Archive for the ‘Mobile Industry’ Category

Mobile Advertising?

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

I don’t know about you, but I have heard little positive news about mobile advertising. Most everybody agrees that it simply is not ready for primetime. One of the more philosophical reasons given is that as an industry we are trying to take a web-based model and make it work on mobile phones, which is kind of like putting banner ads on television - it simply doesn’t make sense. One of the more pragmatic reasons people sometimes give for a lackluster mobile advertising market is that it doesn’t work very well: Little banner ads that click off to little WAP pages (with the restrictions in the mobile space against porn, booze, tobacco, carrier competitors, etc.) just doesn’t generate response rates comparable to current expectations.

Intercasting Corp is not ad-driven, so I do not have a horse in this race other than a general curiosity and a belief that a vibrant mobile advertising industry is a future cornerstone to a more open mobile consumer experience. One thing is for sure, compared to the web, mobile consumers represent a roughly sixfold increase in market size; unlocking the potential of such a market will create the next (and bigger) Google.

I am no expert on the subject and therefore have no opinion. Someone who is an expert on the subject (and who has an opinion) is Paul Palmieri, CEO of Millennial Media, the leading mobile ad network.

His latest blog post, “Saying ‘Yes’ to Mobile in 2009″ offers great insight into the mobile ad market and offers some data that debunks some of the conventional wisdom. 2009 may be the start of something big in mobile advertising. Give it a read - it is definitely worth your time.

Social wrapped around everything

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

I haven’t felt very bloggy lately. Forgive me – it seems I have been living on an airplane for the past two months. I have been traveling around the world, visiting clients, planning for next year, etc., and I can tell you that next year is going to be awesome: There is a convergence of trends that we assumed would happen one day, and those trends are really starting to converge in a big way. Those trends are:

1) Social networking becomes a mainstream communication medium (check)
2) Mobile operators embrace the value of social networking in the mobile space (check)
3) Social communication becomes a feature of the native mobile device UI (soon)

That last one is the bit that is going to make 2009 so exciting for me. Underway now are the various projects at various carriers and OEMs to make mobile phones “social.” Derrick and I have been meeting with all of our clients to plan around their initiatives and our new functionality, and I have to say that what I see in general is really the most innovative thinking I have seen across the industry in some time.

Almost every carrier in the world has the following projects in various stages of development at this very moment:
- “Social address book”
- “One-click upload” camera
- Active UI
- Open app store

As a quick aside, I should note that most of the OEMs and some of the infrastructure providers also have the same projects defined, and it is going to be a zero-sum game among them; among large hardware companies, some move more swiftly than others. As the lines blur between hardware and software, everyone is swimming upstream. Who does the future belong to? Ask Verizon Wireless, soon to be the largest carrier in North America, how they plan to dominate their market. Then again, ask Nokia who they think the customer belongs to, as they continue to build their capabilities not just in handsets and infrastructure, but also in services now. Talk to companies like Alcatel Lucent, in the midst of a management upheaval, where they need to go to stay in the game. “Closer to the consumer,” is the answer for everyone. How to do it? PANDER to consumer whims as never before, give them what they want, and give it to them in the absolute best experience possible.

What do mobile consumers want? Ease of use, low cost and social interaction. And that is exactly what consumers are going to get starting in 2009. Imagine your cheap subsidized feature phone acting more like an iPhone, getting a simplified user interface that is easy and even fun to use, and wrap the word “social” around the most important features. Look forward to the following:

- Active UI: Get RSS feeds, friend feeds, alerts, notifications, messages and media delivered directly into your phone’s native UI. What is an inbox anyway? Can’t the idle screen work more like an active communication dashboard? Yes. And soon it will.

- More useful cameras: Why do only 10% of photos ever make their way off of the mobile device? Because it is really hard to send photos. And what is the incentive to send a photo via MMS anyway? Sharing? Is it more valuable to share with a million people versus one person? Yes. Tighter integration between camera phones and photo hosting and sharing providers is like wrapping “social” around your camera.

- Social address book: Communication is multimodal. You send emails, you use IM, you use Facebook, you send SMS, maybe you even use Twitter. All of your contacts are in different address books. Your mobile phone should be more multimodal than it is. Since it is the device that is with you more than any other, it makes sense that it should have a superset of all your contacts no matter where they originate, and no matter what mode of communication you wish to employ, your phone should be able to do it.

- App store for the rest of us:
With all the hype around the smart phone market lately, you would think that everyone in the world had an iPhone. The truth is that Apple represents a small slice of the smart phone market, which amounted to no more than 120mm units shipped worldwide this year. Feature phones (the less expensive, lower-powered types) account for 1.13 BILLION units sold this year, and they are getting better every day. Those consumers will soon be able to pick and choose functionality and add applets that extend the value of their phones, and it won’t be a rev of the existing “download storefront” model. Look for something totally different and refreshingly simple.

As all of these initiatives make their way to market, consumers will end up winning big. The entire mobile communication experience is about to shift and just get…better. What it all adds up to is a personalized and frictionless communication experience. That is the power of “social.” It is a too-often used word that is ill-defined in the context of technology and communication, but nonetheless it is fueling a revolution in the way people communicate that is about to raise the bar in the mobile industry.

Mobile content demand inelasticity

Monday, October 13th, 2008

How is your portfolio looking today?

I suppose I understand as well as anyone at a macro level what is driving the global financial meltdown. I also understand what a lack of cash means to banks and what a lack of credit availability means to businesses and individuals. Perhaps most importantly, (to my business and our industry, anyway) I understand what all of these macro trends means to the typical mobile consumer: Nothing.

When it comes to the microeconomics of managing our business, I am keenly aware of even the slightest fluctuation in our daily stats. I can tell you when a carrier has done a promotion, put us in a “featured” category, changed a category, altered a naming convention, changed marketing language, had a problem with their storefront vendor, launched a new handset or, put simply, changed anything in any way whatsoever. This is because demand is constant for mobile content and communication, and it is other variables that affect consumption. I just looked at our daily new user stats, and yesterday we had more than 50% more new users than we did exactly 30 days ago. The global financial crisis evidently has little impact on purchasing behavior for products below the $5 mark.

Notice the line at Starbucks is as long as ever. Your triple grande latte is a low-price luxury good, and at the margin, cutting out your $3/day habit does not materially impact your ability to pay the rent. The perceived value of that latte is higher than the cost, because dammit, with the world crumbling around you, you deserve it. So it is with your $1.49 to access MySpace Mobile. (In fact, your barista will tell you that there is a statistically significant increase in demand for whip cream over the past month.)

There are few substitutions for mobile communication, and over the years, our industry has found the market-clearing price for most forms of mobile content. But price is not the most important variable because demand for mobile content and communication is inelastic: The percentage change in demand is smaller than the percentage change in price. This is why carriers increase the price of SMS even as volume increases – they know that increasing the price increases revenue at a higher rate than whatever drop off in demand the increased price might produce. Despite LNP, it is still a perceived high-cost proposition for consumers to switch carriers, even to a lower-cost alternative.

The greatest function of demand for content and 3rd-party communication services in the mobile space is not price – it is discoverability. If a carrier put a big red button on the home screen of every one of their phones tomorrow with a label that said “Press to pay $10,” and that was all the big red button did but it was the only thing on the home screen of everyone’s phone, they would have at least 50% of all subscribers push the big red button.

Preloading is a form of big red button: Where our interface is preloaded rather than offered as a downloadable app from a carrier’s deck, we see a minimum 20x increase in new users who have that handset vs. a comparable device in market. That is a significant multiple, and it has nothing to do with price – it is all about discoverability.

We have tested consumer price points from $10 to Free, and we have learned that all other variables being equal, Free does not increase adoption, and to some measurable extent, it increases churn because the consumer has made no investment in the experience. This is as true amid a global financial crisis as it was in more generally prosperous times. The most effective consumer offers for communication services are “finite day pass” and MRC.

The world is full of bad news, but at least one can take solace in the fact that the mobile consumer displays an attitude that rewards utility not just with usage, but with money. ;-)

Nokia acquiring Oz

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Today Nokia announced that it is acquiring Oz, the mobile IM and email provider. First things first: Congratulations to Skuli and team. Secondly, one must pose the question: Is there no stopping Nokia? In the midst of a worldwide financial crisis that has all sources of cash completely ferklempt, and even as its own stock price takes a beating, Nokia brazenly forges ahead with non-trivial acquisitions, confident in its market position, its strategy and its fundamentals. And why shouldn’t they? NOK, like many telecom sector companies, (and one might even say all companies ex-financial sector) has strong fundamentals, and while the contagion of fear may certainly affect them as investors (who are all on some level speculators) run for the door, this is exactly the time when acting out of fear paralyzes companies. And so Nokia will probably pull farther out in front as its competitors succomb to fear at exactly the wrong moment.

But I digress - I am not a financial pundit, and what I really wanted to talk about is the Software and Services strategy in the mobile space and what the acquisition of Oz means for the incumbents competitive to Nokia.

Nokia bought Oz for an obvious reason: They have been sending out 200mm feature phones a year with no 3rd-party messaging capability. Baking consumer email and IM into those devices solves that problem, and serves well their Software and Services strategy. As devices become less “discreet hardware” and more “service-delivery platforms,” the importance of filling the void for consumers increases. Companies like Oz fill that void for IM and email very well.

In fact, there are a lot of platform companies that fill similar voids. One need only look at Nokia’s history of acquisitions to identify those voids:
Navteq – location services
Enpocket – ad serving
Plazes – social mapping
Loudeye – music
Twango – social networking
Avvenu – desktop sync

Now all they need is Search, Games, News, Weather, Sports, Photo Upload, VoIP and Contact Sync and they effectively become a mobile media company likely to rival, in the long run, AOL, Yahoo, MSN, etc.

I frankly expect to see no slowdown at Nokia and wouldn’t be surprised if they kept ticking off “need to have” verticals with more acquisitions. Of course, near and dear to my heart is the social networking vertical. Just as Nokia can now provide 3rd-party IM and email, so will they eventually provide 3rd-party social networking. (If consumer trends continue in this direction.) Twango became Nokia Share, which is not like “an Oz for social networking.”

But that means that everybody else has to continue, as well. Really interesting to me is what happens when Nokia makes an acquisition. There is a not-small universe of companies around Nokia that, to remain competitive, has to move in a certain direction whenever Nokia moves. Any competitor to their handset or infrastructure division has to now be looking at the Oz acquisition and planning a move into 3rd-party messaging, no? And which private companies are “Oz-like”? Certainly there are a slew of platform companies that provide vary types of similar services. It will be interesting to see what happens next.

Mostly, I am interested to see which companies rise to challenge Nokia during this generally fearful moment in history. I personally think Nokia is making bold moves and showing resolve to win at a time when other CEOs might be forced to pursue a more conservative approach.

In Europe now, thinking about business models

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

My most recent RCR Wireless column is about mobile social networking business models. Here is a link to it on the RCR site, and since I think that link will eventually expire, the text is below. The point is that every participant in the mobile social networking ecosystem has a different strategy, and so there is no single business model that works for everyone.

I happen to be in London at the moment, then I’m off to Germany and some other fine countries, visiting customers, etc. Coming here is a good way to maintain perspective on business models, because the mobile consumer experience is so different compared to in the U.S. Flexibility is key when dealing with a worldwide customer base. One thing that remains constant across all of our customers around the world is the increasing importance of integrating 3rd-party communication service providers into the mobile communication experience.

Anyway, here is the text of the RCR article…

On social networking business models

I have a good vantage point of the mobile social networking opportunity: The largest social networking providers, wireless carriers, content providers and OEMs are using my company’s Anthem platform as the backbone of their mobile social networking strategies and roadmaps. I more or less know what everyone is planning in this space up to about 18 months out. Everyone is doing something similar, yet everyone is approaching it very differently, (if that makes sense) and the end result is going to be a very rich user experience.

Mobile social networking is one of the highest priorities among carriers, OEMs, social networking providers, and content providers because it essentially redefines the personal communication experience. It may be a bit difficult to envision, but as simply as you click on a friend in your address book or shoot off an SMS, the word “social” is being wrapped around the consumer experience in exciting ways. You will soon find that there is no “WAP site” or “application” per se in the mix. Rather, you will find access to your favorite social sites baked into the very UI of your device.

It makes perfect sense, of course, that wireless carriers would embrace what is essentially an evolution of their core business model, which is providing communication services. (And social networking is simply a communication service, on the same continuum as voice, SMS, email, IM and so forth.) It also makes sense that social networking providers would embrace the mobile consumer: Social networking was established and flourishes on the Web, which is limited to a 500-million-strong consumer base (roughly the number of PCs that are connected to the Internet). Compare this to the roughly 3 BILLION mobile consumers worldwide, and it’s no wonder the largest social networking providers in the world are rushing to the mobile space to grow their numbers.

But here arises the question of business model, which is the intended subject of this article. There is a natural tension between wireless carriers and social networking providers because the former has built a business around getting paid for providing communication services while the latter has built a business around providing communication services for free while advertisers subsidize the experience. That they are both basically in the same business of providing communication services, and are therefore on some level competitive, would only seem to add to the issue as the opportunity grows. However, the very size of the opportunity is the thing that is encouraging cooperation among all parties, and I am glad to see it. All that is left is the question of business model.

And here is where I am truly amazed at how differently everyone is viewing the future. The basic consumer-facing models being discussed are:

- Subscription.

- Day pass. (Typically for pre-paid carriers).

- Bundled with data package or tier.

- Paid via defined rate plan.

- Free and ad-supported.

- “Free” and indirectly monetized. (Such as through SMS and MMS).

- “Free” as part of an all-you-can-eat data plan.

There is no one consumer offering that will work across the board, because carriers worldwide operate under very different economic realities.

The presentation paradigms are:

- WAP.

- Downloadable application.

- Preloaded application.

- On-device portal (to the category).

- Integrated into the native UI.

On presentation, we are seeing a resurgence of focus on applications and on-device portal (ODP) supplanting the recent reliance on WAP. Ultimately, I expect for the paradigm to shift entirely to a device-integrated view of communication services, including social networking.

The dimensions that drive adoption are, in order of impact:

- Discoverability overall.

- Search marketing and slotting.

- Placement.

- Brand.

- Promotion (across the board, but cross-promotion in the store is most effective).

- Friction (lowering of).

- Functionality (more and more useful).

- Virality.

- Price.

In various combinations, the three lists above equal success or failure of the category. I would like to point out that contrary to popular belief, something that is free and ad-supported on the Web does not necessarily have to be free and ad-supported in the mobile space (IM is a good example of this). Remember that we are dealing with different consumers, (and 2.5 billion of them) many of whom have never seen MySpace on a PC because they don’t own a PC. For all they know, everything on the Internet costs a dollar. Be careful about your business model, because we have some carriers charging for the category but with superior discoverability that are outperforming others which provide it for free though it is impossible to find.

In the future, there will be one best presentation of social functionality, and it will pervade and extend the usefulness of the device. In many cases today, the carriers are essentially competing with themselves by offering two versions of a social networking site — a “free” WAP version and a paid-application version. For the moment, this is fine since the functionality differs significantly and appeals differently to various consumer segments. As active user interfaces evolve, we expect to see WAP fade in popularity because A) the interface will be transparent, and B) will offer far greater functionality than WAP ever will be able to. I can further predict that this pervasive functionality will drive the business model as well. All but the most cost-constrained MVNO will make social networking “feel” as “free” as SMS or even voice feels today — sure you know it is costing you something, but the thought of that cost does not stop you from sending the next SMS or making a call.

Lastly, let me say that while the advertising model in the mobile space certainly faces its challenges today, the basic dynamics of monetizing an audience have held true for centuries: Where there is a gathering crowd, there is a marketplace to sell them something. Carriers, OEMs, content providers and social networking providers are keenly aware of this fact, and with some hard work and cooperation, this space is going to flourish in a way that will satisfy all interested parties.

Sizing the mobile social networking opportunity

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

I got an email this morning from Informa Telecom and Media about their latest report on Mobile Social Networking. It is called “Mobile Social Networking: Communities and content on the move.”

Here is a link about it.

Judging from the table of contents, it looks very comprehensive. There doesn’t seem to be a company in the mobile social networking ecosystem that they didn’t interview or include. We’re in there along with many companies we work with and others we just have respect for. I did not spend the $4485 to read it, but apparently someone did:

“This report is the first of its kind, to keep the hype to one side, and truly focus on what is under the covers of online communities globally. It explores the role of the different players, involved in the value chain of user generated content including the innovative software vendors, trusted operators, and the trendy social networks. This is a hot area at the moment; it is great to see such a comprehensive report that deals with the facts”

Source: Nagappan Arunachalam, Chief Marketing Officer, NewBay Software

The subject line in the email was “Mobile Social Network revenues could reach US$52 billion by 2012.”

Is calling out a $52 billion projection to keep the hype to one side? I don’t know. That’s a pretty big number. By comparison, the entire worldwide recorded music industry generated just shy of $30 billion last year. EADS, maker of the Airbus A380, generated $52 billion in revenue last year. So did Archer Daniels Midland, (supermarket to the world) Metlife, The Dow Chemical Company and Sears. China mobile made $49 billion last year, as did Chrysler.

So I understand if you are skeptical that the “mobile social networking” industry is going to be worth $52 billion in a few years. Without having read the report, I cannot opine on their methodology, though I am sure it is well justified. The few pages they made public were very well presented.

I think about the future of this space a lot, and as a leading mobile social networking platform provider, I have an enlightened self interest in doing so. I also see an entire ecosystem of players standing on the periphery of what looks like a potentially massive opportunity, all with a similarly enlightened self interest, wondering when the wave is going to hit and how big it is going to be.

Here is the simple truth: Mobile social networking today is nascent and small. Despite the white-hotness of the buzz term “mobile social networking” and the relatively significant amount of attention that it gets in the press and by analysts and by social networking providers who quote mobile user numbers in the millions, today we are only seeing the tip of the iceberg.

Think about how many people use social networking sites on the web. That’s a big number, right? The largest sites claim a hundred million registered users and more. Wow. That’s a big audience.

But consider that there are only about 1 billion PCs in the world, and that only about half of those are connected to the internet. The entire internet consists of about 500 million consumers. If MySpace and Facebook and Bebo and Hi5 and everyone else limited themselves to the internet, they could not reasonably claim more than their fair share of 500 million users.

Look, I understand that the worldwide user numbers of the largest web-based social networking sites are clearly nothing to sneeze at, and the universal appeal of social networking is obvious. But let’s say hypothetically that Facebook gets every person on the web to use their site. Great. That’s 500 million people. That would be awesome for them.

But what about the 2.5 BILLION other potential consumers of social networking services? For comparison purposes, did you know that there are roughly 1.7 billion worldwide users of Instant Messaging? Does that pencil to you? That is more than 3 times the number of PCs connected to the internet. Clearly, some non-trivial percentage of IM usage is via the mobile phone. 783 million of those 1.7 billion users are on QQ in China, and there are far more mobile phones than there are internet-connected computers in China.

The Informa study projects 562 million mobile social networking users in 2012 in its middle-scenario forecast. That’s less than 20% of all mobile consumers worldwide. I frankly think this is very conservative when you consider the following:
- Mobile social networking is an evolution of personal communication
- The mobile phone is the most personal communication device in history
- Social networking is replacing other forms of communication, including email and IM
- Competing carriers are driving consumer data costs down, and using the most popular data applications (like social networking) to attract users
- Device manufacturers are integrating social networking into the native phone experience

In a few years, every mobile device will be “social enabled,” and consumers will simply expect social functionality to pervade their mobile communication toolset.

Bizarrely, some of the largest web-based social networking providers have not recognized the massive opportunity in mobile and still require their users to register on the web. You may then be able to access the site from your mobile phone, but this approach presupposes that you have a PC. Thankfully, adoption of our platform (among other industry shifts) is helping to change this, as carriers and OEMs increasingly promote a more mobile-centric view of social networking.

But think about that for a moment: All of the hype you have seen around MySpace and Facebook and Bebo and all the rest of the entire category has been about the tip of the iceberg. Yes, it has been nothing less than a cultural revolution. It has changed the way we interact. It has changed the definition of such fundamentally well-understood concepts like “friend” and how we communicate and how and in what way we use our computers and internet connections. But it has been mostly about only a fraction of the opportunity.

Imagine you are one of the 6.1 billion other people on the planet who has seen a newspaper headline or a magazine story or a TV program about how social networking is the most powerful shift in personal communication in history, and you have no idea what it means because you have never created a MySpace page, and you don’t even have a computer.

Was that the way Bill Gates saw the future in 1975? Did he just see a fertile untilled field of then-nonexistent worldwide users to be grown and cultivated? I think he did.

Did Microsoft do it alone? No. They were part of a giant and very valuable ecosystem where a lot of companies created a lot of value, but at the beginning, it was small and nascent. Consider the players in the mobile social networking ecosystem:

1) Look at the mobile social networking opportunity through the eyes of the handset divisions of Nokia, Samsung or Motorola, which are all seeing “open” networks creating increased opportunity for them as consumer value shifts to the edge of the network, and namely into the devices themselves. They all have to offer a better and more compelling version of social communication than their competitors.

2) Or view social networking through the eyes of the infrastructure vendors like Alcatel, Qualcomm, Sun, Cisco or Ericsson, which are all evolving their portfolios to offer consumer-centric software and services. They all have to offer carrier-grade solutions that are optimized for a social communication future.

3) Don’t forget about the wireless carriers like Verizon, AT&T, Vodafone and Telefonica, all of which are looking for ways to increase data ARPU while managing massive subscriber bases that are demanding lower-friction access to their favorite third-party communication service providers, namely the brand-name social networking providers.

4) Or see “mobile” through the web-centric eyes of the market leaders like MySpace, Facebook and Bebo, all of which are under pressure to continue their historically unprecedented annual growth and to evolve their business models to show an increasingly difficult-to-show revenue story. Mobile is not anymore just a “nice to have” for these incumbents – it is their likely future.

5) Don’t think that “mobile social networking” is not on the radars of AOL, MSN, Yahoo and Google, all of which have to maintain their positions as the aggregators of an online audience that is increasingly going mobile and at the same time going social. I would not be surprised if in five years Google was primarily a mobile social search company.

My point is that the confluence of so many massive industries around a single concept that is at the moment barely a seed that has been planted is an indication of the massive growth that lies ahead. The organizational inertia behind such huge strategic initiatives is moving this “opportunity” into an “industry” in its own right. Communication is future-proof, and the word “social” is inextricably linked to the future of communication.

So tell me: Does $52 billion in 5 years seem plausible now? It does to me.

The Rule of Three in the U.S. wireless industry

Friday, June 6th, 2008

One of my favorite business books is Jagdish Sheth’s The Rule of Three – Surviving and Thriving in Competitive Markets.

It basically states that markets mature to support three big “generalist” players, leaving the niche markets to more focused “specialists.” The mid-sized generalists get forced out one way or another.

Mature markets end up looking sort of like the structure of the modern American shopping mall, with the big department store anchors at the ends and a bunch of specialized stores in between.

You know this intuitively across many industries:
American Airlines, UAL and Delta
Experian, Equifax and TransUnion
GM, Ford, and DaimlerChrysler

Sheth indicates the four forces that affect market evolution toward efficiency:
- industry consolidation
- government intervention
- establishment of de facto standards
- shared infrastructure

It is a brilliant book, and you should buy it and read it.

So, Verizon Wireless is buying ALLTEL, driven by a desire to further consolidate the industry. That leaves:
VZW, AT&T and Sprint
…as the three big generalists.

That leaves T-Mobile, which just crossed the 30mm subscriber mark, and U.S. Cellular as the mid-sized generalists. Virgin, Boost, (yes I know they are technically Sprint) Leap, metroPCS, Tracfone and a host of regional players are the niche specialists.

If the rule of three is correct, logic would dictate that T-Mobile and U.S. Cellular would now get pulled into play, with AT&T as the most likely suitor for T-Mo, and VZW or Sprint as the most likely acquirer of U.S. Cellular, given the respective GSM/CDMA standards. (I do not think Sprint is feeling spendy at the moment, though putting everything else aside, they almost have to buy U.S. Cellular.) Logic would further dictate that if those deals are going to get done at all, and if government intervention (or lack thereof) is a driving force in the Rule of Three, they are going to get done during the Bush administration. But whatever, that’s not what I want to talk about…

Let’s assume for a moment that the middle players do, in fact, get consolidated and we are left with three generalists. Then what? Maybe Starbucks. Let me explain. Quoting from Sheth’s book:

“In 1987, the Big 3 in coffee – General Foods, Procter & Gamble and Nestle – controlled about 90 percent of the U.S. Market. But Starbucks appeared on the scene, creating a market for upscale coffee that dramatically challenged the Big 3 and the commodity-like nature of their offerings. All three had produced canned, ground coffees that were made from the inexpensive beans of the robusta coffee plant of West Africa. Competition between the leaders was based strictly on price, since the tastes of their products were virtually indistinguishable.”

So who is the Starbucks of the mobile telecom space that will challenge the eventual Big 3? The sands are shifting, for sure, so it is not entirely out of the question that it could happen. Also, like circa 1987 coffee, basic wireless voice service is virtually the same among the various carriers, in as much as I cannot tell a difference when someone calls me from a particular carrier or phone. On the other hand, the competitive dimensions are certainly different in this case.

If “wireless service” today is the “West African robusta plant” of 1987, then what is the wireless equivalent of the “Peruvian-Sumatra organic hand-picked sustainable micro-farmed espresso roast”?

Some would argue that in the landline space, Skype (or VoIP, more generally) was the new coffee to challenge the incumbent long distance carriers. By that logic, maybe WiMAX/LTE will be peddled by a Starbuckian challenger.

Or maybe that aspect of the consumer experience is not where the opportunity lies. Maybe the future opportunity lies outside the network. Here are some thoughts:

With all the talk about “openness,” it is possible that wireless carriers start to look more like utilities, or maybe closer to the current internet “backbone” that is really a cartel of tier-1 ISPs. That structure is interesting to me because the cartel reinforces margins while keeping competitors out via tacit price collusion. (The consideration of connection to the PSTN clouds this possibility a bit, I know, but even without a true closed free peering arrangement, the U.S. carriers can certainly approximate “pipes” or “backbones” or whatever you want to call them.)

This structure will create the greatest opportunity for two major players on the consumer value chain: Device Manufacturers and Media Companies, and both stand to win big over the next few years.

Let’s start with Device Manufacturers, which are on their own path to consolidation, btw:
Nokia, Samsung and Motorola (generalists)
LG, SonyEricsson (middle players)
RIM, HTC, ZTE, Apple (niche players, and I should note these are some large and growing niches)

Nokia is embracing a Software and Services strategy, and the rest of the OEMs will be fast followers down this path. This makes perfect sense: As the carriers are ironing out their business models, functionality is shifting to the edge of the network. No wonder the smart phone market is finally taking off. The bigger the pipe, the more horsepower I need in my phone to process the data. Nokia could be the Starbucks of the mobile industry by shifting consumers’ expectations of what their phone is and does. No longer are the lines between hardware and software clearly defined. The discreet address book on your phone will soon be a “social address book” that maintains live linkages to your friends on MySpace or Bebo. Your phone’s camera, originally built for 1-to-1 transmission will soon include one-click and no-click upload to your favorite photo hosting or social networking destination. Location will finally be meaningfully integrated horizontally across services on your device, opening the door to new data services such as grid-based always-on directory. That a device manufacturer would endeavor to increase competitive advantage by presenting the BEST device-integrated service offering is a logical evolution of that industry segment.

The media companies also have a chance of being the Starbucks in the wireless telecom industry. Google has made no secret of the fact that it wants to own the wireless consumer, as does Yahoo, Microsoft, AOL, News Corp, Viacom, NBC Universal, Vivendi, CBS, and many others. As we move into the mobile media era, there is a requirement to redefine what “media” is and make sure that you have a strategy for capturing audience with the right media that people want to consume. For instance, I don’t think any traditional media company would consider “location information” to be “media,” but in the mobile space it absolutely is, making Nokia’s acquisition of Navteq a fairly brilliant stroke.

I know firsthand that many media companies have a sense of what the redefinition of media means for them and the critical role the mobile audience plays in their future. I just re-read The Highwaymen. People like Redstone, Murdoch, Turner, Gates, Malone and Diller are not likely to sit idly by as the mobile media opportunity grows to billions of dollars. Or I may be wrong and they will sit idly by and watch people like Yang, Schmidt, DeWolfe and Zuckerberg divide the pie. The very fact that the media collective as a whole comes from outside the wireless industry may be reason enough that any one of them could evolve into the Starbucks of the wireless telecom industry.

In any case, consolidation (perhaps counter-intuitively) has historically created opportunity for various reasons, and I think the coming opportunity in the mobile space is huge, particularly for those few companies that are positioning themselves early.

In summary, as the lines blur between hardware, software and services, creating a Venn diagram with a sweet spot in the center, I believe we will see each of those three dimensions collapse in toward that sweet spot. When subscriber growth stabilizes and consolidation commodifies the basic service offering, the value to the consumer will shift to complementary services, creating the next opportunity in the mobile space.

Economics of the Dumb Pipe

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

**This is the full version of an article I wrote for this week’s Reality Check column in RCR Wireless. To meet the character limit, the RCR version was truncated, and the last part of the conclusion was missing.**

For the entirety of my career in the wireless space, I have always worked for a small company selling something to or through wireless network operators. As such, I have made a good number of friends who work at these various carriers. I have observed that the most reliable way to get their dander up is to casually insert into the middle of any conversation, “Well, it doesn’t really matter because you are eventually just going to be a dumb pipe anyway.” Then I sit back, sip my mojito and watch the ensuing rant. Fun times.

Last week I tried this with a friend of mine who works at a carrier, and he said, “I prefer to think of it as ‘an open marketplace of ideas and innovation.’” Attitudes on this topic are changing. In fact, there is great enthusiasm for what most people agree will be a reduction of friction if we all embrace the word “open.” This got me thinking. First off, my friend is absolutely correct: When cast in a slightly different light and without the derogatory descriptor, a “dumb pipe” has the potential to be a very good thing. That simple realization led me to wonder how good it could actually be, and specifically from a financial standpoint. Could a major wireless carrier flip a switch to full “dumb pipe” mode and in so doing, take massive operational cost out of their equation and increase their value overnight?

What follows is an admittedly rough analysis of that possibility, so the conclusion may only be within spitting distance of the truth, but if it is even that close, I am very surprised by the conclusion.

BASELINE
I started by looking at the financials and structures of some of the world’s largest wireless carriers. There are certainly some differences between them, but at a high level, the structure is essentially the same. I could have used any of them as a model, but for my exercise, I happened to use Sprint’s publicly available financials from 2004 which I found to have a very readable structure and some useful details. (Also, I looked only at the wireless division, and not the consolidated financials.)

At the end of 2004, Sprint had 24.7mm wireless subscribers, 7.7mm of which were also data subscribers. Here is the revenue and margin analysis for that year: (numbers are in millions)

Net Operating Revenues $ 14,647 100%
Operating Expenses
Costs of services and products 7,096 48.4%
Selling, general and administrative 3,406 23.3%
Depreciation 2,557 17.5% (includes amortization)
Amortization 6
Restructuring and asset impairments 30 .2%
Total operating expenses 13,095 89.4%
Operating Income $ 1,552 10.6%
Adjusted Operating Income $ 1,577 10.8%
Adjusted EBITDA $ 4,140 28.3%

These are solid financials, and a 10% operating margin is quite respectable. Here is some other important data:
- 26,288 employees
- $557,000 in revenue per employee
- $2.5 billion in capital expenditure
- ~$62 ARPU
- ~15,500 retail sales outlets
- 800 branded stores and kiosks
- 17.5mm direct customer base

The gross add distribution mix is interesting and also an important part of the analysis:
Stores and kiosks: 38%
Alliance partners: 22%
Other direct: 18%
3rd party national/local: 22%

ANALYSIS
So now let’s make some assumptions and do some back-of-the-envelope math. First, I define “dumb pipe” as “branded access” with the closest analog being an ISP. I also roughly estimate the employee functions into four buckets, and used percentages based on anecdotal information from a few sources at different carriers:

Salespeople 20%
Customer Care 40%
Network Operations 25%
Management and HQ 15%

(The first time I heard that it is not at all unusual for a present-day carrier to have Customer Care represent 40% of their employee base, I was astounded, but it is fairly standard across the industry.)

Now then, how would turning a present-day carrier into what would essentially be an ISP change our key metrics? First of all, all the company-owned stores and kiosks would close. (Have you ever seen an Earthlink store? No.) This is not to say that all the salespeople go away, but there would be a shift to consumer commodity sales practices, relying more heavily on retail channels like big box retailers. Direct sales would be limited to large accounts and “1-800” ordering. Let’s say roughly half of the sales personnel go away. The effect to overall sales would be negative, and I will assume it isn’t effectively replaced. So that means 38% fewer gross adds, which shrinks the subscriber base.

A smaller base would obviously mean fewer Customer Service Reps, but how else might that cost be affected? I will assume a “Bring Your Own Phone” model, where all phones are unlocked, the consumer buys it at full price and chooses whatever carrier they want. It is reasonable that the large percentage of calls to Customer Care having to do with the device itself will go away, or more to the point that the carrier will make them go away through effective communication and education. Furthermore, our “dumb pipe” carrier will push “no-frills” plans for people who are smart enough to operate their mobile phone most of the time and don’t need to call Customer Care. Built into our marketing message will be that our customers are paying less per month for our “Do It Yourself” service. I will further assume the large number of all calls about the application they downloaded that won’t work will go away, because there is no storefront and no editorial function. Billing issues will still arise, so let’s say we cut our CSRs by 50%. This will also mean all the business development and product people who deal with application publishers and content providers will go away. So we can cut a few people out of HQ. Network operations basically stays the same.

The marketing expense of any current-day carrier is very large, and typically consists of an ongoing national television branding presence, an ongoing print presence and channel support. Given our reliance on channel partners now, I think I will keep the national television spend, kill the full-page newspaper ads and shift that part of the budget to in-store support, cutting a conservative 25% of our billion dollar budget in the process. I am also dropping the consumer price and killing the myriad incremental price plans. I like $50/month, all you can eat.

To summarize, we would lose 38% of our gross adds, bringing the total subscriber base down to 24.2mm. Total revenue obviously decreases given our new, lower price and smaller base. I lowered the COGS to reflect the historical 48% range then took our marketing savings ($250mm) off the top. I took our cost savings on sales, customer care and management (32%) out of SG&A. To be thorough, I upped our restructuring to $100mm to cover severance, etc. Here is what our new financials look like:

Net Operating Revenues $ 12,100 100%
Operating Expenses
Costs of services and products 5,558 45.9%
Selling, general and administrative 2,316 19.1%
Depreciation 2,557 21.1% (includes amortization)
Amortization 6
Restructuring and asset impairments 100 .8%
Total operating expenses 10,537 87%
Operating Income $ 1,563 10.6%
Adjusted EBITDA $ 4,126 34%

CONCLUSION
It really is not a compelling case. I shared this scratch analysis with a few friends who work at carriers, and they all agreed that it roughly made sense. I fully expected there would be more cost savings and more dramatically improved margins. The most interesting thing to me is that the bottom line is virtually unchanged in this exercise. Wireless carriers are generally very well optimized. The problem is that this is a very capital-intensive business. COGS and Depreciation are the big costs, and they are due to the high cost of spectrum, network equipment and operations.

For a final comparison, I took a look at Earthlink’s 2007 financials. As I mentioned earlier, as an ISP, they are the best example of a branded “dumb pipe.” At 5.3mm subscribers at the end of 2007, it is a much smaller business than some of the largest wireless carriers, but look at the leverage in their model. They generated $1.22 billion in revenue with just 996 employees. That is $1.2mm per employee, more than twice as much as our carrier example. Their COGS is 35%, so a little lower, but their total SG&A is higher at almost 50%. Operating income was a comparatively thinner 4.1%. Earthlink has swung to a loss in recent years due to the underperforming Helio investment, but even if you back that out, the “dumb pipe” model, even if it does create a vibrant atmosphere of innovation, is less attractive not least because such a company does not capture the value of that innovation itself. On top of it, the expected cost saving does not appear to materialize by handing the greatest driver of value – the services that consumers want to access – to 3rd parties. Lastly, if every carrier embraced such a model, I would also expect to see downward margin pressure as consumers perceive the commoditized “branded access” model as undifferentiated, which would increase competition on price, driving ARPU down.

Like I said before, this is obviously very unscientific, and maybe I missed something. But if the broad brushstrokes are about right, and the assumptions are close to reality, and the comparison to analagous industries is sound, then it is worth questioning whether the enthusiasm for “open access” is a catalyst for very welcome innovation in our industry or just a race to the bottom for the incumbents where the ultimate winners are today’s internet titans. Maybe it is both. Time will tell.

“Social” is the next evolution of the mobile communication experience

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

I have not blogged in awhile because I just have not had time. We had a great week in Barcelona last week, announcing some important relationships as we continue to expand our footprint in mobile social networking. We will announce more on our international expansion this week.

But for now, I want to share how I am seeing mobile social networking become a “replacement” technology on many levels and how that is incrementally changing the mobile space.

It is a strange time in communication history right now. In the telecom sector alone, we have observed decades of expansion and growth that is now reaching saturation. Many countries are approaching 100% penetration in wireless. At the same time, the dizzying pace of technology is creating overlapping curves of technology that are sometimes complementary and sometimes not, but my key observation is that all the trends I see are toward “replacement” of the consumer communication experience.

I see three dimensions:
1. Micro level: consumer communication behavior is changing.
When I look at the world and think about our business, I try to add a social anthropology filter. Like, WHY do we communicate the way we do?

One of my favorite historical examples of a communication trend is the fax machine – something that nobody needed before they had it, which everybody needed for awhile, and which is now rapidly becoming something that nobody needs. Did technology create the behavior? Or was there an unmet need to transfer documents immediately and so the technology rose to the occasion? It seems that the latter makes the most sense, but if the fax machine had never been invented, would the world have screeched to a halt? No. But here is the big question: What asshole decided it had to be on hard-to-use curly thermal paper and why do consumers put up with it? (I know there are a lot of plain paper faxes now, but still.) Raise your hand if you have ever received a thermal paper fax and subsequently photocopied it onto regular paper. Yes you have.

It is interesting to me how consumers will put up with a tool that is substandard for their purpose for so long. That there is a nearly universal threshold of sufficiency for all consumers about the same product fascinates me. I generally expect that 0% of my landline calls will be dropped, but I fully expect 10% of my wireless calls will be dropped. I put up with it for the same reason I sometimes use a butter knife in lieu of a screwdriver: It is good enough for my purpose.

This relates to social networking, which is a technology that was introduced (the same way the fax machine was) to facilitate communication. The same general questions apply: Why do we embrace the notion of “social” communication so strongly? Did we all universally desire to be connected to our friends and strangers but just lacked a tool before MySpace? And regarding the threshold of sufficiency, why are so many legitimate business contacts “friending” me on Facebook, a tool created by kids for kids, complete with a “poke” function that I find radically out of context for all of the people who find me on Facebook? That these colleagues will torture Facebook into a communication tool in a professional context means that there is clearly a desire, if not a need to communicate “socially” that transcends a particular demographic.

That is a vastly important point. The very notion of communication is evolving to include a social aspect. Hundreds of millions of consumers cannot be wrong. “Social communication” is replacing other forms of communication along the entire spectrum from a one-to-one experience to mass media. I only have so much time in a day, and I am spending it more on MySpace and less on talking on the phone and watching TV. That is a big deal.

Which brings me to the second dimension.
2) Intermediate Level: Devices and other tools are evolving to embrace social communication. The number and variety of handsets and other devices will continue to grow as OEMs attempt to identify every minute consumer desire and create a feature for it. As true as that might be, it is also true that there are key functions that every device must have. A camera is a good example of something that nobody thought needed to be on a mobile device until someone realized that the cellular telecommunications industry is not in the business of facilitating voice communication, rather it is in the business of facilitating all forms of communication, including pictures and video. Location awareness is another example. Along the same lines, in a few years, every mobile device will include a social communication toolset.

It makes perfect sense. The device manufacturers are the intermediaries that create the tools that consumers use to communicate, and an audience of hundreds of millions of consumers is something to pander to. What makes a consumer pick a certain handset off the shelf instead of the hundreds of others is that thing that enables them to communicate in the way they want to communicate. So if social communication is a replacement for one-to-one communication, then device manufacturers must embrace this evolution lest they create a market opportunity for some other company to fill the need.

And they are embracing the evolution in a big way. Every major OEM that we work with is integrating social communication tools into their devices, and you will start to see these devices roll out this year. Your address book will ingest your friends on MySpace or Bebo. Your camera will automatically background send to your Photobucket or Flickr account. The social communication experience is going to be brought closer to the surface for mobile consumers, and it is going to have ramifications because this is communication replacement technology: The things you use your mobile phone for today are not going to go away, but the percentage of your experience using traditional features versus these social tools will decline. Take the camera as an example. Just two years ago, nearly 100% of pictures sent from a mobile phone were sent via MMS to another mobile subscriber. Now, as much as 20% of pictures sent are going to a non-human recipient like Flickr or Piczo, and they are generally bypassing the MMSC and being sent via IP or email. This has a ripple effect for a long chain downstream, but the most important is the carriers themselves.

Which brings me to the third dimension I am observing as social communication replaces today’s communication standards.

3) Macro Level: The underlying enabling technology of mobile communication is changing, which is focusing efforts on superserving the existing mobile consumer base. I was in Barcelona last week, and it was amazing how many carriers I talked to that have abdicated their positions already and are totally happy with the notion of being “dumb pipes.” Also amazing was the much larger number of carrier representatives that had the exact opposite “over my dead body” attitude about it.

Of the former category, the general message was that competing air interfaces will force their hand anyway, so better to get ahead of the curve. Fair enough. Of the latter category, the spirit of competitiveness is very strong, and rightly so – I wouldn’t throw my hands up if I had 50 million paying subs. But I can say as a vendor serving almost every carrier in North America that there is an active drive toward consolidation of services and vendors. For so many years, carriers have been expanding the offerings on their decks (which has generally been good) that now there is literally too much on the deck to be useful for consumers. While I still think ultimate choice is the best policy and so do most carriers we work with, we are seeing a focus on core value drivers, and those are the services being meaningfully integrated into the native mobile experience. This makes perfect sense to me.

EVERY carrier is upgrading their camera and photo sharing experience.
EVERY carrier is upgrading their address book experience.
EVERY carrier is upgrading their data messaging experience.

And, (speaking from a position of certain insight) EVERY carrier is actively working to integrate social communication into their native communication experience. There is demonstrated high value in enabling consumers to communicate with their social networks seamlessly and frictionlessly. Some of the solutions are pretty amazing. We are fortunate to be involved directly in the plans of carriers and OEMs to see how this area is evolving.

The replacement strategy at this level is interesting because the carriers and OEMs are not looking at social networking as “an application that goes on the deck.” Rather, they view it as an obvious replacement for their core communication bread and butter (voice, SMS, email, IM, etc.) and are keen to integrate it meaningfully to capitalize on the massive opportunity it represents. While WAP is an important part of any service provider’s mobile strategy, any company focusing only on WAP will find the high ground is already occupied by the integrated few chosen to drive the greatest amount of value.

In summary, consumers’ changing personal communication habits are intersecting an industry that is very motivated to evolve to meet their changing desires and the result, while perhaps incremental compared to some of the advances we have seen in the mobile space in the past five years, is still a major shift in how we communicate. What is truly amazing is the number of moving parts required to be part of the same machine, and the fact that it is actually happening is great to see. I am very excited about 2008 and the changes that it will bring in this space.

Open is the new black

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Open platforms.
Open networks.
Open devices.
OpenSocial.
Open APIs.
OpenID.

Do you think the term “open” is being used with some recklessness of late? Or perhaps if not recklessness, with a certain degree of definitional liberty?

In case I haven’t mentioned it before, our award-winning ANTHEM™ platform is open. That means that any company, carrier, content provider, ad network, media company or OEM that wants to use our platform is free to do so. OF COURSE they are free to do so, because we are in business to make money, and the more people who use our platform, the better. But that isn’t what “open” means.

Our open platform works seamlessly with every other open platform because it is open. It interfaces to Google’s Android open platform that is going to run on Verizon’s open network, (as soon as someone creates an open device) and using our open APIs, any developer can build a widget for our widget that any user can put on their Facebook page that enables them to access any social networking site in the OpenSocial alliance right from their mobile phone.

The added value, of course, is that our open platform, due to the fact that it was architected with a superset of openness from the start, automatically interfaces to every other open platform on the planet.

And we wrote it in Erlang. So it is also massive.

So yeah.

I am wondering about two things:
1.) What is the definition of “open”?
2.) Is it really better to be “open”?

1.) What does “open” mean? It’s recent banality invites scrutiny.

Now, I know there is a definition of Open Source. The distribution terms of open-source software must meet 10 criteria to be considered truly open source. But that is pretty specific and is not necessarily what companies mean when they talk about their “open platform.”

How about an open standard?
From this wikipedia link:
“The terms “open” and “standard” have a wide range of meanings associated with their usage. The term “open” is usually restricted to royalty-free technologies while the term “standard” is sometimes restricted to technologies approved by formalized committees that are open to participation by all interested parties and operate on a consensus basis.”

There is apparently no concensus on the definition of “open standard” but there are no fewer than nine specific definitions, which is at least a valiant attempt to help. Ironically, if France’s definition differs from Spain’s definition, (and it does) that actually creates a more fractious environment and greater friction in the market.

To me, the best example of an open standard working for the greater good is the W3C. Here is their stated mission:
“The mission of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is to lead the World Wide Web to its full potential by developing common protocols that promote its evolution and ensure its interoperability.”

Can you imagine having half of the internet using a competing standard to HTTP? Not good. So, yay the W3C, open = good.

But that is not the spirit of the current enthusiasm for openness. This is about accreting value using “openness” as a strategem. The best example from history I could think of is the .pdf format, which is an “open format.” It was developed by Adobe as a proprietary format and later provided on a royalty-free basis, though Adobe holds the patents.

Here is the history of PDF openness from an Adobe Technical Standards Evangelist:
http://www.acrobatusers.com/blogs/leonardr/history-of-pdf-openness/

More interesting is this interview from Adobe CEO Bruce Chizen from September 2003.

This quote sums it up:
“We realized that if we could provide more applications around the PDF as the file format and Acrobat Reader as the rendering platform, not only could we make many customers much more efficient and productive, but it could be a valuable revenue opportunity.”

The recent push by for-profit enterprises for opening everything is based on the desire to become a de facto standard around which an ecosystem of value can be built. The beauty of calling your system/network/platform/software/hardware/whatever open is that you push the cost of building that ecosystem of value to an army of enthusiastic developers, which has the added benefit of percolating the most innovation to the top. Or so the theory goes. But that brings me to my second question:

2.) Is it really better to be “open”?
Inside every entrepreneur is a monopolist. The more value he or she can consolidate, the better. As an entrepreneur, the ultimate accomplishment is for your product or service to become the de facto standard, which is a form of, and next best thing to, a legal monopoly.

How would you like to reap the value from the British East India Company, which you may remember was set up as a legal trading monopoly? How would you like to have built Standard Oil? Or pre-1980 AT&T? DeBeers? TicketMaster? TCI? Microsoft? Even the beloved Apple, so admired by so many Appleheads everywhere, was accused of creating a vertical monopoly with their closed music delivery value chain. (Which many devotees love.)

Let me answer for you: “Yes, I would like to own DeBeers.” (Owning all da beers in the world would rock. I kid.)

Like I mentioned about the W3C, there are plenty of examples where creating an open standard – say, XML – which did not financially benefit a single owner of the standard nonetheless benefited an entire industry of single owners as part of the ecosystem. In this way, the standard is the glue that binds the various parts of the ecosystem.

But if you are one of the parts of the ecosystem, can you effectively promote your standard as the glue just by calling it open? Or is your value naturally locked inside your four walls?

I just read an interesting post from Giles Bowkett that argues that “…social networking web sites aren’t platforms – they’re nightclubs… if you’re building a Facebook app, you’re building a sound system you can never take out of the club. Spending money on something which won’t work anywhere else only makes sense if the payoff is immediate. It’s not really an investment, because assuming any given social network will persist for any given amount of time defies history.”

Read the whole thing - it’s good:
http://gilesbowkett.blogspot.com/2007/11/facebook-apps-facebook-trap.html

Facebook’s very non-secret strategy clearly runs counter to that notion – they appear to believe they will persist. They want to “own the social graph.” That is far reaching. It means they want to be the first link on the communication value chain, as in “the first place you always go to execute your personal communication.” If creating the Facebook “platform” and calling it “more open than your open platform” accelerates that end goal, then it is a reasonable ploy.

It’s like Google saying “we want to own search.” And, given their market share, they fairly do. Does that make Google a monopoly or a de-facto standard? Does it matter?

Not to me. I would just point out that where all this “openness” leads is ultimately to one company winning what they see as a zero-sum game because there is, after all, a finite number of consumers, and the goal of any for-profit enterprise is to maximize value by accreting more value to themselves.

My last thought on this, then, is that value accretes to utility, not to openness. Think about, for instance, how difficult it is to deal with wireless carriers as a vendor. If Verizon Wireless presents developers with an “open” network that isn’t really truly open, but it is “more open” than all other wireless carriers and thus comparatively reduces friction between developers and the Verizon consumers they want to reach, then they will have achieved their goal of accreting more value to their network. But even attracting developers doesn’t get ‘er done - ultimately what makes or breaks a company, open or not, is their ability to engage consumers, and consumers have proven time and again (I bought a very-closed iPhone) that they don’t care what you call it as long as it works.