Missed millions as mobile operators ignore their customers
Written by Robin Hague
Staggering revenue failures as mobile consumers plead for more deals
The mobile industry converged on Barcelona for Mobile World Congress, which is increasing in significance year-on-year even as new research shows mobile operators are missing major revenue opportunities and there’s a growing gulf between what consumers want and what they’re being offered.
Among other milestones, Mobile World Congress saw the launch of the Garmin-Asus nüvifone A50, a touchscreen Android smartphone with location technologies and the obligatory apps; Dolby Laboratories’ next generation technology that brings discrete 5.1 multichannel audio to mobile handsets and of course Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 series.
This last brings Xbox LIVE games and Microsoft’s Zune music and video platform to mobile devices; Microsoft says its partners have already started building the handsets, which are due in stores by Christmas. There was precious little detail about this though and it will take something very special to outgun Apple’s imposing iPhone and its galaxy of apps.
Another significant development sees Nokia and Intel unify their Maemo and Moblin Linux-based platforms to create MeeGo, a system that will run on multiple devices, including smartphones and tablets.
There’s also been some impressive work out there in upping the mobile television ante and there was plenty on offer to silence mobile TV cynics, who, including FreebandTVNews, have been warning of a dearth of the kind of strong content that’s needed to propel mobile television to a commercially sustainable level.
While there’s not much in the way of new content to shout about, there certainly are plenty of encouraging technologies that promise to connect more devices and more users to existing television and other video content, such as conventional TV and movies.
The new LTE standard is at the heart of much of this development, enabling much higher transmission rates, ideal for mobile media applications. In Berlin Fraunhofer researchers have developed a SVC over LTE coding process that will offer HD films on mobiles and netbooks, delivered without interruption and disconnection.
Nagravision demonstrated its Media MOBILE products, which also promise secure streaming of mobile TV and mobile VOD over 3/4G and WiFi networks.
Another exhibitor at Mobile World Congress was Convergys, which published extremely interesting research showing mobile consumers, in the UK at least, are willing to spend more on their mobile services, if only their mobile service providers offered them something worthwhile.
Convergys surveyed 500 mobile users in January 2010, finding nearly two thirds (61 percent) would “spend more with their mobile service provider if mobile operators gave them the flexibility to choose the options that fit their needs”.
According to Convergys, the results show that consumers are “increasingly willing to bundle broadband, TV and even games consoles with their mobile service, as long as the provider can offer the flexible service and choice that consumers demand”.
Nearly half (49 percent) said their operators made no attempt to offer them any promotions or bundles, even though a resounding 72 percent claimed they would like to buy new bundles.
In other words, mobile operators are missing an important opportunity to drive more revenue and increase ARPU, simply by failing to provide much more flexible and clever aggregations of their offers.
Bob Lento, Conversys’ President of Information Management noted: “ … it is clear that subscribers want their mobile providers to advise them on which services they should buy and which combination of services will give them the best value for money. This is a great win-win for the mobile operator, as each contact with the customer provides an opportunity to increase user revenues.”
“However, it concerns me that so many people don’t receive offers from their mobile operators, even though they would like to. This is a missed opportunity. They [mobile operators] need to utilize convergent billing solutions, customer service channels and real-time intelligence strategically, so that each customer receives relevant offers and the services he or she needs.”
It would appear no UK mobile provider has mastered this ability to offer bespoke packages to its customers and as a result, is missing out on revenue from millions of customers who are ready and willing to buy new packages, if only they were offered them.
For example, who is offering short-term mobile TV subscription deals for sports events such as this month’s Winter Olympics, Wimbledon tennis or the 2010 World Cup? No-one.
Convergys is a global relationship management specialist, so Mr Lento’s melancholy at mobile providers’ customer relationship failures is no doubt sincere. Furthermore, this is the sort of customer message that should be getting some Boardroom action, but is too often ignored.
It’s a particular problem for providers hoping to push forward mobile television. Assuming the technology is there to put content on phones, the operators will have to do better in terms of fitting their offers to the demands of the consumer. Again, Winter Olympics, Wimbledon and the World Cup. What about the fashion audience, mostly female, which might be delighted to be offered content from the big seasonal fashion shows?
According to the Convergys research, the appetite and the money is there, even in a recession.
Contrast the woeful adding-value performance of UK mobile operators with research from Accenture’s 2010 Consumer Electronics Products and Services Usage Report, based on a survey of 16,000 consumers in four mature markets – the US, Germany, France and Japan, and four emerging countries – China, India, Malaysia and Singapore.
According to this research the consumers in emerging markets are twice as likely as their developed-market counterparts to buy and use consumer technology in the next year.
They are over two and a half-times more likely to buy a smartphone and twice as likely to have played video games on handheld devices. They use mobile devices for social networking much more than people in developed markets.
Furthermore, and relating directly back to the Convergys research, they use all of a product’s functionality more often than consumers in mature markets.
Why the difference? For one thing, mobile service providers in new markets have much better, more flexible and consumer-friendly offerings than their mature market counterparts in Europe and the US. They’re not held back by old business models, which serve as the inflexible, consumer-unfriendly blocks to new revenue development.
So, there’s the lesson. There’s plenty of revenue out their for the taking, as long as mobile operators tailor their products and services for the consumer, rather than demand the consumer bends over backwards to fit the operators’ plans.
- 25/02/2010 14:54 - Less anonymous and probably less open, but at least it won’t make us stupid
- 25/02/2010 14:47 - Brave new world of interactive advertising will save us all
- 25/02/2010 14:43 - Walmart set to stick pins in established VOD players
- 25/02/2010 11:18 - Taxed enough already: UK ultra fast broadband tax slammed by MPs
- 18/02/2010 15:01 - We’ve seen/saw this somewhere before
- 18/02/2010 14:26 - One platform to rule them all?
- 18/02/2010 14:22 - US broadband adoption up, but digital divide still all too obvious
- 11/02/2010 14:55 - Disney outperforms analyst predictions in Q1
- 11/02/2010 14:50 - Mobile data traffic set to become exa-citing
- 11/02/2010 14:46 - Product placement coming to a television near you
Latest Press Releases
STMicroelectronics reaches ultimate dimension in TV with new high-performance digital TV system-on-chip and video-enhancement IC for 3DTV and 3D graphics
Monday, 06 September 2010 08:54
STMicroelectronics, one of the world's largest semiconductor companies and a leader in chips for set-top boxes and digital TVs, has announced a new TV System-on-Chip (SoC) offering the first-of-its-kind integrated 3D graphics accelerator (OpenGL-ES 2.0 and OpenVG 1.1 compliant), enabling next-generation Internet TV services, exciting user interfaces and casual gaming.Plex to enable next generation of NetCast connected TVs
Monday, 06 September 2010 08:39
Plex (www.plexapp.com), a leading software provider of an open platform for media management and consumption, has announced the availability of the newest version of its service.Mobile advertisers forecast to spend $1.8 billion on location-based campaigns in 2015
Monday, 06 September 2010 08:13
Location-based advertising is still in its infancy, but according to a new study from ABI Research, businesses are primed to spend $1.8 billion on it in 2015 as part of their overall mobile marketing budgets.New ways of 3D interactivity and control at IBC
Monday, 06 September 2010 08:03
The use of interactive 3D visualisations is growing each year. Real estate property developers, governments and even industrial companies are reaping the benefits of these multifunctional visual presentations. World-leading 3D company Zero Creative is demonstrating its new solutions at IBC this year.Icareus delivers interactive OTT SeniorTV service platform
Monday, 06 September 2010 07:55
Icareus has developed a new kind of Interactive OTT TV service targeted to Senior citizens in Finland. The first customer of the OTT platform and SeniorTV service is a Finnish company called EcoTec that launches it under its own brand SmartCare TV.Sky reaches high definition landmarks
Friday, 03 September 2010 06:29
LIVING HD has launched on Sky, meaning that Sky has now confirmed all 50 High Definition (HD) channels that will be available by Christmas, in line with its promise to customers.Pacific Television Center boosts London capabilities with new HD gear
Friday, 03 September 2010 06:25
Pacific Television Center, a Los Angeles-based independent global transmission and production company, is following up the recent expansion of its bandwidth from OC3 (155mb) to OC48 (2480mb) between London and Los Angeles with key equipment upgrades to its London facility.Latens launch ECO UI5 on Entone hybrid devices at IBC 2010
Friday, 03 September 2010 06:18
Latens, the leading provider of software security solutions for Pay-TV across all networks and Entone (IBC stand no. IP-503), the market leader in Hybrid TV and Connected Home solutions, have announced the launch of ECO UI5 middleware and its successful integration with Entone's Amulet IPTV Receiver and Janus Media Hub.justAd.TV takes advertising beyond the 30 second spot
Friday, 03 September 2010 06:13
justAd.TV is making its debut at IBC in Amsterdam, addressing the growing industry need to enable more effective advertising in the increasingly on-demand TV world.For more videos from this exclusive RTVN/FBTVN Roundtable, visit our TV Gaming & Gambling overview page
Most Read
- Television in rude health
- Blu-ray and VOD driving US home entertainment
- Mobisodes, schmobisodes - mobile TV - why watch?
- Missed millions as mobile operators ignore their customers
- Numbers not yet phenomenal, but IPTV is on the up
- Samsung launches first 3D LED TV and gives away some DVDs
- Sky premieres live 3DTV – yawn
- In your face MASH! – Super Bowl XLIV breaks 27 year old TV record
- Health Warning: Watching TV Can Kill You
- Political axe grinding boosts US TV bottom lines





























