Press ReleaseSource: Camiant, Inc.

European and North American Mobile Broadband Study Finds Change Is Key to Maintaining Profitability
Wednesday October 29, 2008 5:16 am ET

Survey of 16 Operators Provides Insight Into the Need for Designing New Business Models for the Mobile Broadband Market

MARLBOROUGH, MA and MAIDENHEAD, UK--(MARKET WIRE)--Oct 29, 2008 -- Camiant, Inc., the leading provider of policy control and application assurance technology, today announced a newly published study, "Mobile Broadband in North America and Europe: Change is Key to Maintaining Profitability," that explores mobile broadband adoption and growth trends in Europe and North America as well as operators' capabilities to control and monetize growth. The custom research outlines the challenges in the mobile broadband marketplace and proposes a set of elements for new business models to alleviate expected negative consequences of broadband commoditization.

Information for the October 2008 research, conducted by Parks Associates on behalf of Camiant, was gathered from in-depth interviews with executives at 16 major mobile broadband providers in Canada, Eastern and Western Europe, Turkey, Scandinavia, and the United States to determine adoption and predominant usage patterns as well as operator capabilities with respect to network and user control and interest in pursuing new mobile broadband business models.

According to the findings, mobile broadband affords tremendous growth opportunities for operators; however, given the popularity of data cards and smart phones and the substantial capital expenses involved in building additional network capacity, operators can expect to hit network limitations fairly quickly. With operators seeing anywhere from 100% to 800% bandwidth growth, there is a clear need to design new business models for the mobile broadband market. Existing business models, especially the "unlimited" models popular in Western Europe and the U.S., have dangerous drawbacks that will become apparent in the next three to five years. As mobile broadband adoption continues to grow and traffic volume skyrockets, the revenue that these models deliver will fail to offset the costs of delivering the traffic.

"Mobile carriers around the world, especially those offering 'unlimited' data plans, must rethink their approach to wireless broadband network management," said Anton Denissov, research analyst with Parks Associates. "Failure to implement refined network controls and business policies would condition abusive consumer use patterns and accelerate service commoditization."

"The time is right for mobile operators to embrace new business models and to train users to behave in a long-term economic fashion, and not expect 'all you can eat' models," said Randy Fuller, vice president of business development for Camiant. "Operators who implement more refined policies and models that monetize traffic early on, before consumer expectations and behaviors are conditioned, won't be the ones leaving money on the table."

Key findings from the custom study:

Mobile broadband offers carriers opportunity to improve their market position by:

 
--  Raising customer average revenue per user (ARPU)
--  Avoiding commoditization by becoming providers of enhanced services,
    not just connectivity

Carriers will need to develop new business models to more effectively monetize rapidly growing mobile data traffic:

 
--  Western Europe - 400% - 800% per year traffic growth
--  Eastern Europe - 300% - 800% per year traffic growth
--  U.S. - 200% - 300% per year traffic growth
--  Canada - 100% per year traffic growth

Current business models are rudimentary and do not maximize a carrier's revenue. Their fundamental elements include:

 
--  Channeling consumers to use lower-capability devices (i.e., mobile
    phone vs. air card)
--  Controlling traffic based on raw traffic volume (i.e., pre-defined
    usage caps)
--  Disconnecting consumers or charging a-la-carte (on per MB or per GB
    basis) if they exceed the traffic cap
--  Banning heavy (most active) users from the network

Carriers need more refined control and business policies to condition reasonable consumption patterns:

 
--  Need to implement early on, before consumer expectations solidify
--  Would help avoid commoditization challenges similar to ones in the
    fixed broadband market (U.S.)

The research proposes key elements for new business models to succeed. These include the need for operators to be service-centric instead of connectivity-centric, monetize traffic as well as users, and avoid blanket punitive pricing. New business models need to resolve usage inequities by charging a user for usage that actually taxes the network rather than for using a device that may tax the network. These changes will encourage adoption of connected devices other than mobile phones or PC cards; that adoption, in turn, will offer additional revenue opportunities for carriers.

Register here for a complete copy of the Mobile Broadband study results.

About Camiant

Camiant's policy control server, fully compliant with 3GPP*'s Policy and Charging Rules Function (PCRF) specifications, empowers broadband service providers to open their networks and deliver a significantly higher quality of service to subscribers by guaranteeing superior performance of rich, high-bandwidth services such as video, streaming media, online games and commercial services. Leveraging its deep expertise in policy management and application assurance, Camiant seamlessly enables broadband service providers to deliver high performing user experiences as new, innovative multimedia services continue to enter the market with increasing unpredictability.

Camiant's market-leading policy control software platform is the solution of choice for service providers who want to reduce OPEX and CAPEX, increase ARPU and reduce churn by improving the user experience. By delivering predictable performance of new multimedia applications, Camiant has become the trusted source for delivering policy control and application assurance to service providers globally. For more information, visit http://www.camiant.com

* 3GPP is a registered trademark of European Telecommunications Standards Institute.


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Source: Camiant, Inc.


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