
Clickatell CEO Pieter de Villiers Shares US Mobile Market Predictions and Views
Redwood City, CA, January 12, 2010---In less than a decade,
mobility has gone from a mere convenience to an absolute must-have,
both in the US and globally. In the US, mobility is most commonly used
for social connections, and is gaining momentum for high value
transactions and mobile services
such as banking, healthcare, government, and more, albeit on a slower
scale, especially when compared to other, developing regions around the
world. In Afghanistan, small business owners absolutely depend on
mobility to bank; in South Africa, people use their mobile phone to
purchase insurance; in India, farmers are using SMS to track crop
prices; in Iraq people are “listening” in to President Obama’s historic
speeches. These are just a few examples, and testimony to the wide
selection of life-changing and awe-inspiring necessities using the
simplicity and mass ubiquity of mobile text messaging, especially when
looking at underdeveloped and developing regions.
The US mobile
market experienced another fast-paced, high growth year -- giving
enterprises, financial providers, vendors, and mobile operators much to
consider. The constant evolution, however, is presenting challenges,
especially for carriers, and fuelling confusion in what is already a
dynamic and complex market. The pressure on mobile carriers is
tremendous and while some are looking to get back to the basics, others
are considering offering higher value-added services, such as mobile
payments and “app stores” which might create even more market
confusion, as the carriers attempt to “own” more of the customer
experience.
In predicting the 2010 US mobile messaging landscape,
we reflect on 2009, a year, which many predicted, would see the demise
of SMS (being made obsolete by mobile IM and email); but, in reality,
we saw SMS continue to remain the long-standing “killer app” on the
mobile phone. Last month, Gartner made its Mobile Predictions,
projecting that SMS money transfers will be the number one
mobile application in 2012. In fact, Clickatell itself has seen
tremendous growth in the application-to-person (A2P) SMS segment as the
“tip of the spear” to offer a wide variety of mobile services being used on a global scale.
During
the world’s largest worldwide mobile event, the Mobile World Congress
in Barcelona, in February 2009, many of the big US-based trendsetters
(Apple, Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc.) who have changed the rules by
redefining the consumer Internet and mobile usage landscape were in
fact not showcased on stage. Clearly, they were discussed in hallway
conversation, but people have been slow to acknowledge their global
impact on a “mobile services”
scale over the course of 2009. Clearly, social media has taken the
world by storm, and people—from teenagers to grandparents—in all
corners of the world are taking part in social media to stay informed
and in touch. Texting has also reached many corners and many
demographics and has overtaken voice calling on the mobile phone. The
combination of the two cannot be ignored. As we look to 2010, the
telecommunications industry will be forced to acknowledge the
tremendous market shifts that have already taken place almost solely
because of these influencers, coupled with the billions of SMS messages
being sent globally.
All eyes will again be on the 2010 Mobile
World Congress taking place next month, and it is our belief that
consumers, influencers, and other, new “market-shapers” will provide
and demonstrate a myriad of exceptional use cases to be adopted by the
masses. Mass adoption will continue to “force” the shape and future of mobile services, and enterprises will need to move quickly to give customers what they want.
David vs. Goliath?
At
the moment, carriers continue to drive broadband and smart phone
adoption as the future of mobile. And, given the broad adoption of SMS
as a core technology, this may limit the scope of their service
offerings, because billions of people around the world have different
types of mobile devices, and often, broadband connectivity is not
viable. On a global scale, this leads to poor adoption and negative
user experience, resulting in a lack of confidence and user
frustration, bringing uncertainty for enterprises wanting to deliver
powerful mobile services to customers around the globe.
Today,
there are roughly 4 mobile phone users world wide for every 1 computer
user. When looking at the numbers, it is clear that SMS is still the
widest reaching communications tool available today:
~4 billion mobile SMS users, globally
~10 million iPhones shipped, globally, in ’08
~3 billion Nokia phones shipped, globally, in ’08
~150 million Facebook users
~45 million LinkedIn users
In
addition to the social media applications, the smart phone evolution
has certainly gained the collective attention of enterprise IT and
financial services providers. With ~90,000 apps, iPhone is getting much
attention. But, as businesses start to plan their mobile strategies,
they need to reach all of their customers. Banks must consider their
entire customer base when rolling out critical mobile services; and more specifically what happens to those who cannot be reached on a smart phone?
Four billion of us, however, can access SMS in seconds, from any phone.
In other regions of the world, SMS is being used for critical banking functions and other mobile services
such as airtime top ups, bill payments, real-time payments, lottery,
remittances, point of sale payments, and more. The US is concentrating
heavily on the smart phone market, which has yet to reach critical mass
adoption, which equates to future revenue. Most enterprises and
financial institutions are clearly looking to increase the
all-important bottom line today. Regardless, we believe US-centric
companies will continue to focus on iPhone and other smart devices.
Given
the attention to smart phones, however, we predict that SMS, USSD and
other ubiquitous, “built in” technologies will continue to thrive and
make their way into important use cases as the “tip of the spear” for
enterprise, government, healthcare, financial services offerings, and
other critical mobile services.
Mobile SMS or the Mobile Internet?
In
the US, the Internet arrived long before widespread mobile adoption.
This and other affluent markets are focusing innovation efforts in mobile services
on smart phones that mimic the Internet, such as BlackBerry with killer
email, and iPhone with killer browsing. US carriers, consumers and
businesses alike are embracing the smart phone as an extension of the
PC, therefore mobilising Internet and email.
We believe that in
2010, US markets will continue to embrace the mobile phone as a “mobile
Internet device” rather than placing the mobile phone in its own unique
category, with the ability to reach billions of people who are not
already connected to the Internet (or who may not own a PC, or even a
television). We expect even more exclusive mobile services
deals between mobile manufacturers, carriers and content providers as
they move towards monetising the “Mobile Internet.” And, as always,
there will be winners, losers and more surprises.
We expect US
businesses to take a closer look at their peers abroad and notice the
mobile successes in banking, healthcare, retail and social media
specifically, focused on advancing mobile “touch” points by innovating
and making it easier to communicate and transact with customers.
Carrier Infrastructure - Old and New
US
carriers have made an incredible investment in their 3rd and 4th
generation data networks. The cost extends far beyond the network
upgrade itself reaching into higher subsidies for more expensive smart
phones, better trained support staff assisting customers with
increasingly complex services, as well as making concessions to
hardware and service providers for “exclusive” deals to help
differentiate from the competition. Carriers are always looking to find
new and creative mobile services and ways to offset these costs without disenfranchising existing customers.
Carriers
might benefit greatly by looking at their core infrastructure for
answers. SMS is an asset that the carriers have long since paid off. On
the consumer side, SMS is a commodity. People of all demographics have
become accustomed to a modest flat rate for unlimited messaging. The
great part for the mobile user is that this is an agnostic channel for
communication — with no need to set up an account, and no reliance on a
particular social network. SMS messages can simply be delivered to
anyone, at any time.
Because of this ease and ubiquity, small and
large businesses need to realize the value of SMS as a massive channel
to reach customers, prospects, partners, and employees. The process,
however, for businesses to properly make use of mobile services
is fraught with implementation expense and regulation. The barrier put
forth by the US carriers, however, could be easily altered once they
realize the hefty revenue opportunity, which can come from an old
investment.
From our global vantage point, Clickatell sees many
of the world's top carriers realizing strong revenue streams from
messaging fees paid by businesses because the implementation process
provides for quick and easy access. We believe A2P SMS revenue would
thrive if the US carriers would consider the following:
1. Reduce the fees for short codes and/or allow long numbers to be used for A2P messaging.
2. Streamline the service review and approval process from months to weeks or days.
3. Continue to enforce the opt-in/opt-out and objectionable content rules to ensure responsible use.
As
the mobile industry continues to flourish, we believe that the US
market and many others around the world will provide innovative mobile service
offerings, making lives better and more convenient. Each of these
markets would benefit greatly if they would come together and learn
from each other’s successes and failures.
As we look to 2010,
there are sure to be a new set of winners (and losers), and mobility
will continue to be an exciting and innovative market around the world.
This is the first part of a series of Clickatell’s “Mobile State
of the Union.” Next quarter, de Villiers will take a closer look at
another specific region and share his views on the mobile landscape.
About Clickatell, Inc.
Clickatell
enables businesses, governments and communities to leverage the
ubiquity of mobile messaging to inform, alert, notify, transact,
interact and share information. Delivering
mobile messaging solutions
since 2000, Clickatell is a global leader in mobile communications
specializing in SMS messaging as a services across 815+ mobile networks
in 220+ countries, Clickatell serves 10,000+ customers including
several of the Fortune 500, leading governments and communities
globally. Clickatell has also formed strategic partnerships with a
number of industry leaders including RSA Data Security, Entrust, S1,
mFoundry, Fundamo, IBM, and others. Clickatell
products and services
increase customer acquisition, improve loyalty and build trusted brands
through direct, personal, easy, and immediate communications. Backed by
Sequoia and Ethos, Clickatell is headquartered in Redwood City, CA, and
has offices in South Africa.