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8 Strategic Inflection Points Redefining the Mobile Industry
1. 8 Strategic Inflection Points Redefining the Mobile Industry
Posted by stuartt on Mar 25, 2012 7:05:30 PM
There are a number of major disruptions, or strategic inflections points, in the mobile industry which are
radically altering the entire mobile ecosystem as we know it. Some of these disruptions have been
slowing building up steam over the last couple of years; although, many of these have just started and
have yet to really play out. However, these strategic inflection points are causing, and stand to cause
even greater, disruption and uncertainty in the industry.
The following 8 key strategic inflection points that I believe will re-define the mobile ecosystem.
1. Explosive Demand for Mobile Data –a 26-fold between 2010 and 2015
o Cost challenges of building mobile networks to supply explosive demand
o Monetization challenges – how to make money from increased demand?
o
2. The Rise of Software Platforms – from “walled gardens to walled ecosystems”
o From battle of devices to battle of ecosystems (e.g., Apple, Android, Windows)
o A world dominated by Apple and Android ecosystems
o The ecosystem and its capabilities (e.g., apps) are what is important to the mobile user
rather than network connectivity, which is seen as a given
3. Availability of New, Fast Mobile Networks
o LTE Everywhere – battle for new services to get ROI and differentiate from 3G
o Rise of Wi-Fi – quickly becoming a viable alternative or complement to mobile networks
as it is often free, good coverage, better experience and fits well with the rapid growth
in nomadic devices. Could Wi-Fi be a viable competitor to LTE?
4. A More Active Regulator in Many Countries
o Spectrum gatekeepers – most operators are hungry for more spectrum
o Public policy - desire to have universal broadband coverage
o Net Neutrality – openness of the internet, strengthens the OTT model
o Protecting the mobile customer – concerns over pricing, data caps, roaming fees
o Industry structure and policy – more discerning about acquisitions and consolidation
5. Changing Industry Structure
2. o Industry consolidation in every segment of the value chain – each segment dominated
by 2-3 players
o Major mergers and alliances – e.g., AT&T/T-Mobile, Nokia-Microsoft
o Limited opportunities to expand in a dominant way into other segments of the value
chain
o Market and innovation leadership concentrated in few major companies – e.g., Apple,
Google
6. Growth of Network Connected Devices – Internet of Things
o Tablets, eReaders, gaming devices, Machine –to-Machine, etc.
o Everything is becoming connected – e.g., home, healthcare
7. Move to Cloud Delivery Models – “everything as a service”
o Happening much faster than anyone had expected
o App store model (application client) vs. the mobile cloud model (service)
o
8. The Rise of the OTT Threat – largely the battle for video distribution and services
o Threat to existing video providers - e.g., NetFlix and Hulu vs. cable TV
o Monetization for network providers – how do they get a bit of the OTT pie?
o Economic balance of the ecosystem – network providers need a return to invest, OTTs
largely successful based on cheaper operating model (content, distribution) – not a
sustainable economic model
Read Stuart's next blog post continuing his blog series The Future of Mobility: The Mobile Seesaw -
Tipping Points Redefining the Mobile Industry
Future articles will explore how these inflection points will re-shape the mobile ecosystem and
successful strategies for different players in the newly defined mobile value chain. Look out for the next
blog post continuing The Future of Mobility Blog Series next Monday.
About the Author
Stuart Taylor's further industry research, insights and perspectives can be found at his blog The
Connected Life
Follow Stuart Taylor on Twitter: @STaylorCisco
For more discussion on all things Mobility, visit the Mobility Community here:
https://communities.cisco.com/community/solutions/sp/mobility