kenya
- Geoff Goss, CEO, Celsys, Zimbabwe
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