Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolutionftp.it.murdoch.edu.au/units/ICT523/ps14_24b.pdf ·...
Transcript of Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolutionftp.it.murdoch.edu.au/units/ICT523/ps14_24b.pdf ·...
Symposium/ITxpo 2006 Geoff Johnson
November 14-17, 2006
Sydney Convention & Exhibition CentreSydney, Australia
Telecommunications Trends: GlobalRevolution
These materials can be reproduced only with Gartner's written approval. Such approvals must be requested viae-mail — [email protected].
14-17 NovemberSydney, Australia
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 2Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
The Future of Telecom Is…
Wireless
– Voice will be 75% wireless in 2009.
Asian-dominated
– Asia/Pacific will surpass Western Europe &North America in mobile handsets sold by 2007.
– Asian service providers and suppliers lead.
Fashionable
– Mobile devices as lifestyle accessories.
– Consumer branding matters:
• Content, services, devices
IP-based, user-centric and media-rich
– Voice, unified communications integrate to applications.
– Information, entertainment delivered on demand.
– User-defined communities/social networks proliferate.
– Usability and user control matter.
2001 2005 2009
Mobile Connections
WE + NA + JapanEE + LA + Africa + MEA/P
2004 2009
FixedWireless
Growth and profits are returning to telecommunications (telecom) equipment manufacturers and serviceproviders, but they're isolated to key sectors and geographies. Strategies will vary widely by market, withthe most-obvious split between the developed and the developing world.
Mobile growth in the developing world is significant, and is collectively larger than the developed marketsof Western Europe, North America and Japan.
The march of "IP everything" will continue as businesses use the public Internet more frequently fornomadic workers and branch offices, and as IP telephony becomes the norm.
Fashion will dictate the success or failure of many consumer electronics/mobile vendors as music,electronic transactions, video and communications technologies converge in portable consumer devices.
Users will define their own uses for the technology, some of which will be unanticipated. Consider thegrowth of social networking sites, such as MySpace. To many young people, MySpace is the Internet.
Content and applications will become the focus of consumer and business networks, respectively, as usersintegrate voice into other applications and entertainment.
In Australia, regulatory uncertainty, as Telstra "games" the Australian Competition and ConsumerCommission (ACCC), has blurred the national vision for widely available broadband services —particularly for fixed networks — although mobile futures look "rosy."
Market: Major Trends
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 3Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Key Issues
1. What are the principal drivers of change in the telecommunications industry?
2. How will evolving consumer and business demands alter the entire industry's valuechain?
3. How should vendors act on these changes and influence the way IT departments useenterprise networks?
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 4Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Global Telecom Market: Large, Growing ...and Consolidating
$346
$1,296
2006 Global Telecom Market($ in Billions)
Equipment 21%
3.7% of Global GDP
Services 79%
Equipment
43%SmallerVendors
Nokia
Motorola
Cisco
Top-3Control26%
Top-10Control 57%
ServicesNTT Group
AT&T
DeutscheTelekom
Verizon
Vodafone56%SmallerVendors
Top-5Control28%
Top-10Control 44%
Large vendors are getting larger.
Casual market observers rarely realize the enormity and growth of the global telecom market. It's importantto note that the telecom industry is 40% larger than the global computing hardware, software and IT servicemarkets combined.
Although the market is massive, it's far from stagnant. It will continue growing at a healthy 2.1% to 4.6%per-year through 2010. In 2010, the total worldwide market will be $1.9 trillion, driven by:
• Growth in broadband and mobile services
• Conversion to IP infrastructures
• Mobile handset sales
• Impressive growth in emerging economies, particularly Asia/Pacific
Large vendors are becoming dominant: The top-3 equipment vendors control 26% of the market, and thetop-5 carriers control 28% of the service market. There's still room for smaller equipment providers, but weanticipate further consolidation in the service provider and equipment vendor markets.
Predictions: Significant consolidation is still to come in developed markets in the wirelineand wireless sectors. Also, 50% of second-tier providers won't exist in their present form by2012.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 5Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Carrier Growth/Retention Strategies• Low-income segments (prepaid)• Expansion into new geographies• Mobile Internet, text, ring tones, games• Bundling: triple/quadruple play• Media services: IPTV, mobile TV• Fixed/mobile convergence• Whole-house connectivity• Enterprise managed services, ICT
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1999 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010
Global Telecom Market Forecasts: NewServices, New Geographies Drive Growth
5%
9%28%
22%27%
CE
2010
2006
W. EuropeAsia
N. America
Cent./E.Europe
Lat. Amer.
Mid. East
0
400
800
1,200
1,600
2,000
1999 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010
Billions of Dollars
Total Telecom Market
Total Telecom Services
Total Telecom Equipment
Billions of Dollars
Fixed Network Svcs.
Mobile Terminals & Svcs.
Carrier Infrastructure
Ent.Networks
The growth of the telecom industry relies mainly on the network service and mobile sectors. Infrastructurewill experience only a limited upturn and won't return to 2000 levels for the rest of this decade.
The market is significantly stronger in mobile services; the fixed network service sector draws somestrength from the acceleration of broadband services and the proliferation of IP-based services, such asMultiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) and voice over IP (VoIP).
For the first time ever, the fixed voice service market will decline in the developed world in 2006. NorthAmerica will hang on — barely — as the largest market, with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of5.7%. Meanwhile, the Middle East and Africa will be the fastest-growing region with a CAGR of 12%.
In terms of geographic comparisons, the Asia/Pacific region will surpass Western Europe to become theworld's second-largest telecom market in 2008. Asia/Pacific's continued expansion is centered on thestrength of emerging markets: China, India, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines.
Prediction: By 2010, more than half of the top-50 telecom carriers will develop new divisionsoutside telecom. Half will fail.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 6Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Telecom Services: Mobile and BroadbandCapture the Growth
Broadband InternetAsia/Pacific broadbandadded 12 million lines in2005 (21% growth)
However, still less thana 2% penetration rate
Mobile Services$658 billion in 2006
$807 billion in 2010
6.1% CAGR 2005through 2009
Expect >3 billion globalsubscribers by 2009
Billions of Dollars
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010
Mobile Services
Total Fixed Network
Fixed Voice
Internet and Public IPFixed Data
Fixed voice is in decline.
The fixed consumer segment is driven by broadband services. At the end of 2005, the North American market hadadded 9.6 million lines, or 22% growth compared with 2004, achieving a broadband penetration level of 16 lines forevery 100 people. Asia/Pacific grew 11.7 million lines in 2005, or 21% annual growth, yet it had reached broadbandpenetration rates of less than two lines for every 100 people, leaving plenty of room for additional growth.
Although consumer VoIP will explode with fourfold revenue growth during a five-year time frame, low prices willmitigate the revenue gains that would otherwise offset some of the decline in circuit-switched voice. VoIP over fixedbroadband services will be a key substitution for traditional voice, but it isn't a business model on its own.
In the corporate segment, there's been a significant migration from traditional managed services to VoIP and IP virtualprivate networks (IP VPNs). Business spending on VoIP will grow 23.7% (CAGR 2004 through 2009), although itwill still equal only10% of total switched voice revenue in 2009. Managed IP VPN service revenue will grow atsimilar rates, or 25.6% (CAGR 2004 through 2009), and will account for nearly 11% of the total data market by 2009.
Many developed markets are becoming saturated and highly competitive. Teledensity in the developed world is now150%. The key challenge for these telecommunication companies (telcos) is managing a decline in traditionalservices and creating a new suite of services — especially around media and applications. In contrast, the developingworld has only 38% teledensity, but is growing at a fast 13.9% CAGR — mostly with wireless infrastructure.
Market: By 2010, there will be approximately 888 million WCDMA subscribers, and mobiledata will count for 27.5% of the total mobile service revenue.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 7Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
2005 2010
Internet Becomes the Core Network
<20% of corporate locationsconnected by Internet
<2% of corporate voice traffic
<3% of carrier voice minutes
<5% of carrier traffic
<10% of carriers use consolidatedInternet/private networks
>20% of corporate voice traffic
>50% of corporate locationsconnected by Internet
>25% of carrier voice minutes
>40% of carrier traffic
>40% of carriers use consolidatedInternet/private networks
WAN
Voice
Core
The Internet is critical to the way the world communicates, and not just for consumers — it also plays a bigrole in corporate networks. Enterprise uptake is driven by the rise in the teleworking and mobilepopulations, as well as the expansion of small branch office services.
Carriers are also consolidating their backbones, and public Internet and private traffic will be delivered via acommon MPLS core. Voice is already being packetized for more-efficient delivery over the carriers'backbones, so many users are already making VoIP calls without realizing it.
The debate over "net neutrality" plays into fears of a "Balkanized" Internet, where access to content andapplications is controlled by carriers and fueled by an oversimplified view of recent carrier consolidation.
The open Internet will remain the dominant model for the foreseeable future. As long as access competitionexists, no provider can afford to provide a bad experience for users of Google, Amazon.com, or evenYouTube or Skype.
Strategic Planning Assumptions: By year-end 2008, there will be 25 million additionalteleworkers worldwide (0.8 probability). By year-end 2010, Internet-related traffic willrepresent no more than 15% of worldwide carrier revenue (0.7 probability).
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 8Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Key Technologies Will Affect the Industry
Less than two years
Two to five years
Five to 10 years
Key: Time to Plateau
Maturity
These technologies are drawn from several Gartner Hype Cycles, including collaboration and communications, wirelessnetworking, networking and communications, emerging technologies, and consumer technologies — all markets in whichtelecom plays an integral role. Some selected technologies: Video on Demand: Originally provided over cable in 2004, it will beembedded in IP television (IPTV) and has massive implications for cable/telephone companies vying for consumer entertainment.802.16-2004 WiMAX: Originally known as 802.16d, this wireless broadband standard uses 2GHz to 11GHz frequencies, whichcan penetrate walls and other dense objects. It provides transmission to stationary devices and replaces the 802.16 and 802.16aspecifications. A disruptive technology that may be integrated into every laptop PC by 2008, it uses inexpensive wirelessspectrum and equipment (cellular operators view it as a major threat). Session Initiation Protocol (SIP): Text-based protocol forinitiating/managing communications sessions; also a foundation technology used in presence awareness and enterprise networkfederation. IP Multimedia Subsystem: A standardized, open architecture based on SIP that defines how applications/services aredelivered to customers, regardless of the network on which they run. It separates session control from the actual applications formaximum flexibility, and can be used for centralized user profiles. Infrastructure vendors are delivering emerging platforms tocarriers, which will result in a logically unified access network that integrates multiple physical networks (fixed and mobile).Mesh networks: Ad hoc networks formed by dynamic meshes of peer nodes, each of which includes simple networking,computing and sensing capabilities. Some implementations offer low-power operation and multiyear battery life. Network on-Chip: An efficient bus architecture that will control the infrastructure of complex semiconductor chips, can reduce the overallpower consumption of the device, and will first be adopted in the high-end network processing market. Because the switching andtransmission issues on-chip are very similar to those in traditional networks (especially WANs), traditional networking vendorscould license their technology to chip and system vendors.
Strategic Planning Assumption: Through 2010, more than 90% of nonvoice networkedapplications won't use IMS (0.8 probability).
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 9Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Mobile Broadband — As Disruptive as GSM
to PSTN?
PeakUplinkSpeed
Peak Downlink Speed
10 Mbps
1 Mbps
100 Kbps
10 Kbps
10 Kbps 100 Kbps 1 Mbps 10 Mbps
EDGE 2005
HSDPA2006
HSDPA2007 to
2008
HSUPA 2008 to 2009
EV-DO Rel. 02006
EV-DO Rel. A2007 to 2008
Approximatebroadband equivalent
experience zone
WCDMA 2004
WiMAX 2006 (est.)
WiMAX
Betterperformancethan Wi-Fimetro
Applications
– DSLextension
– Developingmarkets
– Not a 3Galternative
– Not a TValternative
1st handsetsin 2008
This diagram shows the theoretical peak speeds of selected wireless technologies. The peak is defined bynetwork capabilities and by the silicon chips used to build the client device or wireless adapter. In mostcases, real-life speeds will be much lower than peak speeds, depending on such factors as range from thebase station, client mobility, network characteristics and loading. A reasonable expectation is 10% to 30%of peak.
WiMAX is the exception in this diagram because the difference between theoretical peak (70 Mbps) andreal life will be dramatic and depends on the number of cell users. We expect early WiMAX systems todeliver performance that's approximately equivalent to a 1-Mbps-to-2-Mbps wired broadband link. The"approximate broadband equivalent experience zone" suggests the region in which bidirectionalperformance and latency achieve levels such that the user experience feels somewhat equivalent to first-generation broadband. This is a subjective assessment because it depends on many factors, including theapplication, the user's anticipated broadband experience and the network characteristics. Global System forMobile Communications (GSM) networks won't achieve an approximate equivalence to 2 Mbps wiredbroadband until High-Speed Uplink Packet Access (HSUPA) networks and client equipment becomeavailable (starting in 2008 to 2009).
Action Item: Client equipment, such as wireless adapters, will evolve faster than the devices consumingdata, such as notebook PCs. Don't buy embedded wireless in PCs yet.
Strategic Planning Assumption: WiMAX as a 4G technology won't be commercially availableglobally before 2012 (0.6 probability).
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 10Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Seven Billion Connected Devices by 2010
0.0
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
5.0
6.0
7.0
8.0
PCs
Cell Phones
Consumer Devices
Network DevicesAutomotivePeripherals
Billions of Devices, 2010
38% ofconnecteddevices
Consumerelectronics willdrive the next
wave …
Nokia
MotorolaSamsung
Top-10control88%
Big-3control67%
Mobile Handsets
• Plus billions more sporadicallyconnected devices:
• Sensors
• Toys …
• … People?
• Personal items
• Tags
• Home automation &security
The term "networked devices" means much more than personal computers or cellular phones.
Many consumer devices will be connected to various networks. For example, Samsung announced that itwill invest about $100 million in home networking appliances. An even larger number of devices will beoccasionally connected using technologies such as Bluetooth, ZigBee Alliance, ultrawideband/wirelessUniversal Serial Bus (USB), radio frequency identification (RFID) or Near Field Communication.
About half of the "heavily connected" devices are mobile handsets, including smartphones. The demand forhandsets is huge, but the market is consolidating and becoming very competitive. Being a leading handsetvendor requires a large product portfolio with correspondingly high R&D costs.
Strategic Planning Assumptions: In 2010, more than 1.3 billion new handsets will be shipped(0.8 probability). Through 2010 in the U.S. and E.U. markets, the number of consumerhandset models will outnumber corporate handset models by more than 10-to-1 (0.8probability).
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 11Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
TV
ComputerMobilePhone
Complex Device Proliferation Creates NewOpportunities
• Very-high-speedwired broadbandis emerging.
• The three screens(TV, phone & PC)are blending andmultiplying.
• Mobile isapproachingbroadbandspeeds.
Entertainment
Applic
atio
ns
Mobility
DVR
Multimediadistribution in home
MediaPhone
Midget PCSmartphone
Laptop
PDA
Gaming PCMedia PC
MobileMedia
TV
NoSingle
UniversalDevice
New Business Modelsfor Connected Home
Aging Bus. Model- Advertising- Subscriptions- Pay-per-view
Est. Bus. Model- Subscriptions- Pay by minute or bundles- Prepaid
Threat to
Threat to
Our "old view" of the world was based on the three-screen model — TV, cell phone and PC. Each iseffectively centered on entertainment or mobility or applications, but no longer. The capability of onedevice category is blending into the other, along with a proliferation of devices and user choices. Themarriage of personal computer technologies and video processing created the digital video recorder (DVR)and its capability to skip ads (the basic revenue stream for television). However, the DVR also enablesmedia companies to better understand users and their behavior, thus providing more-targeted ads andservices.
Smartphones and enhanced mobile phones have merged the computer with the cell phone, Smartphones canincrease the average revenue per user (ARPU) via high-end data and messaging plans, but a completelyopen device is also a threat. It enables users to bypass the operator's high-margin services (such as ringtones, games and messsaging), potentially attacking the operator's core voice business (such as Skype).
Note the absence of a device in the middle: No single, converged device meets all needs.
Bottom Line: Operators that offer the best usability, flexibility and user control in their environments havean opportunity to market device-neutral solutions.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 12Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Voice Convergence or Substitution?
Hand-Over
GSMor
CDMA
FixedOperator
MobileOperator
MVNO orReseller
By 2010, 30% of Australianhomes will use only cellular orInternet telephony.
Home or Office
Voice OverWi-Fi
Cellular Network
DSL orCable
4+ MajorFMC Models
SoftwareRules
Convergence
Fixed-line telecom operators are aiming to stem the migration to mobile by launching voice services thatmerge mobile with fixed-line services. The value proposition is built on the assumption that users makesignificant portions of their mobile calls from home. The operators can route mobile calls over the fixedbroadband network and, thus, offer savings on calls, but without compromising the convenience of using amobile handset. An operator can provide an access point, home hub or gateway to link a dual-mode mobilephone to a fixed line. This is a converged approach.
Substitution
Mobile service operators, facing stagnating subscriber growth, are using pricing schemes to combine mobileconvenience with fixed-line prices. Each provider has its own approach. Many are designing location-basedtariffs, with calls made from a specified home or business location charged at lower rates than regularmobile charges. Another alternative is to provide huge "buckets" of minutes to cover all usage. This is asubstitution approach.
So far, uptake indicates that users prefer substitution services delivered with location-based offerings.
Strategic Planning Assumption: In 2009, 75% of total originating minutes will be mobile —up from 20% in 2004 (0.8 probability).
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 13Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
FTTX Delivers Great Services, Potentially
Great Profits — and Redefines Broadband
Japan has >30% FTTX penetration. By2009, there will be 5 million U.S. FTTHhomes (only 4.1% of U.S. households).
FTTX equipment sales will surpass xDSLin 2007.
FTTH costs >US$9 per-month per-household during the investmenthorizon.
Current-generation services don't require100-Mbps symmetrical bandwidth, butHDTV over broadband does.
Impact: 30% gross margins are attainableonly if the ARPU is >$90 or servicedelivery costs drop dramatically.
Voice COGS
$9.42/month
Video COGS
$17.50/month
Internet COGS
$23.85/month
$90 p
er-
mo
nth
tri
ple
-pla
y p
ackag
e(v
oic
e, vid
eo
, In
tern
et)
Gross Margin
$39.23 (44%)
Fiber CapEx
$9.13/month
Gross Margin
$30.10 (33%)
CapEx = capital expenditureCOGS = cost of goods sold
The business case for fiber-to-the-curb/-home/-premises (FTTX) is complicated. Fiber infrastructure is, by far, themost-significant FTTX cost factor, and it actually has an economic lifetime that equals its physical lifetime (20 yearsor more). Ultimately, it delivers lower operational expenditures and is the right choice for undeveloped wiredenvironments (such as China).
FTTX providers must split their business cases into near-term and long-term components to account for the varyinglife spans of the equipment vs. the fiber in the ground. We've laid out a simple analysis and listed the assumptions.The bottom line is that deploying fiber costs the service provider an incremental US$9.13 each month over and aboveestablished services and infrastructures. FTTX makes economic sense only when the service provider can garnersignificant, incremental revenue streams that require fiber speeds, such as high-definition (HD) IPTV on demand.
Assumptions on the fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) model: $1,000 per-household to install; 15-year investment horizon;100% customer takeup and 0% churn; 5% weighted average cost of capital; 3% risk premium for regulatory,technological uncertainty; $90 per-month charge for triple play; and no competing technologies.
Bottom Line: 1) New developments, particularly multitenant buildings, should use FTTX. 2) It makes sense to replacecopper with FTTX only in cities and high-value suburbs. 3) Australia and the U.S. will have only a small penetrationlevel of FTTX (<5% by 2010). 4) In the meantime, wireless technologies, cable, xDSL and satellite provide "fastenough" services for most consumer uses, but not the best available entertainment (HDTV).
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 14Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
IPTV — Rapid Growth in the Coming Years
Driven by high-speed access linesForecast 2010 worldwide:
– 49 million subscribers– $13 billion in revenue– 73% CAGR 2004-2010
User profiles vary by market:– Usually targeted at high-income
neighborhoodsWon't compensate for decline in retail voiceBy 2010, <2% of total fixed retail revenue fromIPTV
Fixed Retail Revenue Split, 2010
VoiceData
Internet
IPTV
IPTV Subscribers
02,0004,0006,0008,000
10,00012,00014,00016,00018,00020,000
2005 2007 2009
A/P-Japan
N. America
W. Europe
Rest of World
(Millions) IPTV Revenue
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
$14,000
'05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10
Revenue
(Millions)
Mass-market broadband penetration, coupled with the increasing deployment of video-capable, higher-speed access technologies — for example, advanced DSL (ADSL2+), very high-speed DSL (VDSL) andEthernet — has enabled the critical platform that allows carriers to move ahead with their IPTVdeployments.
• In the long term, large carriers will increasingly focus on IPTV as a potential business to replacediminishing voice revenue. They'll also increase their understanding of how to use the IPTV platform to sellnew services, as well as pay TV.
• Customer acceptance of new products and content from the IPTV platform will lead to subscribersadopting a wider range of premium and on-demand options when carriers start offering them.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 15Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Business Trends: CIOs Redirect Attention TowardProcess Improvements, Cost Controls
Security enhancement tools
Mobile workforce applications
Collaboration technologies
Service-oriented architecture
Workflow management
Networking
Expected overall IT budgetgrowth
• Expected spendingincrease in 2006
• Worldwide CIOsurvey, 2006
• 1,400 CIOs
4.5%
3.9%
3.6%
3.2%
3.2%
3.0%
2.7%
WhereCIOsSee theIT RoleHeading
WhereBudgetsAreGoing in2006
Strategic use of IT and BI
Creating new products, svcs.
Enabling better bus. processes
Cutting business costs
0% 10 20 30 40
38%
13%
Percentage of responses
42%
7%
More than 40% of CIOs cited business process improvement as the IT organization's top imperative to deliver to theenterprise. (The actual question was, "Over the next three years, the biggest shift in the role of IT in my enterprisewill be toward …"). This trend cuts across enterprise size, industry and geography. The drivers of this trend includethe following:
• Enterprises that have completed the first waves of outsourcing, downsizing and streamlining during the past threeyears. Their current operations are reaching a point of diminishing productivity gains, so achieving new levels ofproductivity requires new approaches to business processes.
• Growth through mergers and acquisitions. This requires robust internal processes and the capability to scale tosupport significant transaction growth.
• Internal complexity, which erodes customer service levels. Enterprises must deliver targeted offerings in the frontoffice without increasing the complexity of back-office operations.
• A completed build-out of transactional systems. This is changing the focus from automating transactions toimproving and integrating business processes.
Note the prevalence of network-dependent technologies receiving better-than-average budget increases in 2006.Security is still the top investment area, but in the eyes of the CEO, it's slipped from a No. 1 priority to a No. 7priority in only two years. The reality is that businesses want IT organizations to just solve security issues. The otherareas — collaboration, mobile workforce and workflow management — are indicative of the business contributionsthat CIOs hope to make in their enterprises.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 16Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Impact of Business Trends on the Market
Voice application server via IPT;wireless; presence andmessaging; security embeddedinto LAN/WAN.
LAN and telephony infrastructureconverge on IP over Ethernet.
LAN
• Remote offices, SMBs adoptpublic Internet as "good enough."
• Large enterprises rely on MPLSfor its flexibility.
WAN
Workers are more nomadic.
Quality of and access tobroadband Internet improves.
• Networks optimize applications.
• Application integration with mobiledevices drives fixed/mobileconvergence in the enterprise.
• Consumer products will invadeenterprise.
Applications
Directory, policy, securityand presence management areintegrated into applications.
In summary, the changes affecting the business market are as follows:
• Convergence of private infrastructure onto IP: This means IP over Ethernet in the LAN. Voice becomes anapplication delivered by a voice application server. This means unified communications (UC) can deliver its promisedbenefits, while online employees use various modes to control calls. Microsoft intends to offer call control capabilitiesat the desktop or the application server, as indicated by Microsoft Office Communicator — the UC client for LiveCommunications Server 2005. An IP-enabled infrastructure can support a voice application server, which enablesenterprises to integrate UC, various modes of voice and messaging, presence and policy management. The "tippingpoint" for IP communications applications comes when approximately one-third of locations in the enterprise havefully embraced IP. At that point, the "network" effect drives the adoption of additional features and availablefunctionality.
• Convergence of public infrastructure onto the public Internet: For many operators, there's little to no differencebetween their backbone networks and their public Internet networks. For branch offices and remote workers that areunwilling or unable to pay for more-expensive private networks guaranteed by service-level agreements, the publicInternet with basic Secure Sockets Layer or IP Security tunneling is good enough.
• Convergence of multiple networks and applications means that centralized directory and policy managementservices assume greater importance in the corporate network. Although MPLS provides a great common backbone,policy and priority management must still be established to ensure the acceptable performance of all applicationswhen e-mail, voice and video multicasting are routed over the same network.
Strategic Planning Assumptions: By 2010, the Internet will be able to support 70% ofbusiness needs and deliver acceptable consumer quality (0.8 probability). By 2010, themajority of large enterprises will rely on MPLS for their WAN needs (0.8 probability). By 2010,the majority of SMBs will rely on IP VPNs over the public Internet for their WAN needs (0.8probability).
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 17Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Communications Providers' Food Chain:An Enterprise View and SWOT Analysis
Nimble start-ups, best-of-breed
Incrementaladvance intoemergingmarkets
Gargantuaninnovation,portfoliochallenges
Huge "mindshare," well-financed
No businesschannels,diversity,integration
Willing massmarkets, tryanything once
Unrealisticuser dreams,expectations
Overwhelmingconsumeracceptance
Low margins,must scale forproductivity
Industryconsolidation,master newtechnology
Volatilecontracts, skillsretention risk
IT core skills,large facilities,talent pool
Regulatedreturns, lowprofit, poorpartnering skills
Wealthy partner,deep resources,FTTH
Future as a bit-pipecommodity,utility
Large-scale,stable, reliable,ubiquitous
ThreatOpportunityWeaknessStrength
NSPs(Fixed, Mobile
Carriers)
ITSPs(EDS, IBM,
CSC)
EnterpriseSolutions(MS, IBM,
ERP)
Wild Cards*(Google,Yahoo)
The leading network service provider (NSP) and IT service provider vendors can be readily characterized as above inour SWOT (strength, weakness, opportunity, threat) analysis. Nontraditional voice providers will create newcategories to consider. Widely popular consumer IT companies (such as Google or Yahoo in search) can potentiallymake serious discontinuities in enterprise sourcing behavior.Enterprise software application systems and platform vendors: When voice is carried as an IP traffic stream on a datacommunications network, it becomes readily integrated into IT applications. As the dominant enterprise solutionsvendors — Microsoft Office Communications Server (previously Live Communications Server); IBM LotusSametime; SAP NetWeaver; Oracle (acquired Telephony@Work); MYOB uses engin — develop "voice" as a featurein new releases, it's clear that previous architectures such as PBX, computer-telephony integration and interactivevoice response will be facing dead-ends.Popular consumer "wild cards": The "giveaway" mass marketing (to sell core products) business model, whichbecame so successful in the "dot-com" era, is creating inexpensive and cheerful alternatives to formal enterprise ITsolutions. Today's popular "freebies" include search for text, images and video; e-mail, VoIP, storage, news,information, merchant payments, directories, location images, services and many more single-function services.Prominent players such as Google, Yahoo and eBay (and even Time Warner or Apple/Disney in the future) will bethoroughly occupied with delivering single-function products in their near-term business plans, but many (currentlyspeculative) mash-ups (blended solutions) will launch during the next few years.Action Item: The leading platform vendors must remain on most shortlists for major corporate projects. Duringplanning and procurement, evaluate the effects of emerging alternatives and blended solutions from potential wild-card players that offer enterprise platform functions.
Strategic Planning Assumption: By 2011, more than 80% of enterprises will permit the use ofeffective consumer IT solutions as employees' personal productivity tools, but fewer than20% of enterprises will adopt consumer IT in a way that actively displaces "mission critical"enterprise systems (0.7 probability).
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 18Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Impact on Equipment Providers: Asian VendorsGrow; Global Equipment Providers Consolidate
-50% 0% 50% 100% 150% 200%
367%
2001-2005 Revenue Evolution
Juniper
Nokia
Motorola
Cisco
Samsung
Siemens
NEC
Ericsson
Alcatel
Nortel
LG
Lucent
Fujitsu
Avaya
Huawei
ZTE
UTStarcom
Carrier Infrastructure
Consolidation: 2005
Alcatel/Lucent $26B
Ericsson/Marconi $21B
Nokia/Siemens $20B
Cisco/Scientific-Atlanta $31B*
* Enterprise + carrier
Watch List for Restructuring,Spinoffs, JVs, Acquisitions:
Nortel
UTStarcom
Ciena
Tellabs
Huawei (2008-2010 likely)
Juniper
ADC
Convergys
During the past five years, the telecom vendor landscape has been thoroughly reshaped. Five years ago,infrastructure vendors Ericsson and Nortel were dominant. Now, they're less than half the size of the leadingvendor, Nokia. Handset vendors were dominant in 2005, thanks to the continued growth of mobileconnectivity worldwide (particularly in North America and China). Enterprise vendors (such as CiscoSystems) experienced a significant drop in revenue in 2001 when the global economy slowed, but they'vesince recovered.
The most-spectacular change during the past five years has been the strong growth of Asian vendors inhandsets and infrastructure. In the handset market, South Korean vendors (such as Samsung and LG) havebenefited from the technical leadership of their home markets. Product road maps in Japan and South Koreaare a year ahead of the rest of the world. The high level of domestic competition in these countries isstimulating further innovations. Japanese and South Korean companies have transformed their technicalleadership into assets for international expansion.
In the infrastructure market, Chinese vendors ZTE, UTStarcom and Huawei have registered impressiveperformances. Initially, they grew in the domestic market by providing low-technology/low-costinfrastructure to carriers. These vendors have expanded well beyond China's borders, initially targetingTier-3 carriers and emerging country markets. They've since won contracts in Asia, Europe (BT's 21stCentury Network), Africa, and North and South America.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 19Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
8
40%
20%
6
Relative Growth: CAGR (%) 2004-2009Size of bubble = relative market size worldwide
Impact on Providers: The 'Grass Isn'tAlways Greener' for Operators
Source: Gartner Analysis, Datamonitor (Cable), 2006
2% 12
Margin(EBIT)
4 10
Cable 4.6%CAGR
Process Mgmt.8.9% CAGR
App. Mgmt.8% CAGR
OperationServices
7.1% CAGRFixed Telecom
Services1.7% CAGR
MobileTelecomServices
10% CAGR
NSPs are seeking margin and revenue growth, but there's strong competition in adjacent markets.
The two typical market expansion areas — consumer video entertainment and enterprise IT services — areheavily competitive.
The growth rates and margins available in these businesses are roughly equivalent to operators' traditionalfixed and mobile service markets. Without the total addressable market growing faster than their "home"markets, operators' only option is to capture share from established IT service providers or cable/satelliteoperators. The resulting competition will further reduce gross margins on services and drive continuedconsolidation in these markets.
The addressable markets by growth/profits make it clear that there are key differences between sectors, butthe telecom sector is, by far, the largest, and none of the others are undeveloped opportunities.
Telcos should offer differentiated positioning to compete, but there are some opportunities (in areas such asvideo on-demand and managed network services) in which growth and margins are relatively attractive.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 20Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
8
40%
20%
6
Relative Growth: CAGR (%) 2004-2009Size of bubble = relative market size worldwide
Impact on Providers: The 'Grass Isn'tAlways Greener' for Operators
Source: Gartner Analysis, Datamonitor (Cable), 2006
2% 12
Margin(EBIT)
4 10
Cable 4.6%CAGR
Process Mgmt.8.9% CAGR
App. Mgmt.8% CAGR
OperationServices
7.1% CAGR
ContinuousMergers & Acquisitions
One-Stop ShopCommunications Providerfor Converged Services
Fixed TelecomServices
1.7% CAGR
MobileTelecomServices
10% CAGR
NSPs are seeking margin and revenue growth, but there's strong competition in adjacent markets.
The two typical market expansion areas — consumer video entertainment and enterprise IT services — areheavily competitive.
The growth rates and margins available in these businesses are roughly equivalent to operators' traditionalfixed and mobile service markets. Without the total addressable market growing faster than their "home"markets, operators' only option is to capture share from established IT service providers or cable/satelliteoperators. The resulting competition will further reduce gross margins on services and drive continuedconsolidation in these markets.
The addressable markets by growth/profits make it clear that there are key differences between sectors, butthe telecom sector is, by far, the largest, and none of the others are undeveloped opportunities.
Telcos should offer differentiated positioning to compete, but there are some opportunities (in areas such asvideo on-demand and managed network services) in which growth and margins are relatively attractive.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 21Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Success Stories Around the Globe
Mobile/wireless kiosk,Kampala, Uganda
MTN — Africa
– Loyalty programs
StarHub (Singapore): Successful quadruple play
– Saturated market (96% penetration)
– Two services: 12% less likely to churn
– Triple play: 28% less likely to churn
– Grew 3-service households by 32% in one year
– Data mining finds common subscribers in a householdand identifies up-sell/cross-sell opportunities
PCCW (Hong Kong): Fast IPTV entrant
– Giving away STBs and offering free service
– Converted 53% of customers to paid in first year
– ARPU rising, but still low
Sprint/Cable Partners quadruple play: U.S.
A work in progress with a view to the future
– Home/mobile mailbox
– Remote DVR control
– Fixed/mobile bundle
BT Global Services and HP: Info. & communication tech.
– Managed services for enterprise
– All IP network services plus IT for enterprises
Despite operating in a market that's near saturation, Singapore's StarHub has been successful with"quadruple play" bundled service offerings that provide mobile, broadband, cable TV and fixed services ona single bill. The offerings have created differentiation by creating unique cross-platform products andservices. The direct benefits have been greater customer retention, customer acquisition and costefficiencies.
PCCW, the former Hong Kong incumbent carrier, took an early lead in deploying mass-market IPTVservices, and was able to justify its strategy of "giving away" (subsidizing) set-top boxes (STBs) to buildmarket share.
BT Global Services and HP are offering telecommunications and IT services for large enterprises. BTcovers the connectivity part, while HP covers IT applications, systems integration and hosting.
Bottom Line: It's unnecessary to chase leading-edge technologies to deliver profitable services. However,it's critical to understand a unique market's behavior, identify unmet customer needs and craft a suitablebusiness model to fit.
Telecommunications Trends: Global Revolution
Page 22Geoff JohnsonPS14_191, 11/06, AE
© 2006 Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Reproduction and distribution of this publication in any form without priorwritten permission is forbidden. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Gartnerdisclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. Gartner shall have no liability for errors,omissions or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for interpretations thereof. The reader assumes sole responsibilityfor the selection of these materials to achieve its intended results. The opinions expressed herein are subject to change withoutnotice.
Use consumer-focused industry innovations to your business's advantage:• Broadband access to public Internet; VoIP; messaging.
Understand the implications of convergence vs. substitution:• Quality of mobile is lower; convenience and personalization is much higher.
• Wait for fixed/mobile convergence on Wi-Fi-enabled mobile handsets to mature (niche only through 2008).
• Fixed/mobile convergence for consumers is a nonstarter.
Identify business applications and process improvements enabled by IP-based infrastructure:• That is, if voice is embedded in a sales force automation application, how does that change your booking process?
Learn from providers and users, particularly in Asia/Pacific:• Asia/Pacific vendors should be on your shortlist for mobile handsets and networking products; user service adoptionin the region is well ahead of that in North America and Europe.
Look for IPTV to succeed in some markets (telcos, however, may not be the winning providers).Watch for telephony and NSPs to evolve into a software-based model:• Revenue counted in licenses, not boxes.
• Look for integration opportunities from a software as well as a business process perspective.
Recommendations
• Use consumer-focused industry innovations to your business's advantage.
• Understand the implications of convergence vs. substitution.
• Identify business applications and process improvements enabled by IP-based infrastructure.
• Communities and markets grow with good tools and freedom, not by provider control.
• Learn from Asian providers and users.
• Look for IPTV to succeed in some markets, but telcos may not be the winning providers.
• Watch for telephony and network service providers to evolve into using software-based models.
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