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The Dyanamics of Mobile Apps and Stores – Operators Need to Partner with Content Providers

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Operators such as MTN, Airtel, Glo, Etisalat, Orange, Vodafone are looking to expanding Africa operations by launching app stores.  This is an phase for these telcos and players. They need to go into partnerships with content providers to offer services such as cloud computing, solutions for small and medium enterprises and to provide rich content in terms of music, gaming, entertainment and news. Why? The era of air time only revenue is going!

 

It is no longer about selling airtime, but bundling airtime with products and services. These can range from app stores and music to value-added services like m-learning and m-health. A good example of business information services extending their reach from print media to mobile is directory services. Yellow Pages search brings the ability to find products or services in consumers’ neighbourhoods by any of hundreds of categories, from attorneys to garden services to huts. Targeted businesses can then be contacted telephonically or via SMS, and also navigated to.

 

Users demand accurate, relevant local search results and a seamless ‘find, locate and communicate’ experience. Direct integration allows users to call, make bookings, navigate and share locations and routes via Facebook and Twitter, SMS and email.

 

 

Better Tools For the Knowledge Economy

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The legendary Peter Drucker, the Father of Management, stated these iconic words: ‘the best way to predict the future is to create it’. The building theory is that when nations and firms have control over many future variables, they have more chances to succeed. And creating that future requires constant new knowledge in the ever dynamic world.

 

As Dr. Drucker saw it more than half a century ago when he coined the term ‘knowledge worker’, it was very evident that the most important factor to building a new world will be the knowledge. In other words, the world has to move beyond the classical theory of factors of production where land, labor, and capital were very formidable in the lives of firms to one where knowledge would be most important.

 

A knowledge that is so potent that it can disrupt markets by creating new products and services as well as bringing new class of consumers by meeting their needs and perceptions. Developing that knowledge capability positions nations and firms to have better competitiveness. It is doing the business of human existence cheaply and efficiently through technologies engineered and managed by the new class of workers.

As nations develop these workers, they improve their productivity and over time they will develop knowledge comparative advantages through clusters of brain powers. Positioning to tap these clusters, ‘outsourcing’ was born, not necessarily because of the relative cheaper labor, but because there is knowledge capacity to do the job by the ‘outsourcee’.

 

In essence, knowledge brings readiness and satisfies that elemental factor for location and localization of industries-labor. Unlike the industrial labor, this labor is more mobile, adaptive and agile, and has a nucleus of brainpower, instead of muscles.

 

With the advent of Internet, nations become conduits of knowledge, having the power to become richer by selling and buying knowledge. America exports knowledge management, but buys knowledge IT skills in India, making knowledge both a tool and a product.

 

Gradually, but noticeably, new firms that have small land, labor and capital became disrupters in markets as the likes of Microsoft created a new industry and Google redesigned that industry with Facebook working to re-emerge it.

 

The knowledge leads to a new society. We have already seen the effects as citizens willingly share private information to the public. Citizens are more active in news generation and consumption. A society that embraces change in continuity and innovation within time-tested practices is what we have. Industries exist, but within them, we have remade them.

 

In the knowledge economy, knowledge is a product which must be managed just as other factors of production. Under this construct, we discuss the economy of knowledge. When used in the context of a knowledge based economy, knowledge becomes the technologies that enable new creation. Under these two definitions, knowledge has a duality: tool and product.

 

Most of the economic theories in use today were formulated during the industrial economy. Unfortunately, despite the transition from industrial to knowledge economy in most economies, those theories are still in use. Increasingly, the work of economists in understanding the direction of global economy has been difficult as boom and bust have become very cyclical with no end in sight. One main explanation is that the rules and practices of economics and management are still anchored on industrial economy and cannot align with the new economic system.

 

You can neither measure nor understand the knowledge economy with the tools developed for industrial economy.

 

We have seen disproportionate failures of regulators to prevent chaos in the world economic system. From mortgage crises to EU debt crises, one reality is that the world has become very complex to be properly vetted and understood. The challenge is not the regulation, but the tools which are used in doing it.

 

Yet, new economic structures will emerge in the future. If we cannot manage the knowledge economy; what will happen in subsequent ones? Governments need to fund the development of new economic tools which will stay ahead of economic transformations as technology enables new global innovations.

author/ndubuisi ekekwe 

Tech4Africa, October South Africa – Speaker List is Out. Herman Chinery-Hesse Will Be There.

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TECH4AFRICA is proud to bring together some of the most respected people in technology to share, teach and interact with Africans, in Africa. It’s an exciting time for African technology and it wouldn’t be possible without the vision and commitment of our partners.

 

The speaker list is out.

 

Who should attend?

  • Business people wanting to understand how Web 2.0, mobile, and emerging technology and mobile is relevant to the enterprise
  • Technologists, geeks, bloggers, social media hipsters, hackers, journos, ponytails, propellorheads, and of course suits, who want to learn from the best in tech
  • Everyone working in a tech startup
  • Entrepreneurs interested in learning more about venture funding
  • Companies wanting to expose their product or service to a focussed audience
  • People looking to recruit technology people

 

Focus areas are:

  • Emerging tech and trends for Africa
  • Applications for Web 2.0 in Africa
  • Mobile & wireless innovation and trends for the next 3 years
  • Cloud computing and it’s relevance for business in Africa
  • Startups & business opportunities in Africa
  • African success stories
  • The funding landscape in Africa

ITU Plans Universal Charger for Mobile Devices

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The universal charging solution being pushed by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), the world governing body for ICT, has been expanded to include its use in a wider variety of devices and making it even more energy efficient.

 

According to ITU in a statement, it will no longer be necessary to provide a new charger with every new ICT device. Considering that billions of these chargers will be made available in the market in the next few years, the new standard, ITU said will enable a significant global energy reduction.

 

ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Touré has said that , “Other standards claim to be universal and energy efficient, but only ITU’s solution is truly universal and a real step forward in addressing environmental and climate change issues. This updated standard, he said will bring the benefits of the universal charger to a wider range of devices and consumers.

 

“ I am sure it will be welcomed by all ITU’s membership – 192 governments and over 700 private sector entities,” he said.

 

“This also means that it can be used for data transfer, avoiding an unnecessary duplicate cable and thus further reducing costs and e-waste” he explained.

 

ITU membership, according to him, also agreed to specify a no-load power consumption of the power adapter below 0.03W which is the most efficient available today.

Mobility Geography of Africa – Markets and Dynamics

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For market leader MTN, South Africa and Nigeria are the main markets of growth; they brought on board a total of 6.2 million subscribers, with Nigeria accounting for 4.2 million new subscribers in 2010.

 

 

MTN announced a 22 percent increase in the subscriber base in 2010. The total number of subscribers for the MTN Group rose from 116 million in 2009 up to 141.6 million in 2010. MTN has achieved an average of 50 percent subscription penetration on the African continent.

 

MTN Group plans to invest $1 billion in improving its mobile phone network in Nigeria’s growing market. This will include building a fi ber optic network, improving transmission capacity, building more base stations and improving the capacity of its network.

 

 

On the international roaming front, MTN South Africa has introduced free incoming calls and SMS for both postpaid and prepaid customers travelling in the South and East Africa (SEA) region. This applies to MTN operators in Botswana, Rwanda, Uganda, Swaziland and Zambia.

 

 

The MTN brand has been rated as South Africa’s most valuable brand, according to a league table of both African and South African brands compiled by Brandirectory. It is valued at US$4.7 billion, almost double that of its nearest rivals on the continent, Vodacom, Orascom Telecom (Egypt), FNB and Standard Bank.
MTN recently reported that their data revenue grew 47% over the last twelve months while Vodacom grew its data revenue by 33.8% on the back of a 54.6% increase in data usage. Cell C is aggressively rolling out a country-wide 21Mbps HSPA+ network, and will start to upgrade this network to 42Mbps. Vodacom and MTN are also extending their 21Mbps HSPA+ coverage, and both companies are looking at 42Mbps broadband
services.

 

 

Bharti Airtel, the world’s fifth largest telecommunications company, has also entered the Nigeria market. Its purchase of Kuwait-based Zain brought it into 15 African nations. In the time since, Bharti cut call prices by 50 percent or more in 11 countries to attract more customers. It aims to target the low-end, rural customer segment in the region.
Bharti wants to double the company’s Africa business in 30 months to 100 million subscribers. At the end of September 2010, Bharti Airtel said it had about 40 million subscribers in Africa. In July 2010, Bharti announced plans to spend $600 million in Nigeria to improve its service.

 

Telkom South Africa has a range of off erings including mobile service 8.ta; Multi-Links, which provides a range of telecommunications services in Nigeria; iWayAfrica, the Internet services off ering outside of South Africa formed by merging the operations of MWEB Africa and Africa Online; and a selection of other local operations.

 

In 1993, Telkom branched into cellular communication and successfully bid for one of South Africa’s fi rst two mobile network licenses. Vodacom launched in March 2004, with Telkom as a 50% owner. In 1997, 30% of the company was sold to Thintana, a consortium made up of SBC from the US and Telekom Malaysia Berhad.
The company listed in 2003. In 2008, Telkom sold a 15% stake in Vodacom to Vodafone. Telkom is years ahead of the competition, despite the development of fi xed infrastructure networks by the likes of MTN, Vodacom and Neotel, according to Frost & Sullivan.

 

The Egyptian telecom sector generated $6.4 billion in revenue last year and has grown by nearly 25 percent in the past two years. Egypt will remain one of the fastest growing markets in Africa and the Middle East going forward. During the recent political instability that led to the overthrow of President Mubarak’s regime, telecom use increased and was heavily utilised to mobiles the masses, according to Pyramid Senior Analyst Hussam Barhoush.

 

 

According to Pyramid’s report, mobile penetration has increased from 23 percent in 2006 to nearly 80 percent by the end of 2010 year and the consultancy sees it expanding to over 100 percent by the end of 2015.
Etisalat Nigeria has sealed agreements for a $650 million syndicated loan with eight local banks to expands its mobile phone network across Africa’s most populous nation. “The additional funds will be used to roll out both our 3G and 2G network on a national basis,”

 

according to Etisalat Nigeria chief executive offi cer Steven Evans. The banks involved are First Bank, Zenith Bank, Access Bank, Fidelity Bank, United Bank for Africa (UBA), Bank PHB, Guaranty Trust Bank and Oceanic Bank. Etisalat’s main rivals in Nigeria — Africa’s fastest growing telecoms market — are South Africa’s MTN, India’s Bharti Airtel, and local fi rm Globacom.

 

 

Nigeria is the most competitive fixed-line market in Africa, featuring a second national operator (SNO, Globacom) and over 80 other companies licensed to provide fi xedtelephony services. The alternative carriers combined now provide over 95% of all fi xed connections. The majority of fi xed lines has been implemented using wireless technologies, which gives the network operators the opportunity to also enter the lucrative mobile market under a unifi ed licensing regime and has helped them to secure hundreds of millions of dollars in investments from local and foreign investors.

 

 

On the handset front, Nokia was the leading handset manufacturer in Kenya though its market share had reduced from 64% in September 2010 to 57% in February 2011. In the same period, Samsung increased market share from 12.5% to 13%. Android-based devices made an entrance in the top 10 devices to displace Sony Ericsson at fourth position with 4% share. Sony Ericsson dropped to fi fth position though market share.
Huawei made an entrance into the top 10 to settle at 7th position with 3% market share. Apple, Motorola, ZTE, LG and RIM round up the rest of the list.

 

Sources: ITU, MM