
Posts Tagged ‘carriers’
Nielson: Factors for Choosing a Wireless Carrier
December 1st, 2009SAI: Mobile Data Revenue Per Month, Per Subscriber by Operator
November 23rd, 2009Bernstein: Bandwidth Crunch
November 23rd, 2009From Techliberation/Bernstein::
Today, the average voice-only customer consumes something like 50 megabytes of data every month. For that, they pay about $40, or about $0.80 per megabyte. That’s 70% of wireless industry revenues. Text messaging generates another $10 per month for a minuscule amount of data (in fact, arguably no throughput at all, since text messaging travels in a signaling band rather than in the carrier band itself). Let’s call it $1,000 per megabyte. That’s another 15% of industry revenues. On a blended basis, then, that’s $1.00 per megabyte for 85% of industry revenues.
And then there’s the iPhone. By some estimates, the average iPhone user consumes as much as 800 megabytes per month. Take out their 50 Mb for voice and you’re looking at 750 Mb of data… for an additional $30. For the mathematically challenged, that’s a princely sum of… wait for it… four cents per megabyte. Worse, we noted that the FCC’s wireless net neutrality policies posed the risk of “bandwidth arbitrage,” where low bandwidth services (at $1.00 per megabyte) would be replaced with free or almost free applications that ride on $0.04 per megabyte data plans, and where carriers’ hands would be tied to prevent it. Taking a business that is currently getting $1.00 per megabyte down to just $0.04 per megabyte is, well, hard.
From CTIA:
- According to the FCC’s most recent data, there were over 59 million mobile wireless high speed lines.
- In addition, mobile wireless broadband growth continues to outpace every other broadband platform, with net additions between December 2007 and June 2008 greater than those of DSL and cable modem combined.
- Mobile data and Internet traffic will increase 66 times between 2008 and 2013;
- By 2010, “mobile broadband penetration will surpass fixed penetration globally.”
- The simple task of watching a YouTube video consumes 100 times the bandwidth of a voice call.
- The mobile data traffic footprint of a single mobile subscriber in 2015 could very well be 450 times what it was in 2005.
From: http://techliberation.com/2009/11/21/the-wireless-bandwidth-crunch-where-will-we-find-more-spectrum/
Admob: Mobile Metrics for October 2009
November 23rd, 2009NYT: Cell Phone Pricing
November 17th, 2009- When Apple and AT&T started offering the iPhone for $199, plus $30 a month for Internet access, sales shot up, even though the previous deal — $399 for the phone and $20 a month — cost less over a two-year contract.
- Phone companies have doubled the price for text messages, to 20 cents each, in recent years, even though they cost almost nothing to deliver.
- When companies introduce certain discounts — like Sprint’s recent offer of free calling to any mobile number — the effect is that customers often switch to more expensive plans.
- On average, we effectively spend about 5 cents per minute of talk time and about a penny a text message, lower than anywhere else in the developed world.
- In the first half of this year, the average wireless customer sent 518 texts a month and made 220 phone calls, according to CTIA figures.
From: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/15/business/15price.html?_r=2
Informa: Mobile Data Growth Projection
November 14th, 2009Mobile analysts from Informa have predicted that mobile online usage is set to grow to 25 times its present levels by 2012.
While this sounds like great news for mobile operators, the revenues are not likely to grow at the same rate. In fact, it is expected that mobile revenues may only double in the same time period.
From: http://www.accuracast.com/search-daily-news/mobile-7471/online-mobile-traffic-jam-predicted/
In-Stat: Hotspot Usage Up 47% in 2009
November 14th, 2009In-Stat estimates that hotspot usage will increase by 47% in 2009, bringing total worldwide connects to 1.2 billion.
Recent research by In-Stat found the following:
- Total worldwide hotspot venues will reach 245,000 locations in 2009.
- AT&T is on course to experience 500% usage growth for 2008 vs. 2009.
- Asia-Pacific will experience the greatest growth in venue deployments over the next few years, largely driven by large-scale deployments in China.
- Survey results suggest that security concerns by individuals, not corporate users, are limiting hotspot usage.
From: http://www.dailywireless.org/2009/11/13/hotspot-usage-up-47-in-2009/
In-Stat: Wi-Fi Exploding
November 12th, 2009From: http://www.in-stat.com/press.asp?ID=2662&sku=IN0904521WBB
- In-Stat estimates that hotspot usage will increase in 2009 by 47%, bringing total worldwide connects to 1.2 billion.
- Total worldwide hotspot venues will reach 245,000 locations in 2009.
- AT&T is on course to experience 500% usage growth for 2008 vs. 2009.
- Asia-Pacific will experience the greatest growth in venue deployments over the next few years, largely driven by large-scale deployments in China.
- Survey results suggest that security concerns by individuals, not corporate users, are limiting hotspot usage
Chetan Sharma: U.S. Wireless Market Share
November 11th, 2009FCC: The Decline of the Land Line
November 11th, 2009From: http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2009/1116/technology-mobile-4G-telephony-metropcs.html


- Providing unlimited calls now costs the company [MetroPCS] $16.82 per customer per month, down from $18.23 a year ago.











