Seeking Alpha

Dean Bubley » Comments » T

  • Mobile Phone Industry in Denial About Economy [View article]
    The iPhone example is an interesting one - but coupled with other factors it's still quite a US-centric model that doesn't work quite so well elsewhere.

    Bear in mind that in the rest of the world, the majority of people use prepaid cellphone plans (often with unsubsidised devices), not monthly contracts. iPhones can be $500-1000 upfront in those cases.

    SImilarly, "ditching the landline" is unlikely in markets which tend to use ADSL rather than cable for broadband, especially if there is no legal imperative to sell unbundled DSL without an associated PSTN telephone account. Generally it is only the economically disadvantaged that "cut the cord" - it's not aspirational, except in a few countries like Finland.

    I'd certainly agree that Apple is better-placed than the Android ecosystem at this point in time. Slightly less true of non-US markets where people generally buy high-end Nokias because of brand, or basic preference for their voice and SMS user experience.

    Also, worth noting that in many parts of the world users would rather have a mobile broadband USB modem for their notebooks, than a smartphone.

    Dean Bubley
    Jan 12 08:13 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Comm Forecast No. 1: No More Landlines [View article]
    This is interesting to me. The US appears to have a fairly unique attitude to "cutting the cord" which is not present in most other countries. (I'm from the UK). While there is generally fixed-mobile substitution elsewhere, there is typically much lower use of cable & ADSL tends to be the predominant means of delivering broadband, except somewhere like Japan where there's been a big push on fibre. Also, the distinction in numbering between fixed and mobile tends to mean that most people accept the validity of both, for different applications. In the UK, I've noticed BT adfvertising its fixed telephony service is being cheaper than many prepaid mobile tariffs, encouraging reverse mobile-to-fixed substitution.

    However, one thing does seem fairly clear to me - copper is not going to disappear any time soon for calling *businesses* rather than consumers. While the very largest firms might use VoIP + copper, the average hairdresser or restaurant or travel agent seems unlikely to use cellular. In those cases, you want to call a place, not a person.

    Dean Bubley
    Nov 18 10:22 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Are Text Messaging Prices the Biggest Wireless Issue? [View article]
    Mobile operators around the world are trying to maintain their overall SMS revenues by playing with bundling, pricing elasticity and so forth. Volumes are going up, but (on average) prices are coming down. They are trying to encourage users to adopt large bundles (with a cheap "per message" rate but better revenue visibility) by increasing one-off message prices.

    That said, some of the US carriers' pricing seems egregiously high when compared to prices of 1c or less in some countries in Asia which use essentially the same type of infrastructure.

    There is a fine line between "value-based pricing", where the user willingly pays a premium for a service they really like - and "resentment-based pricing", where the user feels extorted, but pays anyway as it's a "must have" service. Resentment-based pricing leads to spectacular churn rates at a later date, when credible competition appears. It also leads to regulatory pressure if customers feel ripped-off.

    From a European analyst's perspective, some of the North American carriers are now seriously miscalibrating the value/resentment balance on SMS pricing.
    Sep 11 17:34 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • What's Up With 3G Performance in the iPhone? [View article]
    Tuskagee - try re-reading my posts. You're misinterpreting them.
    Aug 26 05:35 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • What's Up With 3G Performance in the iPhone? [View article]
    No problems, AppleFinland. It's a lot better than boring names like Jobs or Gates, and a lot more easily pronounceable than Kallasvuo....

    Tuskagee - you do indeed recall that. But that's Apple's fault, while this seems more likely to be a network issue, given the reports I'm seeing that the 3G iPhone is working fine elsewhere.

    Incidentally, it appears that Seeking Alpha has included this article of mine twice under different titles. See the other comment thread at:
    seekingalpha.com/artic...

    Or my original post at:
    disruptivewireless.blo...
    Aug 25 17:28 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
More on T by Dean Bubley
Comments by Ticker
Dean Bubley's
Comments Stats
24 comments
Rating: 1 (1 is - 0 )