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Teleuse on a Shoestring:

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Title: Teleuse on a Shoestring:


1
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2
The path to the information society Does it lie
through the mobile?
  • Evidence from Asia and thoughts for Africa
  • Rohan Samarajiva
  • SA Connect Public Seminar, Cape Town
  • 14 April 2009

3
The challenge . . .
  • Solve the hardest problem getting the poorest
    millions connected to the Information Society
  • This will potentially unlock many markets and
    drive the world economy to a new level
  • Innovation at multiple levels needed
  • Business models to connect large numbers of poor
    people to electronic networks extend from mobile
    to broadband
  • Technical solutions to make it possible for them
    to do more-than-voice, once connected
  • More-than-telecom solutions to problem of putting
    money in peoples pockets through telecom, rather
    than taking money out

4
Connecting the millions at the bottom of the
pyramid
5
WSIS definition of Information Society
  • a people centered, inclusive, and
    development-oriented information society where
    everyone can create, access, utilize and share
    information and knowledge enabling individuals
    and communities to achieve their full potential
    in promoting their sustainable development and
    improving their quality of life.

6
In other words . . .
  • Everyone should be able to do some of what we do
    routinely using the metamedium known as the
    Internet
  • Communicate in multiple forms
  • synchronous/asynchronous
  • One-to-one/one-to-many/many-to-many
  • Push/pull . . .
  • Retrieve information from multitude of sources
  • Publish
  • Transact
  • Remotely compute . . .

7
Answers from LIRNEasias Teleuse _at_ Bottom of the
Pyramid (T_at_BOP) research (2008)
  • Six countries
  • Bangladesh
  • Pakistan
  • India
  • Sri Lanka
  • Philippines
  • Thailand
  • 9,950 sample, representing gt500m Bottom of the
    Pyramid, age 15-60
  • Design and analysis by LIRNEasia fieldwork by
    Nielsen affiliates

8
Bottom of the Pyramid (BOP) SEC D E
  • BOP defined as SEC D and E between ages 15-60
  • SEC determined by education and occupation of
    CWE closely related to income levels
  • BOP sample is representative of the BOP
    population
  • Diary respondents also representative of BOP
  • Only in Philippines, sample entirely SEC E, which
    gives a better match with the below USD 2/day
    classification

9
The hardest problem Internet use and awareness
in 2008
Among BOP teleusers
10
Little growth in South Asian Internet use since
2006
Among BOP teleusers
11
Will we ever get there? . . .
  • But there is an alternative path . . .

Access mobile?
12
What are the prerequisites for more-than-voice
mobile?
  • Familiarity with the technology
  • Access and use
  • Easy access via mobiles or CDMA fixed phones is
    most appropriate
  • Ownership
  • Only 40 in the Indo-Gangetic Plain (worlds
    largest concentration of poor people) own a phone
  • Sophisticated handsets can aid uptake
  • Potential for use of more-than-voice
  • SMS is the most popular more-than-voice
    application
  • Payment systems in place e-reloads as gateway
    to advanced applications

13
Recent use of the phone to make/receive calls
Used a phone in the last 3 months
Used a phone in the last week
13
Among BOP (OUTER SAMPLE)
14
Mobiles are used most as the primary phone
public phones in second place
Access within the household
Fixed phones at S Asia BOP are mostly CDMA
Mimic GSM features.
Also note that 20 in BD, 32 in PK, 13 in IN
10 in LK use the mobile of another household
member
Among BOP teleusers
15
Easy access needed for more-than-voice with
mobile
  • Easy access provided by ownership is important
  • Unlikely that public/shared phones will be used
    for anything other than basic voice
  • Access for more-than-voice, in order of
    importance
  • Own mobile
  • Other household members mobile
  • CDMA fixed phone

16
Total BOP phone ownership (mobile fixed) at
household level
  • Mean price paid by BOP for
  • Brand new handset USD 63
  • Secondhand handset USD 32

16
Among BOP teleusers
17
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Mostly calls, SMS, missed calls, balance
checking, but some download/upload, mostly
entertainment-related
Among BOP mobile owners
19
SMS more popular among those below 35 yrs
Among BOP mobile owners
Below 35 years
Sri Lanka
Among BOP fixed phone owners
20
E-reloading most popular in Bangladesh, Pakistan,
Philippines BOP
  • Qualitative research is showing interesting
    hybrid strategies, where, e.g., Indian users will
    use a scratch card for monthly/weekly use and
    then top-up with small e-reloads

20
Among BOP prepaid mobile owners
21
Trust is key to payments over the mobile
  • 71 of Thai top-up card users completely trust
    their method highest level of distrust in Sri
    Lanka
  • 77 of Bangladeshi electronic reload users
    completely trust their method again, Sri
    Lankans most distrustful

21
Among BOP prepaid mobile owners who use each
respective method
22
Top-ups are closer in urban areas
Among BOP prepaid mobile owners
23
Awareness ? trial ? use
  • Does the BOP know about more-than-voice services?
  • What experience do they have with these services?
  • Do they use them?

24
Poor awareness in the Indo-Gangetic Plain better
in LK and Southeast Asia
(n56)
24
Among BOP teleusers
25
Trial and use are even poorer Thai and Sri
Lankan BOP a little more advanced than other
countries
Among BOP teleusers who are aware of services
26
Payments Most who are aware don't know how or
don't feel the need to use it
26
Among BOP teleusers who are aware of services but
dont use them
27
1/3rd of the unaware in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka
and Philippines willing to use money transfer
services govt services via mobile
27
Among BOP teleusers who are not aware
28
Innovations to get from here to there
  • Less for less (budget-telecom-network) business
    model to be successfully extended from mobile
    voice to mobile broadband
  • Special attention to quality of service
    experience
  • Technical innovations

29
An incredible innovation that has already been
made in South Asia and is now spreading
  • Average for 77 emerging economies was USD 13.15
    four South Asian countries were below USD 5 TCO
    in 2007, now joined by 12 others (Guinea and
    Madagascar in Africa)

Total cost of ownership lt USD 5 BD, IN, PK, LK
30
High EBITDA margins, suggesting . . .
31
A new business model
  • Driven by hostile external conditions, low
    purchasing power and pressure from disruptive
    innovation, South Asian operators are
  • Executing a new budget-telecom-network business
    model
  • Service-process innovations that enable
    exploitation of long-tail markets
  • Revenue-yielding minutes not ARPUs ? high minutes
    of use and high EBITDA margins
  • Because of high loading of networks quality of
    service is likely to be spotty
  • However, this being a necessary feature of the
    model, excessive quality regulation could have
    prevented/delayed its discovery/ implementation

32
An inapplicable definition
  • Disruptive competition may be defined as
    existing when competitors to the incumbent have
    been so aggressive with their pricing that they
    do not cover their costs and end up making
    short-term losses. Their hope is in this way to
    gain market share and possibly force the exit of
    some of their competitors. In the longer term
    they hope they will be able to price more
    profitably. Fransman, Global broadband battles
    (2008)

Fransman does not explain why operators would
engage in this kind of behavior. We know it
makes sense for multi-product firms with one line
of business that is under regulation or where it
enjoys monopoly power this would most likely be
the Incumbent/dominant operator. But his claim
here is about challengers. On the face, it does
not make sense.
33
What we do use and what makes sense Disruptive
innovation (less for less) - Christensen
Raynor
  • Potential customers want a service, but because
    they lack money or skill, a simple, inexpensive
    solution has been beyond reach
  • They will compare the disruptive product to
    having nothing at all. They are happy to buy it,
    even though it may not be as good as other
    products available at high prices to current
    users
  • The enabling technology can be quite
    sophisticated, but disruptors deploy it to make
    purchase and use of the product simple and
    convenient (enabling people with less money and
    training to begin consuming)
  • The disruptive innovation creates an entirely new
    value network. The new consumers typically
    purchase the product through new channels and use
    the product in new venues

34
Postpaid vs. prepaid
  • Think of postpaid as the conventional mode of
    supply
  • Prepaid was a different service delivered through
    different channels to customers who could not
    have taken postpaid
  • It required more sophisticated technology than
    postpaid
  • Minutes increased with low ARPUs? prices
    declined? service-process innovations
    exploitation of economies of scale and
    purchasing? lower costs per minute ? prepaid
    postpaid prices also declined
  • 98 of BOP mobiles are prepaid
  • 54 of fixed phones at BOP in LK are prepaid

35
Extension to (mobile) broadband . . .
36
Recognize that not everyone has regular income
  • Budget-telecom-network model for voice recognizes
    that income is irregular at the BOP and comes in
    small increments e reloads
  • ? Broadband pricing should follow
    all-you-can-eat, flat-rate pricing models will
    not work at BOP
  • Should it be based on time (easier to understand)
    or on volume of data?

37
How much and for how long?
Value of last prepaid top-up
  • Is expected to last

Mode values
37
Among BOP prepaid owners (mobile or fixed)
38
Unbundle the mobile Internet
  • The Internet is a metamedium, which includes
    multiple functionalities
  • ? those who are starting may not require all the
    functionalities and may not be able to pay for
    all at first
  • What does less for less mean in broadband?

39
Some broadband services and significance of
quality
  • highly relevant, very relevant,
    relevant, - not relevant

40
Keep costs (and prices) down
  • Low prices are key, but cannot be sustained
    unless costs are also lowered
  • This would, most likely, require economizing on
    links to the Internet cloud
  • Domestic access network is not the main problem
    now

41
ADSL/WiMax Colombo Download speeds within ISP
domain
2 Mbps
February 2009
42
ADSL/WiMax Colombo Download speeds accessing
international server
100
February 2009
43
Where is the bottleneck (Colombo)?
170 ms
65 ms
25 ms
10 ms
NB Upto 5th hop IP addresses are within SL
(www.whois.net)
44
RTT from Dhaka- Submarine Cable vs Satellite
(international sites)
October 2008
45
Colombo International bandwidth a problem in
2009, but less than in 2008
100
February 2009
February 2008
February 2008 2009
46
Colombo HSPA better than ADSL/WiMax
100
February 2009
47
Latency some operators, but not all, meet IDA
(Singapore) standard
IDA standard 300 (ms)
February 2009
48
Actions
  • Buy more international capacity, and/or
  • Do a lot of mirroring
  • Can this be done within the region?
  • And, encourage locally hosted content
  • Given nature of mobile broadband (possibly more
    P2P content), this may be a significant factor

49
Regional mirroring?
  • The route to www.yahoo.com (hosted in USA) from
    Colombo takes roughly 250-300 milliseconds with
    11 hops
  • To next-door India (ww.yahoo.co.in), takes
    roughly the same time and 17 hops to Mumbai via
    Singapore and Chennai
  • Unless these links are improved, not much benefit
    from regional mirroring

50
Quality adequate to purpose at affordable prices
  • If voice quality is atrocious and price is high,
    will people buy voice services?
  • But when service was offered at quality adequate
    for purpose and at low prices, the market
    flourished and enabled needed investment
  • This is the key to broadband success, though the
    quality problem is more complex than was with
    voice

51
Technical solutions that need to be made for
mobile more-than-voice
52
Handsets
  • Lower costs
  • Higher functionalities
  • Voice interfaces
  • Trust-building features

53
Network equipment
  • Design of 3G networks to give decent QOS with
    high load factors

54
Web interfaces
  • Optimized for mobile not conventional Internet
    access

55
Social science has a major role to play
  • Everyone wants to understand the end user
  • Handset designers
  • Network designers
  • Service designers
  • Who will tell them?
  • LIRNEasia quantitative research
  • Nokia, Telenor qualitative research
  • Where are the universities
  • U of Salzburg, usability labs
  • ???

56
Putting money in users pockets, not taking from
57
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58
Need innovations in making/saving money from ICTs
  • Agricultural information
  • Our research shows the key interventions should
    be at
  • Selling stage (market information in real time)
  • Decision stage (ability to tell what the prices
    will be at harvest time)
  • M-payments
  • Reduce transaction costs for migrant workers
  • Reduce expensive cash use
  • Transportation
  • Help in cutting travel time and costs
  • More . . . ?

59
Survey asked about perceived benefits of telecom
access how has telecom access improved
  • Your ability to
  • make more money (generally, and via sale of talk
    time)
  • find out about employment/work opportunities
  • access price or market information
  • save money
  • save on travel cost
  • act in an emergency
  • contact others in an emergency
  • The efficiency of your day to day work
  • Your relationships with family and friends
  • Your social status/ recognition in the community

Economic benefits
Emergency communication
Efficiency
Emotional / soft benefits
Five-point scale 1worsened ? 5improved
60
Largest benefits perceived in emergency
communication and relationship maintenance
1worsened 2 slightly worsened 3no
change 4slightly improved 5improved
  • Smallest benefit on economic factors

Among BOP teleusers with personal incomes gt 0
61
Teleusers less certain when it comes to financial
benefits
1worsened 2 slightly worsened 3no
change 4slightly improved 5improved
Among BOP teleusers with personal incomes gt 0
62
Zooming in on the Indian BOP
  • Indians who use the phone for business activities
    see more benefits in terms of making more money
    (also via sale of calls), ability to find out
    about employment, save money, improve efficiency
    of daily work
  • 77 of Indian teleusers at BOP use their mobile
    for business, financial or work-related purposes
  • More than half of these do so on a daily basis

63
77 of Indian teleusers at BOP use their mobile
for business, financial or work-related purposes
more in BD and PH
72
49
Daily use
42
32
31
21
Among BOP mobile owners
64
Most pronounced differences between BOPs in urban
and rural Thailand
Among BOP mobile owners
65
Who is the most entrepreneurial of them all?
65
Among BOP mobile owners
66
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