Broad Soft

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 30 September 2013

Competing with "Free" Remains an Issue

Posted on 05:27 by Unknown
How to ”compete with free" is a major question in the Internet era, where many goods--especially of the non-tangible sort-- can be replicated and produced with low marginal cost.


For communications service providers, the issue has arisen mostly in conjunction with low cost or “free” services such as Skype or WhatsApp that supply voice or messaging services “at no incremental cost,” once a user has suitable devices and Internet access.


That has lead many to say the economics of abundance makes new revenue models possible. Some would say “abundance,” a relative term, makes new models essential, in at least some cases. But the implications are startling.


The basic idea is that transistors, storage, computation and bandwidth are so abundant the cost of their use is a price very close to zero. The corollary is that businesses based on the use of such resources can be viewed differently from businesses where inputs are expensive.


In other words, businesses based on abundant inputs can "waste" those resources. In a pre-broadband, pre-Internet-Protocol era, unicasting (content on demand) would have been nearly impossible.


With fast broadband access and abundance of terminals (smart phones, tablets, PCs, game consoles, specialized decoders and TVs), unicasting is feasible.


With that infrastructure in place, real-time cloud storage and computing is possible to a degree that would have been impossible just a decade ago. Likewise, streamed Netflix content, Pandora and Google Drive (cloud based productivity apps and storage) would not have been a reasonable experience for most people.


The degree of “abundance” in various parts of the Internet ecosystem is open to question, but all theories of abundance require a “not scarce” approach to value and retail pricing. That doesn’t necessarily mean “no cost,” only costs so low they are not a barrier to use of a product.


In some ways, a shift to 1-Gbps fixed network Internet access services, priced at $70 a month, is one example how “abundance” can drive even deployment of capital-intensive Internet access services.


ISPs would not claim it is “nearly free” to build and operate such networks, nor would most consumers consider $70 a month “almost free.” By historical measures, a symmetrical gigabit consumer connection costing just $70 a month is quite “abundant.”


Such logic defies conventional  sense, and certainly conventional economics, which is fundamentally based on assumptions of scarcity. In fact, such retail prices, for those capabilities, virtually require new thinking about additional revenue sources not contingent on charging for actual use of bandwidth.
In part, that explains the intense amount of attention many service providers are paying to machine to machine services, the Internet of Things, mobile payments, connected car and other initiatives.


Those efforts directly reflect the reality that many goods in an Internet era actually seem to defy the logic of scarcity, which tends to underpin retail prices suppliers can command.


That doesn’t necessarily mean a product or experience has “no cost,” only that once created, the marginal cost of distributing one more unit is fairly low. Nor, in truth, do the economics of virtual goods imply there is no scarcity: in fact, “hit” experiences and products still remain scarce.


Still, some talk about the economics of “abundance,” characterizing the business context for some potential products--especially digital goods--as representing a new type of context, where incremental costs are so low that “free or nearly free” is a reasonable price point.


In fact, the “freemium” revenue model, where a base product is usable for no incremental charge, while additional features are available for fee, is precisely an expression of the notion of “abundance” or low incremental marginal distribution costs.


It is true that marginal distribution costs for many digital goods are relatively low, even when initial production costs can be large. A movie or a broadband access network can represent huge amounts of capital investment, but the cost of using a marginal or additional unit can be quite low.


For a movie, marginal distribution cost arguably is lowest when a title is available to be streamed.


For a communications service provider, marginal distribution cost is lowest when enough customer adoption has occurred to recover all sunk costs, but before saturation of network capabilities.


In other words, when a service provider has extra capacity on the network, but already is recovering capital investment costs, the marginal cost of delivering one more phone call, one more text message, one more email or song is quite low.


At about the point where network utilization climbs up to about 90 percent, the economics change, as additional investment costs loom. So sunk costs dominate. Usage-related costs are relatively minimal.


Since nothing is ever truly “free,” the issue is how to construct a revenue and business model around a product that end users can avail themselves of “without incremental charge.”


The answer continues to evolve, but up to this point indirect revenue models, such as advertising, donations, transaction fees and commerce, have provided the revenue model, even when use of a product requires no incremental charge or payment.


Those are difficult revenue models for most communications service providers,in large part because of more than a century of operating as utilities. That experience has shaped both buyer and seller expectations.


As with electrical, natural gas or water services, people are accustomed to buying an admittedly essential service that nevertheless is sells a product (electrons, BTUs or gallons) viewed as a commodity.


So the key, many would argue, is changing the experience of the products sold in ways that add value and differentiate the products. As always for an intangible product such as a “service,” there are tangible elements, but the product itself (“the experience”) is not directly something a buyer can touch and feel.


To be sure, fixed network service providers, though always faced with high sunk costs, might arguably have an advantage in the “bandwidth supply” area that spectrum-using mobile and untethered service providers do not enjoy.


Though the sunk costs are substantial, once a fiber to home network is in place, the incremental cost of activating or enabling bandwidth is relatively low, up to a point.

So, in many ways, “abundant” computing, storage and bandwidth resources create new problems and opportunities for ISPs and communication service providers.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Why Sprint is Certain to Launch a Price War
    SoftBank cut retailer fees 35 percent  to defend its small merchant point of sale service, operated with PayPal, from an attack by rival Squ...
  • If You Use the Internet, You Have Access at Home, Surveys Suggest
    Just about every U.S. adult that uses the Internet has access to the Internet at home, using fixed network access, mobile access or both, ne...
  • Gigabit Connections Will Be Commonplace by 2020, Really
    Predictions always are difficult, under the best of circumstances, because researchers cannot really account for the unexpected, principally...
  • 4 or 3: the Most Important Number in the Mobile Business
    The most important numbers in the global mobile service provider business are "three" and "four." The reason is that nat...
  • LTE a 'Huge Opportunity' in Europe?
    AT&T CEO  Randall Stephenson sees a "huge opportunity for somebody" in Europe to invest in mobile broadband, presumably given ...
  • Mobile Now More than 65% of All U.S. Internet Access Connections
    Of 262 million U.S. broadband access connections, there were almost 65 million fixed and 64 million mobile connections with download speeds ...
  • Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile US Want to Swap Spectrum
    Verizon Wireless and T-Mobile US have asked the U.S. Federal Communications Commission to exchange blocks of spectrum, generally on a one-fo...
  • Will FCC Formally Modify its Historic Cable TV Industry Market Share Rules?
    Something potentially more interesting than smaller Charter Communications buying Time Warner Cable are afoot.  The wild card at the moment ...
  • Is the U.S. Ahead, Behind or at Par, in Terms of Broadband Speed, Price? Answer: Don't Blink
    Whether the United States is ahead, behind or about par in the area of fixed network broadband speeds and prices seems always to be content...
  • U.K. Mobile Operators Face New £244.5 Million in Annual Spectrum Costs
    U.K. mobile service provider costs of doing business are going to rise in 2014, by about £244.5 million, because spectrum fees are rising. O...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (23)
    • ►  January (23)
  • ▼  2013 (476)
    • ►  December (83)
    • ►  November (79)
    • ►  October (127)
    • ▼  September (95)
      • A New Era of Computing and Communications: A Decad...
      • Video Makes "Pricing by Value" Difficult
      • Provo, Utah Residents Get Google Fiber 1-Gbps Serv...
      • Exposing Network Features to Create Revenue is Har...
      • Competing with "Free" Remains an Issue
      • Does Wireless Charging Cause RF Interference?
      • Competing with "Free" Remains an Issue
      • Intel TV Seeking Partners?
      • 89% of U.K. Fixed Connections are "Untethered"
      • Revenue Sluggishness Will Propel Consolidation Wave
      • U.S. 4G Users Consume 36% More Data
      • If You Use the Internet, You Have Access at Home, ...
      • Google's 1998 Look
      • Access Networks Increasingly are All About Video
      • Nearly 70 million U.S households will have Smart T...
      • 4G Nets Will Carry 66% of All Mobile Traffic by 2018
      • Fourth Revenue Wave Will be the Toughest
      • What Drives Mobile Revenue Growth After M2M or Int...
      • Percentage of Portential Video Cord Cutters Less I...
      • AT&T "Open" to European Acquisitions
      • T-Mobile CFO Says Merger with Sprint Could Happen
      • AT&T Believes Economics of Gigabit Access Networks...
      • AT&T Wants to Create Multicast Video Delivery Service
      • 60% of U.S. Mobile Phone Users Access Internet fro...
      • Fixed Broadband Prices Have Dropped 82% Over 5 Years
      • Telefonica to Own Most of Telecom Italia
      • AT&T, Fon Sign Roaming Deal
      • Australia NBN Making Course Correction to Save $56...
      • Rights to Supply TV Series to Support "Binge Viewi...
      • Will Telco Video Services Go Nationwide, as Mobile...
      • How is Home Automation, Security Business Differen...
      • What Declining Product Demand Looks Like at Colleg...
      • Microsoft Will Buy Your Old Tablets and Smartphones
      • "Mobile Mostly" Content Consumption Trend Grows
      • Movie Revenue Model is Breaking
      • Apple Sticks to Strategy: No "Junk"
      • New Opposition to EC "Connected Continent" Plan
      • Smart Phone, Tablet Adoption in Asia is Study in C...
      • What is the Revenue Model for Mobile Apps?
      • Postpaid Wireless Data Revenues Dominate Telecom R...
      • ISPs Drop Gigabit Service Pricing from $300 a Mont...
      • U.S. Mobile Market Disruption Will Not be Easy
      • Multi-Sided Markets are Complex, Therefore Slow to...
      • 66% of All Mobile Phone Users Use Internet on Thei...
      • Google Wallet Can be Used by Any Android Running V...
      • Does Broadband "Cause" Economic Growth and Higher ...
      • In Different Ways, Microsoft and Apple Both Bank o...
      • Revenue Role Reversal for Fixed, Mobile Networks?
      • Over the Top Video Entertainment Suffers Because o...
      • Growing Mobile Internet Access Has Implications fo...
      • Sprint Launches "One Up" Device Upgrade Program
      • Are Apple and Nokia Mirror Images?
      • Expected Europe Consolidation Wave Causes EE to Re...
      • Is Apple Making the Same Mistake, Again?
      • Auction Policies Should Work, Not Just "Sound Good"
      • U.S. to Auction 10 MHz of Mobile Spectrum Now, 55 ...
      • T-Mobile's LTE network now covers 180 million peop...
      • Verizon Wants to Sell FiOS TV Nationwide
      • Kabel Deutschland Shareholders Vote to Sell to Vod...
      • How Big a Deal is the Right to Sell iPhones?
      • How Mobile Payments, Minimum Wage Demands are Corr...
      • An Illustration of How Speed Transforms Internet M...
      • EC to Review Telefonica, E-Plus Merger: How Many C...
      • Tablet Sales to Eclipse PCs by 2015
      • Will "Connected Continent" Plan Spur Infrastructur...
      • European Commission Announces "Connected Continent...
      • European "Single Telecom Market" Proposals Coming ...
      • Vodafone Gets Ready to Grow
      • 44% of Fixed Broadband Homes Buy an OTT Subscripti...
      • How Big Will U.S. Mobile Revenue Be in 2017?
      • Fingerprint Reader is the Significant Takeaway as ...
      • Virgin Media to Feature Netflix
      • Network Neutrality: The Long Term Implications
      • Verizon Headed for Net Neutality Win?
      • Net Neutrality in Court Again
      • Consumer Devices Using Organization Networks will ...
      • Regulators Favoring New Entrants in Spectrum Auctions
      • Amazon Launching a Free Smart Phone? Maybe Not.
      • Hong Kong Mobile Operators Each Could Lose 33% of ...
      • U.S. Mobile Market Share Now Hinges on Organic Gro...
      • DoCoMo Finally Gets the Apple iPhone
      • Microsoft Nokia Buy Puts More Pressure on BlackBerry
      • Majority of Android Handset Traffic Uses Wi-Fi, in...
      • Mobile Accounts Outnumber Fixed Lines More than 6:1
      • Yelp Really Works, Study Finds
      • Can Microsoft Nokia Make a Dent in Apple Samsung H...
      • Study Confirms: Most People Watch One to 10 Channels
      • Largest Price War in U.S. Mobile History is Coming
      • Huge and Risky Bets are Being Placed in Global Mob...
      • Microsoft Steve Ballmer Succession Now Could be Af...
      • Verizon Purchase of Vodafone Verizon Wireless Asse...
      • Microsoft to Buy Nokia's Handset Business
      • Cloud-Based UC is Growing in U.S., Still Lags Glob...
      • Vodafone Agrees to Sell its Stake in Verizon Wirel...
      • Microsoft Research Study Shows People are Rational...
    • ►  August (92)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile