Sunday, March 30, 2008
Low cost handsets driving Indian mobile growth
"Very low-cost (defined as sub-US$50) handsets have become integrally important to the Indian cellular market's astonishing growth. Sub-$50 models accounted for 62% of all imported units between January and October 2007. CDMA models from 13 vendors dominate this category, comprising 78 per cent of all sub-$50 imports," said the Yankee Group. While this is good news for mobile users, for handset manufacturers such as Nokia popularity of low end phones means lower margins. In order to cut down on costs Nokia is manufacturing most of the low end phones from its plant in Tamil Nadu. Whats also working for handset vendors is the huge volumes in the market. Nokia for instance earned 3.9 billion Euros in India. The Indian cellular market continues to add new subscribers at a world-leading rate of between 7 and 8 million users per month. "A number of factors including, but not limited to, service provider competition, service quality, brand affinity, effective marketing and distribution, device vendor competition, increasing per-capita GDP, and general demand factors such as choice, are driving growth. The broadening availability of ultra low-cost handsets (defined as sub-US$35) is also becoming one of the key drivers to subscriber growth," the study pointed out.
A comparison of GSM versus CDMA sub-$50 import volumes shows that sub-$50 CDMA imports outpaced sub-$50 GSM imports by a factor of approximately 3.5 times for the period. In terms of average selling price the CDMA handsets were found to be much cheaper than GSM low cost handsets. There are around 60 very low cost CDMA models from 13 vendors making it a highly competitive sector. This price gap between CDMA and GSM has, however, narrowed with the introduction of sub-$30 GSM imports from August to October. "Total market leader Nokia's contribution to sub-$30 GSM volumes increased from 15 per cent from January to July to 22 per cent from August to October," said the study.
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
CDMA's second innings in India
Friday, March 21, 2008
All set for 3G a(u)ction
After all the brouhaha over second generation (2G) spectrum in the past few months, the Government has got it right by suggesting an open auction for 3G mobile licences in the country. This means that companies such as Shyam, Unitech, Videocon, STel and Swan, which recently got new 2G licences, will be able to take part in the auction for 3G services. A new company wanting to take part in the auction will have to take a unified access licence by paying an entry fee of Rs 1,650 crore for pan Indian operations. This could also give a chance to companies such as Moser Baer, Hindujas and AT&T which could not acquire a licence for 2G mobile services. Since these companies were at the back of a queue of applicants, they were left out by DoT based on the first-come first-served policy. Now they could straightaway bid for 3G spectrum after taking a licence. This will increase competition for existing operators such as Airtel, Vodafone and Reliance Communication as they were expecting the auction to be limited to only those companies which were currently in operation. Since new licence holders are still awaiting release of spectrum to launch 2G mobile services, they will compete hard with the existing players for acquiring 3G spectrum. While existing operators want 3G spectrum for packing in more subscribers in line with their growing user base, new operators would want it to kick start their operations. As per the proposals being finalised by DoT successful bidders would be given chunks of 5 MHz spectrum each in the 2.1 GHz band. A single operator will not be allowed to bid for more than 2 such blocks which means that a company like Airtel could get 10 MHz spectrum if it goes for an aggressive bidding. Given that DoT has 30 Mhz for 3G services, at least 4-6 operators could get a 3G berth. While BSNL and MTNL will get 3G licence without participating in the bidding, the two companies will have to cough up the same amount as quoted by the highest bidder during the auction process. The final guidelines are expected to be released by April and the auction is being planned for the later part of the year. Going by the initial enthusiasm from the operators Government can expect to rake in around $5 billion from the auction. Now that should prompt DoT to take a fresh view on allocating 2G spectrum also through an auction method instead of a flawed subscriber linked allocation criteria.
(Third generation services will enable mobile users to get high speed broadband connectivity on their handsets. This will allow operators to start offering interesting data services like video on demand and mobile TV. Operators also need 3G spectrum as it is more efficient in packing in more number of users in lesser bandwidth compared to existing mobile technologies.)
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Right frequency for RCOM- 1800 or 900
Monday, March 17, 2008
Are GSM operators losing sleep over the 'Virgin Effect'?

Mr Shashi Arora, CEO - Bharti Airtel Ltd. (Mobile Services), Delhi & NCR said, “We at Airtel have always been at the forefront in introducing best in class products and services for our consumers. This latest endeavour is towards making tariffs more affordable and within the reach of all income groups. We are sure our customers would find this opportunity very cost effective.”
However, the Virgin Mobile offer seems to be still more attractive as it allows subscribers to call fixed line users also at 50 paise a minute, besides getting paid for incoming calls. The Airtel offer is limited to mobile-to-mobile calls. The other difference is that while the Airtel offer does not give any talk time with the Rs 56 voucher, Virgin has a recharge coupon for Rs 50 with a talk time worth Rs 39. “Virgin Mobile branded services offer the best value for money for youth who call and text a lot. The way we do this is by rewarding them both for making outgoing and receiving incoming calls. Customers who make a lot of calls, will benefit from our 50 paise to any local network offer. Many third party experts agree that we offer great value for money.
For example, in a report released by Morgan Stanley earlier this month, they found that customers who made 140 minutes of outgoing calls could save up to 25-30 per cent if they used Virgin Mobile,” said a Tata Teleservices spokesperson.
More than 70 per cent of the 200 million mobile subscribers use pre-paid cards and they tend to change operators. Lifetime validity cards were launched just over a year ago by all the mobile operators in a bid to arrest the high churn rate, which is around 4 per cent. GSM operators are confident that they are ready for the Virgin blitz. Bharti Airtel, BSNL, Vodafone and Idea Cellular are internally gearing to up the ante in terms of pushing their own youth-oriented initiatives. “We are enhancing our youth-oriented advertising and marketing initiatives. Our entire customer service platform is based on self-service, where customers pick and choose what they want without actually interacting with a human interface and is aimed at the youth segment,” said an Airtel executive. Another GSM operator said that it was waiting for Virgin Mobile to unveil its complete range of value-added services. “It is still early days and we will react once the entire package is unveiled,” said a Mumbai-based operator.
With many new operators set to enter the fray Indian mobile market can expect more interesting days ahead.
Thursday, March 13, 2008
DoT's Blackberry woes

Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Broadband or slowband?

When I was in Paris a few weeks back I was amazed at the fantastic speed of the Internet services there. Here in India, though speeds have improved since the so called broadband services were launched, it is no where near suited for viewing streaming video or downloading high bandwidth files. Watching a 5 minute clip on Youtube,for instance, could take as much as 20 minutes. While Indian telecom authorities are not keen on raising the minimum speeds required for broadband services from 256 kbps, the actual speeds that one gets is probably a few notches higher than the dial up. High bandwidth prices and an artificial choking of available capacities are making quality of Internet services in India among the worst in the world. According to data collected by Internettrafficreport.com, India had an overall index of 74 and a response time of 253 milliseconds.
Countries like the US have an index of 98 and a response time of just 13 milliseconds. Response time is the time taken for a packet of information to reach from one point to another. The higher the response time the slower will be the Internet connection.
Higher index, on the other hand, indicates faster and more reliable connection. Even developing countries like Mexico and Peru have a higher Internet index than that of India. Though the numbers put out by Internettrafficreport.com is dynamic and changes almost every hour depending on the connectivity of each country, similar index comparisons have been noted over the past few months.
Mr Rajesh Chharia, President, Internet Service Providers Association of India (ISPAI), says that though the Internet services being offered by Indian companies are among the best in the world, the efficiency is reduced because the bandwidth providers have an artificial cap on the total availability.
“Indian bandwidth providers have the infrastructure to offer capacity in terrabits but they are making available only a few gigabits. This has resulted in artificial change in the supply and demand equation.”
Mr Chharia also said that international bandwidth operators are also pricing capacity at much higher levels than global standards. “An E1 capacity in India is available for Rs 33,000 per month while the same is available for just Rs 17,000-20,000 per month in the US and the UK. This forces smaller ISPs, which cannot afford such higher price, to manage their services with less capacity even though they may need more bandwidth. The end result could be poor customer experience,” he said.
Market watchers pointed out that poor quality could be the reason for a sluggish growth in Internet and broadband services in the country.
However, bandwidth providers are refuting the ISPAI claims and said that there was more than enough capacity available and more is being added.
“Indian bandwidth operators are only adding capacities and building new cable systems to cater to the growing telecom market. It is a highly competitive market and the pricing is determined on free market forces. As broadband and Internet services grow in India, the prices will only come down,” said a Mumbai-based international bandwidth provider.