Deutsche Telekom spur as US businesses add users (Europe)
Deutsche Telekom AG has revealed its third Quarter results. The company recorded a 7.9% t increase in earnings as revenues from mobile data services climbed and the company made progress in cutting costs.
The company reported a net profit of nearly US$1.45 billion for the JulySeptember period compared to last year. Total revenue declined 4.1%. Telekom however claimed that its mobile data revenue rose 26% to US$4.49 billion.
According to Deutsche Telekom, it also has made progress in costcutting efforts, and is on course to exceed its original aim of saving US$2.80 billion this year. The company reaffirmed its fullyear earnings targets.
According to CEO, Rene Obermann, the company is delivering what it has promised. In terms of both finance and operations, the group’s development has completely fulfilled company’s expectations.
As per the company, its U.S. cell phone unit TMobile USA’s customer base grew by 137,000 in the course of the quarter to 33.8 million, following a decline in the previous threemonth period, thanks to a rise in pre-paid customers. The unit’s average data revenue per customer was up nearly a quarter as the number of smart phones on its U.S. network swelled.
For the year’s first nine months, net earnings rose to US$3.20 billion from 499.96 million. Revenue declined 3% to US$65.92 billion.
As per Deutsche Telekom, net profit was up nearly 22% in the third quarter at euro1.53 billion, while quarterly revenues edged up 1% to US21.90 billion. Adjusted pretax earnings declined due largely to higher customer acquisition costs in the United States and the Netherlands.
SFR to launch unlimited quad-play offer (France)
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: An unlimited quad-play offer will be launched by French mobile and broadband operator SFR in June. The move follows the expansion of Ideo range with Ideo 24/24, costing EUR 99.80 for broadband, TV, voice and mobile by Bouygues Telecom a month back. Illimythics Absolu of SFR will sell for EUR 110.
Usual caps of other ‘unlimited’ offers on the market, 500 MB or 1 GB per month will be applied to the mobile internet component. Customers will also be allowed by the SFR to buy the mobile data service independently from mobile voice, unlike the Bouygues offer.
Quad-play subscription of SFR could also be limited to the first 100,000 customers. Quad-play has been realigned by the French market ahead of the entry into the mobile arena of triple-play operator Free at the start of 2012.
Deutsche Telekom introduces new growth plan (Germany)
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: A number of new financial targets and focus areas for accelerating growth have been introduced by Deutsche Telekom on its investor day. The focus has been put on driving growth from broadband, TV and IT services to offset the steady decline in fixed and mobile voice revenues. Five growth areas have been outlined by the German operator in particular.
The first focus area of the company is mobile data services where an increase in the revenues from just under EUR 4 billion in 2009 to around EUR 6 billion in 2012 and approximately EUR 10 billion in 2015 has been targeted. The roll-out of HSPA+ in Germany will support the move. LTE will also help if the operator wins frequencies in the upcoming auction. HSPA+ should be available to around 180 million people by the end of this year at T- Mobile USA while the number of 3G smartphones is expected to double to 8 million.
60 percent reduction in the gap in data ARPU with the rivals by 2012 will also be expected by the US operator. Besides, it is also expected that over half the handsets on its network should be smartphones by the same date.
Russian telco MTS eyes Indian telecom market
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: India’s hunger for real-time information and infotainment has attracted the attention of Russian telco MTS which is shifting from mobile voice to mobile data services. It has been expected by the company that the markets will expand beyond just corporate users for data to include small to medium enterprises (SMEs), students and small households.
MTS biggest rivals in India are the companies like Reliance, Bharti Airtel, Vodafone and Tata Docomo providing postpaid services to its customers. According to Vsevolod Rozanov, president and CEO of Sistema Shyam Teleservices, it difficult to win existing customers of other operators but the company would fight the battle for new customers.
Bouygues Telecom selects ip.access for picocells
www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Ip.access has been chosen by French fixed and mobile operator Bouygues Telecom to supply 2G picocells to Bouygues’ enterprise customers in France. The nanoGSM system of ip.access will provide extra 2G and EDGE cellular coverage to enterprise customers exactly where it is needed such as indoors and in areas of high network traffic.
By installing ip.access nanoGSM picocell, Bouygues Telecom business customers will be able to use their mobile devices for high-quality voice and mobile data services indoors without any lapse in service performance.
According to Sebastian Racu, in charge of the picocell program at Bouygues Telecom, the ip.access nanoGSM system met all the requirements when the company assessed the various solutions on the market and nanoGSM’s reliability, together with its rapid and seamless integration with the existing core network assets was confirmed during the trial period and the first site deployments.
Mobile industry in Africa satisfying key consumer needs
While Western mobile companies scratch their heads about how to replicate or adapt the widespread adoption of mobile data services in Japan and Korea, Africa provides another example of how people respond to a great need not new technology. Currently WIZZIT Bank is providing a mobile banking initiative to fulfil the needs of the 14 million South Africans who have no proper access to banks or other financial services. Analysts estimate that up to 60% of the 22 million mobile phone owners would be without bank accounts or easy access to money transfer systems and that WIZZIT would provide these mobile consumers with a significant benefit in becoming economic citizens.
WIZZIT is essentially a new bank that provides its customers with the ability to carry out transfers, pay standing orders, top-up mobile phone credit and take out money. Security is via the usual four digit codes used by other banks and they have relationships with other banking chains allowing you to still do things the usual way. They already have what they call a “cult following” and have set up accounts for farmers to allow the mto send money home or to other family members much more easily.
This kind of banking operation has been made illegal in England and, looking at some of the details more carefully, it is clear that WIZZIT is, if anything, not a business model to follow in all its details, even if it suits the needs of its current target market. First of all, the bank carries out no credit checks, something obviously impossible for some of the citizens who have no credit to check. It takes only 2 minutes to set up an account and the service is also available to schoolchildren, which makes it universal and, to Western minds, inherently suspicious. Uniquely, WIZZIT has a policy to only employ unemployed people and uses them as salespeople to demonstrate and spread their knowledge of the service. You’d be hard pressed to find many people who could have faith in a bank in England or America who followed a similar policy.
It remains to be seen if this service can remain popular and secure but it fundamentally fulfils a glaring need for its customers. It is also just another example of how Africans in general are some of the highest users of WAP technology to access the internet, in particular using their mobiles to access world news sites such as the BBC. Poor fixed-line networks and the high cost of computers have made internet access far more more appealing on mobiles. Fast adoption of 3G Networks and the effciency of cellular network companies as opposed to the government-run telecoms companies have made WAP an internet standard in Nigeria and South Africa.
Again this model is unrepeatable in its details, given the high development and penetration of broadband in Western companies, whcih effectively raised the bar for mobile phones and cannibalised the potenital market. What is noticeable is that in both cases mobile phones have fulfilled needs otherwise uncatered for or under-provided through other media (Banking and News-provision respectively). It is this aspect of recognising useful gaps in the market that needs to be worked on by operators in developed economies, where data aservices are more likely to enhance or improve existing habits and behaviours rather than create new needs.
Once networks provide this kind of longed for service to their customers they are likely to see increased goodwill and loyalty that has previously eluded them. As an unlikely example of this relationship developing, witness the woman in Sierra Leone who named her new-born son “Celtel” after the local mobile operator that allowed her to contact a midwife in time to deliver her baby. Admittedly, this is unlikely to happen in Europe (“We’ve decided to call her “Orange”!”) but at least we can get to the stage where we don’t resent or ignore them.
Source- http://www.w2forum.com
Technorati : Africa, Cellular, Wireless
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