carrier

Writing in today’s New York Times, Jenna Wortham reports that:

The ultimate risk for the carriers is becoming “dumb pipes,” providing only the data connection and not selling any more sophisticated communications services themselves.

It’s not just a risk.  It’s reality.  Carriers are moving toward becoming dumb pipes, and there’s little that can be done about it, as consumers are demanding a volume of applications that carriers themselves can’t deliver.  Moreover, the carriers have ceded the tollbooth role to entities like Apple, who have a better understanding of both developers needs and consumer behaviour. 

It didn’t need to be this way. Long before Apple introduced its game changing App Store, voices in the next generation telecom community were asking for better developer support, developer programs, and common standards for building and selling mobile applications.  As Andy Abramson writes:

…just about every mobile operator gets offered the opportunity to have the new services first. Nary a business development professional doesn’t have access to their counterparts at all their major mobile telcos via their LinkedIn directory or from first person relationships so the fear of the rising tide of upstarts isn’t paranoia. It’s reality. Apple, Google, Microsoft, the Yahoo and AOL of old all had it figured out, and only IP communications is the future and they built their businesses that way.

Andy suggests that carriers get back into the services and applications game – sell the pipe at a loss, and charge for the applications.  But is it still true that mobile operators get offered the opportunity to have new services first?  Or is that a relic of yesterday, also?  I think it’s the latter.

Carrier product groups need to focus on the core data services that people buy today – internet, voice, television, security – and figure out how to be the best at delivering those bread and butter products to the customer.  In business it’s managed PBX, conferencing and collaboration, and call center.  Carriers need to deliver these core services better than the Valley, and at a better price than the Valley, in order to remain relevant.

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EComm: Time to change the station

by alec on October 29, 2009

I’ve spent a little over a day at eComm meeting people, listening to the conversations and presentations happening and reflecting on what I’ve heard.

During the panel yesterday afternoon, I noted that I spend less on voice, data, and text messaging each month than I ever have, but more money on communications over all. What has made up the difference?  Music, and applications.  The carrier’s share of wallet is in decline, although I spend as much or more money than before. When I asked whether the panelists were worried by this trend, there was no good answer.

It’s time to start a new dialog in the emerging communications community.  It’s time to abandon conversations about whether carriers will or won’t survive.  They will. Yes, margins are under pressure, but networks need to be managed and operated.  Better the carrier manage the network than, perhaps, a government entity. 

Perhaps carriers will be the pipes companies, and as many people observed yesterday at eComm, that’s a great business.  Perhaps they will be applications developers, although I think that’s highly unlikely.  The vertically integrated model this implies necessarily constrains innovation.  Perhaps they will be aggregators of third party applications; several carriers I spoke with yesterday expressed support for this viewpoint.

It is, however, time to stop talking about the death of the incumbent. Let’s instead change the conversation – acknowledge that the carrier network is a platform, and that the carrier has a need for an application community, and begin the dialog between network partners and developers about the ability for those operators to help us get to market.

While we’re at it, let’s also change the channel, dial away from the conversation about “mash-ups”, and focus instead on user needs, the user experience of communications, and the economics associated with that user experience.  By focusing on the business value of the services being developed instead of the technology platform, we can all become better able to reach the customer with game changing new communications services.

Make sense?  It’s an idea who’s time has come.

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JAJAH on iPod Touch: a novel strategy.

February 6, 2009

JAJAH’s announcement yesterday that they are bringing VoIP calling to the iPod Touch had an interesting twist to it.  The application will be offered to third parties who can brand it, and offer it as an additional service to their customers.  Imagine, for example, and AT&T branded softphone client for iPod Touch.  It’s a novel [...]

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Phoneboy dumps on EQO’s new strategy

September 15, 2008

Phoneboy dishes on EQO this morning in a piece titled Why I Think EQO is Doomed.  I agree with him that the hardest mobile strategy of all involves convincing carriers to put your software on their deck.  Carriers move slowly, and view the deck as a distribution platform that the software developer should be paying [...]

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Squawk Box May 29 – Guest Trevor Healy

May 29, 2008

Today we talked with JAJAH CEO Trevor Healy, about the JAJAH Q2 Telecommunications Industry Index. This is a piece of research conducted by JAJAH which reveals industry trends that I think a lot of people on the telephone call had been expecting for some time.

The data was collected from 700 interviews conducted at CTIA, and then a series of C-Level carrier interviewers.

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Squawk Box May 21

May 22, 2008

On the call, we talked about Microsoft’s new “pay the user” search model. Consensus? A desparate bid. None of us felt that we would change our behaviour as a result of micro-payments.

And what about the rash of lawsuits being launched in the US by consumers against wireless providers? Finally fed up with byzantine contracts, billing plans, and high handed behaviour by the carriers, consumers are fighting back. No surprise to any of us. We’ve all experienced a carrier “sting” after tripping some unknown carve-out in the terms of service.

And finally we talked about Warner Records VP Technology Ethan Kaplan’s comments at Mesh. Unfortunately, a glitch in the conference recording meant that I lost most of the tail end of that conversation.

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