By 2020, mobile subscriptions and smartphone usage are expected to greatly increase. It is projected that there will be over 9 billion mobile subscriptions globally by 2020, with smartphone subscriptions more than doubling. Video traffic will also increase significantly, making up around 60% of mobile data traffic by 2020. 5G networks are expected to begin commercial deployment in 2020 as well, supporting thousands of new applications. The mobile industry will see continued growth in data usage, driven by more devices connecting to mobile networks, especially with the rise of the Internet of Things. It is estimated there will be over 50 billion devices connected to wireless networks by 2020. Mobile payments and commerce are also forecasted to rise substantially, with mobile commerce potentially accounting for 21% of all digital
2015 Global Trend Forecast (Technology, Media & Telecoms)CM Research
Global Trend Forecast Report: Technology, Media & Telecoms
by CM Research
This report is an extract from the fourth edition of our Global TMT Trend Forecast series, originally published on 16 July 2014. In it, we identify the major disruptive technologies that we will see in 2014/15 and predict how they will impact the world’s largest technology, media and telecom (TMT) companies.
Telecom 2020: Preparing for a very different futureRob Van Den Dam
Mega market and technological trends are creating a very new world for consumers, businesses and markets as a whole. A potential role for communications service providers in this new world charts a path to growth
2015 Global Trend Forecast (Technology, Media & Telecoms)CM Research
Global Trend Forecast Report: Technology, Media & Telecoms
by CM Research
This report is an extract from the fourth edition of our Global TMT Trend Forecast series, originally published on 16 July 2014. In it, we identify the major disruptive technologies that we will see in 2014/15 and predict how they will impact the world’s largest technology, media and telecom (TMT) companies.
Telecom 2020: Preparing for a very different futureRob Van Den Dam
Mega market and technological trends are creating a very new world for consumers, businesses and markets as a whole. A potential role for communications service providers in this new world charts a path to growth
Telcom Industry Review and Future of Telcom Providers - Telco 2015IBMTelecom
How will the Telcom industry evolve over the next five years? Will telcom providers strategies be proactive or protective? Our research suggests four plausible scenarios and the events that would signal their unfolding. More important, we outline the characteristics of companies most likely to succeed in each of these possible futures.
The following is an infographic identifying technological trends for 2016. This forms part of an assignment for an EDID 6506 course in issues and trends in instructional design, technology and distance education
Overview about technology trends in 2016. Wearable Devices, Energy Storage, 3D Printing etc. Axel & Boris are Yessspreneurs, Visionaries, Global Generalists & Artists, technology enthusiasts and passionate for awesome people and innovations.
Where do telecom operators go from here?CM Research
Why have telecom operators performed so badly over the last decade and what strategy do they need to adopt in order to remain relevant in the Digital World?
Telcos’ have consistently underperformed analyst and market expectations … their stock market recoveries after the 2000 crash and the 2007 crash were weak relative to the rest of TMT.
Their core revenues – voice, messaging and internet access – are now in terminal decline (or at least moving towards terminal decline).
Their future is tied to over-the-top services such as internet TV, mobile payments and cloud services.
Telcos remain the most over-regulated part of the internet value chain, so any super-normal profits they attempt to make from new technology cycles risk being capped by the regulator.
In order to survive, Telcos need to latch on to one of the many emerging technology cycles mentioned on page 19.
But they also need to change their business models:
- By moving towards software services
- By restructuring their businesses such that their new products are not regulated
- By consolidating to eliminate excess competition
SK Telecom is an example of how the move to software can raise shareholder returns.
BT’s ring-fencing of its regulated activity into Openreach is an example of the type of internal restructuring that can raise shareholder returns
AT&T and Verizon are living proof that industry consolidation will raise shareholder returns.
I'd appreciate if you leave a comment on the slideshow. You are free to use to use the information as long as you mention the source although I would not be able to share the originals with you since it is not under my ownership alone.
Keynote delivered at European CTO Telecoms Forum looking at Telco World beyond the initial roll-out and path to 5G. Will Marketing lapfrog out of the Access-based thinking and really sell what Technology enable with converged broadband networks, cloud and visualization supporting IoT, Industry 4.0, Connected Car@s (or X in general) and so forth.
If you are interested in the slide or discussions related to the content, don't be a stranger, get in touch!
Why Telcos need to embrace Digital Transformation nowEricsson
Check out this informative IDC Executive Brief for CSPs looking to become digitalized.
Read about the changing ICT market, gain some insights on how to manage and implement your digital transformation vision, and learn how Ericsson can help through its advisory services, OSS/BSS portfolio and proven experience in large scale transformation projects.
Telcom Industry Review and Future of Telcom Providers - Telco 2015IBMTelecom
How will the Telcom industry evolve over the next five years? Will telcom providers strategies be proactive or protective? Our research suggests four plausible scenarios and the events that would signal their unfolding. More important, we outline the characteristics of companies most likely to succeed in each of these possible futures.
The following is an infographic identifying technological trends for 2016. This forms part of an assignment for an EDID 6506 course in issues and trends in instructional design, technology and distance education
Overview about technology trends in 2016. Wearable Devices, Energy Storage, 3D Printing etc. Axel & Boris are Yessspreneurs, Visionaries, Global Generalists & Artists, technology enthusiasts and passionate for awesome people and innovations.
Where do telecom operators go from here?CM Research
Why have telecom operators performed so badly over the last decade and what strategy do they need to adopt in order to remain relevant in the Digital World?
Telcos’ have consistently underperformed analyst and market expectations … their stock market recoveries after the 2000 crash and the 2007 crash were weak relative to the rest of TMT.
Their core revenues – voice, messaging and internet access – are now in terminal decline (or at least moving towards terminal decline).
Their future is tied to over-the-top services such as internet TV, mobile payments and cloud services.
Telcos remain the most over-regulated part of the internet value chain, so any super-normal profits they attempt to make from new technology cycles risk being capped by the regulator.
In order to survive, Telcos need to latch on to one of the many emerging technology cycles mentioned on page 19.
But they also need to change their business models:
- By moving towards software services
- By restructuring their businesses such that their new products are not regulated
- By consolidating to eliminate excess competition
SK Telecom is an example of how the move to software can raise shareholder returns.
BT’s ring-fencing of its regulated activity into Openreach is an example of the type of internal restructuring that can raise shareholder returns
AT&T and Verizon are living proof that industry consolidation will raise shareholder returns.
I'd appreciate if you leave a comment on the slideshow. You are free to use to use the information as long as you mention the source although I would not be able to share the originals with you since it is not under my ownership alone.
Keynote delivered at European CTO Telecoms Forum looking at Telco World beyond the initial roll-out and path to 5G. Will Marketing lapfrog out of the Access-based thinking and really sell what Technology enable with converged broadband networks, cloud and visualization supporting IoT, Industry 4.0, Connected Car@s (or X in general) and so forth.
If you are interested in the slide or discussions related to the content, don't be a stranger, get in touch!
Why Telcos need to embrace Digital Transformation nowEricsson
Check out this informative IDC Executive Brief for CSPs looking to become digitalized.
Read about the changing ICT market, gain some insights on how to manage and implement your digital transformation vision, and learn how Ericsson can help through its advisory services, OSS/BSS portfolio and proven experience in large scale transformation projects.
The 4G technology is nothing less than ground breaking. The advancements that have been made from 3G to 4G alone are mind blowing. With the data processing speed being increased to at least 100 Mbit/sec the possibilities are limitless in the wireless communication world. The 4G technology has a great present and future scope and worth. It makes the average person really think about what is possible with wireless communication? If there ever is a 5G network, how powerful will it be and what will it possibly be able to do that the 4G doesn’t already do?
digital signal processing
Computer Architectures for signal processing
Harvard Architecture, Pipelining, Multiplier
Accumulator, Special Instructions for DSP, extended
Parallelism,General Purpose DSP Processors,
Implementation of DSP Algorithms for var
ious operations,Special purpose DSP
Hardware,Hardware Digital filters and FFT processors,
Case study and overview of TMS320
series processor, ADSP 21XX processor
This is an abridged version of the 124-page report. Go to JWTIntelligence.com/trendletters to see the full report, including recommendations for brands
JWT’s third annual report on trends in the mobile sphere spotlights key themes that came out of this year’s Mobile World Congress, Consumer Electronics Show and South by Southwest Interactive, and builds on trends spotlighted in previous reports. The report covers significant drivers and manifestations of these developments, and their implications for brands. “10 Mobile Trends for 2014 and Beyond” is based around on-the-ground research at the MWC in Barcelona and SXSW in Austin, as well as desk research and insights gleaned from interviews with several mobile experts and influencers.
Will 2015 be the year of wearables? Will Apple Pay succeed? Why are enterprise apps getting more expensive and complex? What's happening with Big data? How should developers treat phablets?
Every year we analyse and summarise the key mobile trends for the following year and share with customers and partners. The main objective is to keep you up to date on what’s going on and give you insights into what these trends may mean for you. Last year our mobility predictions and UX/UI trend presentations were used in hundreds of workshops, lectures and jointly got more than 100,000 views on Slideshare.
The Top 10 Mobile Trends for 2015 are more exciting than ever as we are experiencing explosive growth in almost every area including mobile usage (apps and web), mobile commerce, payments, enterprise apps, Internet of Things, wearables, nearables (sensors) and invincibles, data driven mobile services (big data), mobility in healthcare, omni-channel retail and innovations in mobile application development.
The telecom companies took many initiatives and make many operational changes to improve customer experience and generate revenue consistently. The telecom companies will continue to lunch new projects, experiment with new business models, and improve network experience to stay profitable in the post-pandemic world.
The disruptive technologies will make many existing telecom industry trends obsolete and create many new telecom industry trends. The telecom companies have to invest resources and address challenges to adopt some of the emerging industry trends in 2021. We can prepare a list of telecom industry trends for 2021 based on the information and data collected from diverse online sources.
https://bit.ly/2NNtpQR
Mobile broadband services are undergoing a period of dramatic growth causing a tremendous increase in data traffic. This rising tide of traffic is being driven by the growing number of mobile subscribers, particularly smartphone users, who are connecting to faster networks and consuming bandwidth-hungry video content.
Ericsson: Latam Insights, June 2015 - Leading the way in the Networked SocietyEricsson Latin America
The world is becoming increasingly connected and ICT is starting
to fundamentally transform large parts of society. Networks are
now relevant not only to people using their smartphones, but also
businesses and society as a whole.
As an industry leader, Ericsson has set out a clear long-term
commitment to leadership and driving change through mobility in
an evolving ICT landscape. Many of the solutions we see in
today’s Networked Society seemed unbelievable not too long ago.
In our latest Insights brochure, we take a look at some of our
regional projects, alongside highlights from the Ericsson Mobility
Report and ConsumerLab reports. In addition, we share the latest
consumer and market trends currently driving the transformation
journey.
10 Mobile Trends for 2014 and Beyond (May 2014)Karen Sanchez
This is an abridged version of the 124-page report. Go to JWTIntelligence.com/trendletters to see the full report, including recommendations for brands
JWT’s third annual report on trends in the mobile sphere spotlights key themes that came out of this year’s Mobile World Congress, Consumer Electronics Show and South by Southwest Interactive, and builds on trends spotlighted in previous reports. The report covers significant drivers and manifestations of these developments, and their implications for brands. “10 Mobile Trends for 2014 and Beyond” is based around on-the-ground research at the MWC in Barcelona and SXSW in Austin, as well as desk research and insights gleaned from interviews with several mobile experts and influencers.
+ Overview of MOBILE EVOLUTION AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE INTERNET.
+ MOBILE INTERNET: TRENDS AND GROWTH
+ BENEFITS OF THE MOBILE INTERNET
+ CHALLENGES OF THE MOBILE INTERNET
+ SOLUTIONS
#CIPRsm (CIPR Social Media Panel) - Mobile and Public RelationsCIPRsm
The guide, produced by #CIPRsm members Paul Wilkinson FCIPR, Rachel Miller FCIPR, Dom Burch MCIPR and Joanna Halton MCIPR, covers how mobile communications and mobile-oriented social media is changing PR.
Cloud computing, along with mobility increasing percolation of broadband, is aiding the creation of a networked society. Moving towards a digitally connected world, telecom operators have a unique opportunity to position themselves and capitalise the growth of cloud services – both as service providers and adopters of the technology.
2. Mobile subscriptions are expected to increase
to $ 9.2 Billion by 2020.
By 2016 the number of smartphone
subscriptions will surpass those
for basic phones.
Source: ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT, June
2015
3. WCDMA/GSM will make up the largest share of all subscriptions in 2020.
There will be around 3.8 billion WCDMA/GSM subscriptions by 2020, compared to around 3.7 billion
LTE subscriptions.
Source: ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT, June 2015
5. Mobile video in general is forecast to grow by around 55 percent annually through to 2020, when it will
account for around 60 percent of all mobile data traffic.
Source: ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT, June 2015
7. 5G is expected to be commercially deployed in 2020.
5G will be able to cater for thousands of new use cases, as well as more traffic, more devices and more
types of devices – even those with different operating requirements.
Source: ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT, November 2014
8. 3 MAJOR TRENDS THAT
THE TELECOM INDUSTRY
WILL SEE BY 2020
10. “By 2020, it is likely that one or more
major telco companies will be acquired by
a content company.” - Christopher Surdak,
JD Global Subject Matter Expert,Analytics,
Governance and eDiscovery, HP Software
12. THE RISE OF DATA
Source: ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT, November 2014
13. The rising number of smartphone subscriptions
is the main driver of mobile data traffic growth.
Increased consumption of mobile/cellular data
per subscription – mainly driven by video – is
also contributing to this growth.
Source: ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT,
November 2014
14. CSP REVENUE PER SUBSCRIBER HAS
DECREASED
Source:Telecom 2020: Preparing for aVery Different Tomorrow, September 2014
15. INTERNET PLAYERSVS TELECOM
COMPANIES
AT&T's market capitalization in 2014 was about
the same as it was in 2006, while Google's value
has more than doubled.
Facebook didn't even exist in 2006, and by 2014
it was worth roughly 40 percent more than
AT&T (approximately $222 billion).
Source: HP: Content Barons, Smart Dust & SkyNet: 6 Telecommunications Disruptions for 2020, 2015
16. INTERNET PLAYERSVS TELECOM
COMPANIES
Content companies are moving into the
infrastructure game.
Google’s new service Project Fi, is taking a plunge into
the $189 billion market for wireless service, creating
fresh competition forVerizon and AT&T and stepping
up efforts to boost sales and lure users to its Android
mobile-phone software.
Apple Inc. is assembling a high-speed network and
upgrading how it builds data centers, a push to be
more competitive with Amazon.com Inc., Google Inc.
and Microsoft Corp. in cloud services.
Source: Bloomberg.com: Google Announces Project Fi Wireless Network Starting at $20 per Month,April
2015, Bloomberg.com:Apple Said to Build High-Speed Network for Fast Content Delivery, June 2015
18. THE NEXT STEP IN THE INTERNET
REVOLUTION
Source:Alcatel-Lucent:THREE CONSUMER MARKET TRENDS THAT ARE IMPACTING TELECOM
INDUSTRY, May 2014
19. “‘The internet of things’ is the way of the
future. Internet will be ingrained in everything
that we do, in the objects we use like the
fridge monitoring and ordering food from the
store to insurance telematics where driving
behavior directly determines your insurance
premium.This way, our lives will be more
efficient and linked to the services we use.”
- Puijpe, Global Head of Telecom Media and
Technology at ING Commercial Banking
20. THE “INTERNET OF THINGS” IS COMING
AND IT’S GONNA BE BIG (NO... HUGE)
50 BILLION
DEVICES CONNECTED TO WIRELESS NETWORKS
WORLDWIDE BY 2020
$164 BILLION
REVENUE OPPORTUNITY BY 2018
Source: SAP:The CEO Perspective | The Transformation of the Telecommunications Industry,April 2015
Source:Telecoms.com: 2020Vision:The decade ahead
21. “By 2020, there will be 50 billion devices
connected to wireless networks
worldwide.The majority of this surge in
connections will come from machine to
machine applications” - John Cunliffe, Chief
Technical Officer at Ericsson UK
22. The number of cellular M2M subscriptions
is expected to reach around 800 million by
the end of 2020.
Source: ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT, November 2014
23. HOW TELCOS ARE PREPARING -
TECHNOLOGY
In June 2014,Vodafone announced plans to
take over Italian based telematics firm Cobra
Automotive Technologies as it looks to move
up the M2M value chain.
A few operators, namelyVodafone,Telefónica,
Orange, Deutsche Telekom,Telecom Italia and
Verizon Wireless, have also developed
proprietary, in-house M2M operating
platform, deploying solutions provided by
Ericsson and Jasper on top.
Source: GSM Association:The Mobile Economy 2015
24. HOW TELCOS ARE PREPARING - SERVICES
ATT Digital Life created
a unique service with a
beautiful user interface to
protect and manage
homes using a
smartphone, tablet,
or computer.
Source: SAP:The CEO Perspective | The Transformation of the Telecommunications Industry,April 2015
26. “By 2020, not only will more transactions
take place via our mobile devices, whether
it’s our smartphones or wearable
technology leveraging near-field
communication (NFC) technology, we’ll
also see the emergence of even more
streamlined payment experiences.”
– Natasha Baker, Forbes
27. Mobile commerce is now forecast to
account for 21% of total digital commerce
by 2018, up from 12% in 2014.
Source: GSM Association:The Mobile Economy 2015
28. GROWTH OF THE GLOBAL DIGITAL
MCOMMERCE MARKET
Source: GSM Association:The Mobile Economy 2015
29. Pew Research predicts the end of regular
commerce by 2020, with mobile payments
“an obvious choice to replace established
modes of payment in day-to-day
commerce.” This paradigm, while profound,
represents a natural evolution
of human behavior.
Source: Forbes.com: How Instant Mobile Commerce Will Disrupt The WayYou Do Business, July 2012
30. A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A ‘LESS-CASH’
CONSUMER SOCIETY OF THE FUTURE
Source: SAP: Engage Customers and Build Loyalty in Developed and Emerging Markets, May 2013
31. THE SIGNS ARE CLEAR
Billing provider Boku has partnered with UK mobile
network operators O2, EE andVodafone to allow
customers to charge public transport tickets, takeaway
food, cups of coffee, and other ‘click and collect’
physical world purchases to their mobile phone bill.
Banco do Brasil has partnered with mobile network
operator Oi andVisa to offer NFC mobile payments in
Brazil. Users will be able to make payments with an
NFC phone at any of the 1.6 million contactless POS
terminals available throughout the country.
Source: GSM Association:The Mobile Economy 2015
32. SOURCES
• ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT, June 2015
• ERICSSON MOBILITY REPORT, November 2014
• HP: Content Barons, Smart Dust SkyNet: 6 Telecommunications Disruptions for 2020, 2015
• 2014 IBM Global Telecommunications Consumer Survey
• Telecom 2020: Preparing for aVery Different Tomorrow, September 2014
• Bloomberg: Google Announces Project Fi Wireless Network Starting at $20 per Month,April
2015
• Bloomberg:Apple Said to Build High-Speed Network for Fast Content Delivery, June 2015
• Alcatel-Lucent:THREE CONSUMER MARKET TRENDS THAT ARE IMPACTING TELECOM
INDUSTRY, May 2014
• ING
Commercial
Banking:
The
‘internet
of
things’
and
the
future
of
telecommunicaons
• Telecoms.com: 2020Vision:The decade ahead
• SAP:The CEO Perspective | The Transformation of the Telecommunications Industry,April
2015
• GSM Association:The Mobile Economy 2015
• Forbes: 5 Tech Trends That Will Hit Every Retail Store By 2020,April 2015
• Forbes: How Instant Mobile Commerce Will Disrupt The WayYou Do Business, July 2012
• SAP: Engage Customers and Build Loyalty in Developed and Emerging Markets, May 2013