jump to navigation

Global Wireless Data Market Update 2007 March 27, 2008

Posted by chetan in : AORTA, Infrastructure, Carriers, Security, Speaking Engagements, M&A, 3G, Partnership, Devices, Mobile Advertising, US Wireless Market, Mobile Content, Mobile Entertainment, Mergers and Acquisitions, Location based Services, MVNO, Indian Wireless market, India, BRIC, WiMax, Mobile Gaming, Networks, ARPU, Japan wireless market, European wireless market, Mobile TV, mobile users, Mobile Applications, Worldwide Wireless Market, Mobile Usability, Mobile Ecosystem, Speech Recognition, Mobile Search, Wi-Fi, Wireless Value Chain, 4G, CTIA , trackback

Global Wireless Data Market Update 2007

Download PDF  (2.3 MB)

Download PPT  (1.3 MB)

http://www.chetansharma.com/globalmarketupdate2007.htm

As you read this End of Year (EOY) 2007 Global Wireless Data Market update this week, somewhere in India, a new subscription will catapult India over the US as the number 2 global wireless market. 2007 was a banner year for global wireless data market. The global service revenues for the year touched $700 billion, the data service revenues were more than $120 billion, China signed its 500 millionth subscription, and both India (in feb 08) and the US crossed the 250 million subscription mark. 2007 continued to enhance mobile data’s role in the operator ecosystem with approx 17% of the revenue is coming from data services.

For some leading operators, data is now contributing up to 35% of the revenues however increase in data ARPU is not completely offsetting the drop in voice ARPU. From the true and tested SMS messaging to new services such as Mobile TV, Enterprise apps, and others, different services helped in adding billions to the revenues generated for 2007. Japan and Korea remain the envy of the global markets and the countries to study and learn from w.r.t. new services and applications. The US market has been steadily making strong comeback and for the first time exceeded Japan in service revenue generated from mobile data.

Chetan Sharma Consulting conducted its semiannual study on the global mobile data industry. We studied wireless data trends in over 40 major countries - from developed and mature markets such as Japan, Korea, UK, and Italy to hyper growth markets such as China and India. This note summarizes the findings from the research.

Your feedback is always welcome.

Chetan Sharma

Disclosure: Some of the companies mentioned in this note are our clients.

Comments»

1. Mobile Data Usage in the Philippines Increasing Rapidly - March 28, 2008

[…] 03/29/2008Mobile Data Usage in the Philippines Increasing Rapidly Chetan Sharma Consulting has made their Global Wireless Data Market Update 2007 available for download on their blog. Of interest to us is this particular statement in the report: The biggest percentage contribution by data ARPU has been consistently registered (since mid 2002) by two Philippines [sic] carriers – Smart Communications and Globe Telecom with almost 55% (or $4) contribution coming from data services. […]

2. Talking Turkey on Canadian Data — Alec Saunders .LOG - March 31, 2008

[…] Mark coined this term a decade ago when most of us were thinking broadband as a wired internet phenomenon.  Blogger / analyst Chetan Sharma has been tracking the wireless AORTA revolution for some time.  So when he published his Global Wireless Data Market Update last week, it was worth paying attention to.  In fact, there are real some gems in there. […]

3. Dean Bubley - April 3, 2008

Hi Chetan

Any thoughts on how much skew is introduced into the data by 3G modems for PCs, especially given the rapid growth of USB dongles?

I’m particularly thinking about operators like 3 UK, which is selling huge numbers of consumer mobile broadband subscriptions (which are obviously 100% data) at perhaps $25 ARPU, or others like the US operators & Vodafone which are more focused on the corporate market at perhaps more like $60-80 ARPU.

Cheers

Dean Bubley

4. chetan - April 3, 2008

Hi Dean,

Thanks for writing. In the early days of 3G penetration, the market skew is over 50%, typically when the penetration is around 10-15%. Then it gradually starts to come down. Obviously, this is true for traditional operators like Vodafone who are migrating form 2/2.5G. 3 UK and pure data/broadband operators will see a different mix, more skewed towards data cards.

Thanks
Chetan

5. Gautam - April 9, 2008

Hi Chetan,

I have a question about the market for ‘data cards’ or wireless modems in India. In particular, I’m thinking of small to large businesses using data cards for their employees while traveling; obviously, the revenue here will not be coming from SMSs but from connecting to the net and accessing email and webpages on laptops.

Do you have any sense for the ARPU in India for this segment of the data market? Does it even make sense to talk about ARPU for data cards or wireless modems? And do you think technologies like WiMAX will render current data cards obsolete in a couple of years anyway?

I’m relatively new to the industry so my apologies if I have this totally wrong.

Thanks!

6. chetan - April 9, 2008

Gautam,

There is a market for data cards in India but relatively small though it is growing pretty fast. Number of companies are handing our data cards with laptops and expect their sales employees to update sales figuers daily/weekly. Email is less of a concern for companies as employees can find an Internet cafe nearby (however slow the connection might be) and check messages. ARPU for this segment of users is obviously high as they get unlimited data packages.

Regarding WiMAX, we still have to wait and watch if trials turn into deployments and how pervasive the network will be .. it needs to be in all major cities to be effective and if there is not going to be any price advantage that WiMAX can offer, cellular will stay dominant.

Best,
Chetan

7. Katie Lips - May 5, 2008

Thanks Chetan, this is a really useful article. I’m researching SMS trends and seeking a figure on the % of mobile subscribers that are active texters. I believe it’s around a third (66%)? Although it varies country to country with India being higher and the UK for example being lower. Any ideas where to find more accurate global SMS stats?