Broad Soft

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

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Why U.S. Cable and Telcos are Chasing Home Automation and Home Security

Posted on 09:47 by Unknown
There are a couple of reasons why telcos and cable companies in the U.S. market are putting sales effort and development effort into the home automation and security businesses. First, such businesses, while perhaps not of so much interest in a pre-Internet era, and in an era where other revenue opportunities simply were vastly larger, have become more important as legacy revenue sources have begun to wither.

As a line extension using the core features of telco and cable access networks, home automation and security offer a logical way to add more application value to an access network.

Also, the change in access from narrowband to broadband mean some new features, especially the use of cameras, now are possible.

At the same time, the availability of tablets and smart phones might dramatically affect the ease of use, as well as value of home automation and home security systems.

At the same time, the better technology now available to support alarm systems, surveillance systems, intercom systems, access control and energy management services are key changes on the supply side of the business.

Simply, broadband access, Internet Protocol and easy to use mobile and untethered devices increase capabilities and ease of use in new ways.

Security, as such, is becoming a huge market worldwide, as well.

And the U.S. market is among the most lucrative globally. In terms of revenue generation as of 2011, North America held the highest share of revenue, at about 56 percent, followed by Asia-Pacific at 28 percent, according to Marketsandmarkets.com.

Among the various end-products used for home security solutions (electronic locks, sensors, alarms, cameras, panic buttons), cameras are observed to be the most potential product market with a market share of approximately 27 percent as of 2011.

By definition, camera security requires a broadband connection. Revenues for suppliers of security systems, energy management systems are estimated to grow between 25 percent and 31 percent annually between 2012 to 2017, Marketsandmarkets has estimated.

The global home security solutions market is expected to grow from $20.64 billion in 2011 to $34.46 billion in 2017 at a compound annual growth rate  of 9.1 percent from 2012 to 2017.
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

  • Seattle's Gigabit Squared Fails: Sustainability Remains an Issue for Muni Access Networks
    Seattle's Gigabit Squared  network appears to have failed, illustrating a recurring problem with all municipal or joint venture Internet...
  • Can "Internet Access" Be More Than a Commodity?
    What makes today’s “Internet access” different from voice, text messaging or video entertainment? The answer explains why service providers ...
  • Debate over "Fiber to Home" Versus "Fiber to Node" Erupts Again in Australia
    Oddly enough, for some of us, a debate over access network architecture, specifically fiber to the home or fiber to the node, appears to be ...
  • Apple TV: Content, Sales Volume, Uniqueness are Key Challenges
    Some observers argue Apple needs to launch a TV device (a display) to spur growth. Others might argue that is a mistake.  Some might argue ...
  • How 1 Philippines Telco Monetizes Over the Top Messaging
    Mobile service providers globally face big problems in the messaging space, as users are showing high preference for no incremental cost ove...
  • 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 ...
  • Will End of Smartphone Subsidies Actually Help Mobile Service Providers and Ecosystem?
    It might seem self evident that smartphone subsidies are a burden for mobile service providers. If that is the case, getting rid of device s...
  • Movie Revenue Model is Breaking
    Sometimes the decline of a business model is historically inevitable even before the peak of revenues for the model. Voice revenues for the ...
  • Access Networks Increasingly are All About Video
    In North America, r eal-time entertainment is responsible for over  68 percent of downstream bytes during peak periods, compared to 65 perce...
  • Verizon Acquires Content-Delivery Firm EdgeCast Networks
    In one sense, the  Verizon acquisition of EdgeCast Networks  is a simple way of gaining revenue and customer base in complementary businesse...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (23)
    • ►  January (23)
  • ▼  2013 (476)
    • ►  December (83)
    • ►  November (79)
    • ►  October (127)
    • ►  September (95)
    • ▼  August (92)
      • Verizon, Vodafone Making Different Bets on Market ...
      • What Happened to Free Speech in the U.S.?
      • Mobile Spending Now 10% of all E-Commerce
      • Tablets Might be Fastest-Growing Consumer Electron...
      • Will Vodafone Survive Verizon Wireless Sale?
      • AT&T’s Contract-Free Prepaid Aio Service Goes Nati...
      • America Movil Encounters Obstacle in Effort to Buy...
      • Three U.K. Offers Domestic Tariffs for Roaming Cal...
      • Gigablit Libraries Network to Test TV White Spaces...
      • Slovakia Begins 4G Spectrum Auction
      • EC Digital Commissioner Backs Off 90% Roaming Rate...
      • Skype Marks 10th Anniversary
      • Will Verizon Sell its Fixed Network, After Buying ...
      • Comcast to Launch 250 Mbps in Provo for $80 a month
      • Debate over "Fiber to Home" Versus "Fiber to Node"...
      • Will End of Moore's Law Impair ISP Ability to Rapi...
      • 90% of Republic Wireless Traffic Moves Over Wi-Fi
      • Cox Communications Offers Wi-Fi Hotspot Access
      • Why U.S. Cable and Telcos are Chasing Home Automat...
      • Africa Might be Among the Best Places for Fast Int...
      • Google Names Top U.S. "eCities"
      • "Net Neutrality" Will Kill the Teleconm Business
      • 20% of U.S. Residents "Can't Get" Broadband, or "D...
      • Mobile Revenue: Voice 21%. Where's the Rest?
      • Wi-Fi is Valuable for a Service Provider, Just Har...
      • Broadband Now IS Internet Access
      • Telefonica, America Movil Both Covet the German Ma...
      • The Difference Between 2000 and 2013
      • Will LTE Displace Public Wi-Fi?
      • Licensed Wi-Fi?
      • While LightSquared Lawsuit Remains Unresolved, So ...
      • 10% of U.K. 5-Year-Olds have Mobile Phones
      • How 1 Philippines Telco Monetizes Over the Top Mes...
      • Amazon Weighing its Own Mobile Network?
      • Google Project Loon (Internet by Balloon) Continue...
      • Are Mobile Networks a Viable Substitute for Fixed ...
      • Why Over the Top TV Won't Necessarily Save You Money
      • More Book Reading on Smart Phones than Tablets, St...
      • Amazon is 5X Bigger Than All Other Cloud Vendors C...
      • Czech 4G Auctions Coming in November 2013
      • OTT Messaging is Not Cannibalizing Text Messaging,...
      • Will You Save Money Buying Future Online TV?
      • Bundles Lift Revenue per Customer, Drive Revenue G...
      • Despite Earlier Denials, Apple Will Ship a Low-Cos...
      • Smart Phones Will Close Digital Divide Globally
      • Video Business Loses Customers, Again
      • Skype Now Available from Inside Outlook.com
      • 10 Firms Win Parts of $10 Billion U.S. Interior De...
      • How Big a Phone Will You Carry All the Time?
      • China Aims for 50 Mbps in Cities by 2020
      • Cloud Computing Nears "Trough of Disillusionment"
      • Alteva, Frontier, Windstream Show Transformation S...
      • If the Windows Operating System Were a House, It W...
      • U.S. Licensed and Unlicensed Use of White Spaces H...
      • About 66% of Mobile Data is Offloaded to Wi-Fi
      • FCC Says It Will Not "Automatically" Allow Verizon...
      • Telekom Austria Wants to Buy Serbia Broadband
      • NSA Spying: How Can We Trust Anything You Now Say?
      • Is Square "Western Union?"
      • TOT Delays 3G Expansion in Thailand
      • Google Fiber in Provo Prices Same as Kansas City
      • Using a Drone-Mounted Camera to See what a Surfer ...
      • Skype Will be Native Part of Windows 8.1 Start Screen
      • Technology Adoption Rates Show Danger of Getting t...
      • Content Owners Will Decide Whether Apple Really Ha...
      • Baltimore to Explore Own Internet Access Network
      • PCs are for Work, Other Than That, People Will Pre...
      • Lenovo Sells More Smart Phones, Tablets than PCs
      • DoJ Opposition to US Airways, American Airlines Me...
      • 1 Regulator or 28? Competition or Investment? Are ...
      • Nobody Knows What Will Happen to Service Provider ...
      • Smart Phones Surpass Basic Phone Sales for First T...
      • Mobile Business Now Faces "End of Growth" Driven b...
      • 7% of Surveyed Mobile Execs Think Joyn Will Succee...
      • More Consolidation in U.S. Mobile Market is an Eas...
      • How Much Will Global Telecom Revenue Grow in 2013?
      • Telekom Austria and KPN Wholesale Fiber Network a ...
      • Orange Money Expands into Retail Payments, Branded...
      • CenturyLink Touts 1 Gbps
      • Google Adds Global Spell Check, Formatting Features
      • LTE Customers Buy Bigger Data Plans, Study Finds
      • T-Mobile US Breaks Trend
      • Mobile Commerce 11% of E-Commerce in 1Q 2013
      • Telekom Austria Revenues Fall 2% in 2Q 2013
      • Can FCC Lawfully Do Anything; Should it Do Anythin...
      • Has U.S. Mobile Market Revenue Reached its Peak?
      • Security Concerns About Mobile Commerce Might be Q...
      • Leaders and Managers: Followers Create the Former,...
      • Market Disruption is a Game Verizon Can Play as Well
      • How Strategic is Ownership or Operation of an Acce...
      • Windstream Earnings Illustrate Rural Telco Problem
      • Video Cord Cutting Not Yet at the "Disruption" Phase
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile