Research Consultant has taken a peep
into 2018 and predicts that the telecom landscape, worldwide, would be
brighter. The Researcher said this would be hinged on a counter strategy to
last year’s realities where politicians and regulators made policies on
ideology and idiosyncratic preferences rather than on evidences.
Strand says
that the bane of development in 2017 was the division of operators, while some
operators accepted such obnoxious policies as the new normal, others challenged
them in court. Dynamic future The research says that in 2018, some countries
would open the door for markets to drive a dynamic future, while others would
double their efforts in doing away with the failed policies of the past. The
research predicted that Africa will experience consolidation which is needed
among many players in the region, as the Continent is known to have high
penetration, high churn, and low Average Revenue Per User, ARPU. It tipped
Africa as gearing for more investment in the networks, which is the foundation
of the modern society, as political and regulatory pressure adversely affected
the market last year. The research categorically states, “2017 exposed how
politicians and regulators make policy not based on evidence, but on ideology
and idiosyncratic preference. There were also counter trends all over the
world. Some quarters opened doors for markets to drive a dynamic future while
others doubled down on failed policies of the past. Some operators accepted bad
regulation as part of the new normal while others challenged it in court.
Financial analysts incorporated regulatory burden as one of the parameters for
assessment, and CEOs readied questions about the impact of regulatory policies.
“The regulatory world was brutal in 2017, especially in the EU. There it was
effectively a re-nationalization of networks but without financial compensation
to the shareholders. Policymakers made rules for mobile coverage, faster
broadband, free roaming, data protection, and intellectual property, many rules
which negatively impacted shareholder value.
Moreover,
regulators justified their actions by saying they are protecting the internet
and preserving democracy, but the real question is whether it is a cover for
politicians to take control of communication and shut down their political
enemies. Brexit, Trump, and Emmanuel Macron’s successes frighten many
underperforming politicians,” the research provided. The threat to the free and
open internet is not the telecom companies that build and operate networks, but
the governments that want to control people and the information they see.
Political elites are also threatened by the internet’s capabilities to empower
people through platforms, as well as its ability to create a media outside of
national broadcasts. As such internet platforms are also a target for
government regulation. The CEO also revealed, in the
report, what might happen around the world in the next 365 days. According to
him, European politicians will spend a lot of time boasting about their
technological ambitions but the dream will not become a reality for Europeans.
The EU will continue to fall behind the US and East Asia, as these regions
implement 5G network. “The US will be an exciting region to watch, a reset
after the 2015 Title II debacle. The combination of tax reform and regulatory
right-sizing will boost American operators in 5G, IoT, and wireless broadband
technologies. In Latin America, attention will be paid to limited ability to
develop local services and limited level of investment. A culprit may well be
that key networks are still state-owned, frustrating their entrepreneurial
abilities. A possible pendulum swing is afoot, and privatization is long overdue
in many countries. “Asia is probably the most exciting region in 2018 as China,
South Korea and Japan will take another leap into the future. China is grooming
Huawei to be a one-stop shop for telecommunications, enterprise solutions,
smart cities, and energy production. By 2018, Huawei will be not only largest
manufacturer for telecom equipment but solar panels as well. India, once a
textbook success story for its mobile market liberalization, is a basket case.
Increasing broadband regulation imperils investment, and performance in
infrastructure deployment and internet adoption lags.” Increase traffic The
report further states that, 2018 will likely feature the production of new
technology with high user value for the mass market, whose development will
likely increase the demand for connectivity, subscriptions, bandwidth, software
and hardware based SIM cards.
Strand Consult is not
confident that most operators will experience increased revenue and earnings
because of increased traffic and new technology. The
Internet of Things (IoT) market will also likely grow significantly, as new
services are deployed on top of old technologies, making the transition for
consumers easier and cheaper. One example is devices for cars On Board
Diagnostics (OBD) port which transforms old cars into intelligent smart cars, a
backward enablement for analog vehicles. Consumers will use their smartphone to
make their car smarter and the driving experience better. ODB solutions
providers collaborate with mobile operators such as T-Mobile, Telia and others
on combining technologies for new services. 2018 will prove that intelligent
homes and cities can be realized incrementally without a complete overhaul of
network and technology. Decommissioning 2G Strand continues, “in 2018 many
operators will declare the decommissioning of 2G/GSM and even 3G/UMTS networks
and move toward 100% at 4G/LTE networks. The development will be driven by the
positive experiences with 4G while the number of cheap phones that support
different 4G frequency bands increases. The savings that an operator can achieve
by operating a clean 4G network is so large that operators will try to expedite
the processes. The case study is the American Verizon with its successful
migration from CDMA to 4G/LTE, achieved faster than promised their
shareholders. “The world of connectivity is converging
and diverging simultaneously. Existing value chains are breaking up while new
ones are being forged. Telecom was once a vertically integrated industry in
which the same firm sold network access, service, and device. This model has
been disrupted at every level. Diversification of the value chain has brought
opportunity to market entrants. Consider how premium SMS services brought new
ringtones, logos, Java games and TV voting or how MVNOs created new distribution
channels. 2018 will bring more partnerships between operators, IoT providers,
MVNOs, MVNEs and other players.” Strand Consult believes that the number of
operators which can develop their own IoT services will be limited. Many
operators will recognize that opportunity in offering solutions for global IoT
connectivity. Room for apps Few competitors are teed up to challenge the
dominance of Google and Apple in the app store market. While there is room for
apps with unique offers, the clear majority of app-based services will be
delivered through the two app stores that Apple and Google own and operate. In
2018 app store bottlenecks and related platform algorithms will get regulators’
attention. Platforms will face big challenges in 2018, says Strand. He pridicts
that; “Google turns 20 years old in 2018. While Facebook, Amazon, Apple and
other platform companies have been around for a while, they are bigger than
most countries in users and revenue. Governments are struggling to figure out
how to handle these players. Digital ambassadors Denmark has dispatched a
Digital Ambassador to Silicon Valley with responsibility for these actors, as
they are digital countries in their own right. Some believe there needs to be
global government for these actors, a United Nations of Cyberspace as it were.
There is no doubt that the EU wants them regulated. It’s interesting to think
about regulators’ assessment of the problem. They said that to spawn the next
Google, we need net neutrality rules. Netherlands, Slovenia, or Chile have had
these rules for almost a decade, and no Google has emerged from them. Internet
innovation Indeed these countries have reduced the amount of internet
innovation they made from before rules were adopted. If anything, net
neutrality regulation has only strengthened the power of the existing
platforms, giving them artificial subsidies in transmission and protection from
competition. Finding a revenue stream from these platforms is the Holy Grail
for policymakers. 2018 will see more on focus on taxation. Facebook says they
will now move to a local sales structure, providing offices to support local
advertisers and returning tax revenue for countries. While Facebook has
customers in 195 countries but offices only in 30, the change is likely not
significant. The company reported that the shift probably not will increase
their overall tax burden. There is no doubt that some will take pleasure in
platforms getting their just desserts, but the truth is that increasing
regulation is not good for consumers and citizens. Regulation of fake news is
often a cover for censorship. And increasing the burden on platforms is not a
selling point for reducing regulation on telecommunications. The government
just grows more entrenched overall. Conclusively, the report predicts that 2018
will be a challenging year for creative people and innovative companies. “There
will be tons of new solutions that can add value to society, but there will
continue to be a challenge that increasing regulation will limit the
possibilities for business models. The price of technology has fallen so much,
user interfaces are so user friendly that what we should now be focused on is
how to create a number of sound business models that can stimulate adoption.
“We expect more information to emerge in the early part of the year. CES in Las
Vegas, and Mobile World Congress are two events which will set the tone for
2018. Strand Consult expects another exciting year and looks forward to
contributing with serious knowledge and analysis to help our customers to
navigate in a complex world. We also look forward to educating policymakers
with a more realistic view of the industry. We hope these predictions give you
inspiration for 2018. It is our 17th year in making predictions, and we try to
inform, delight, and challenge our audience.”
1 comment:
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