Premium content drives Asia's mobile

By Aaron Tan, ZDNet Asia
Wednesday, October 04, 2006 03:12 PM

As the growth number of cellular subscribers starts to flatten across the Asia-Pacific region, the mobile communications industry will in future be driven largely by data services, an analyst says.

Frost & Sullivan said in a statement Tuesday that while messaging continues to contribute the bulk of revenues in emerging mobile data markets, much of the growth potential lies in premium content.

In the Asia-Pacific region, messaging accounted for about 39.6 percent of total data revenues last year, excluding revenues shared with third-party content providers. Overall, the mobile data market is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 17.9 percent between 2005 and 2011, the analyst said.

Janice Chong, industry manager at Frost & Sullivan, noted: "Subscribers in most Asia-Pacific countries have strong preference for local content, which creates the impetus for the fast-growing mobile content market."

The demand for premium content will also be boosted by an expanding regional subscriber base and better 3G (Third Generation) network coverage, according to Frost & Sullivan. Cheaper advanced multimedia handsets, and the race by mobile providers to secure a continuous stream of content through partnerships will also drive growth of mobile data revenues, the analyst added.

According to Frost & Sullivan, the Asia-Pacific premium content market--spanning 13 countries in the region--raked in revenues worth US$9.4 billion last year. This market is expected to reach US$32.9 billion by the end of 2011.

The research company also noted that in some Asia-Pacific markets, the revenue share ratio skewed in favor of mobile operators, rather than content providers which are also required to pay hefty royalties for applications to music label companies and associations. This has held back the growth of the premium content industry in some countries.

Chong explained: "In markets such as Indonesia and the Philippines, mobile operators typically retain 60 to 70 percent of the revenue from sale of content, while content providers receive the remaining smaller portion."

QUICK POLL
Do mobile operators deserve a bigger share of the revenues than content providers?
Who cares? I'm the consumer. They can split the revenue-ratio any way they want, as long as they don't increase content fees.
Yes; operators have invested a lot more in the networks needed to support content delivery
No; without good content, operators have no real value-add to offer mobile subscribers

She added that content providers in these countries believe they deserve a larger revenue share because they bear the entire cost of content development.

This trend is particularly inherent in markets outside Japan and South Korea, Chong said, mostly due to the popularity of SMS (short messaging service) based applications that contribute to low data traffic usage. As such, operators will tend to seek a higher revenue share from content downloads to compensate for the low data traffic revenue, the analyst said.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 1 comments

Let's Face it. Mobile Providers like Smart and Globe in the Philippines are just plain greedy. They are running at 60% profit margins and they still want more. Greedy.

A while back we approached Nazareno (Smart/PLDT CEO) with a service that would lower the cost of international text for the consumer. And his answer was "If we wanted to, we could do it on our own". Apparently 15 peso cost for international text is an arbitrary number they just came up to get the most money out of the consumer.

They call the Overseas Filipino Worker the "Bagong Bayani" (New Heroes) but it seems they have no problems fleecing these very same heroes. And the Government's Big Boy protectionism is not helping either.
Posted by Jose S. Tate on Tuesday, October 17 2006 07:57 PM


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

OpenAmplify developer's diary Part 4: Using OpenAmplify via SOAP

Web Development

Justin James walks you through the process of using the SOAP interface to OpenAmplify from Visual Studio 2008.


Read more »



When technology costs more than human

Blog thumbnail

Movie director James Cameron waited 15 years for technology to catch up before it was sufficiently advanced for him to create the much-anticipated upcoming film, Avatar.

To be released in..... by Eileen Yu

Read more »

Tags

  1. 3g
  2. 3g third generation
  3. apple inc.
  4. apple iphone
  5. broadband
  6. cellular phones
  7. google inc.
  8. handset
  9. mobile
  10. mobile platforms / communications
  11. mobile / wireless
  12. network
  13. phone
  14. revenue
  15. smart phone
  16. smart phones
  17. software
  18. u.s.
  19. web
  20. wireless