Most European MVNOs Will Fail,
Forrester Warns
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands, 27 September 2001 . . . Nontelecom companies face two
distinct MVNO (mobile virtual network operator) options, but Forrester advises
European firms to think long and hard before committing to a potentially
disastrous MVNO. The much-hyped brand MVNO will reward only those few firms with
powerful brands, niche customer bases, easily mobilized core businesses, and
strong management support. The unexploited device MVNO opportunity creates more
certain value with less risk -- but fewer firms can pursue it, according to a
new report by Forrester Research B.V. (Nasdaq: FORR). Forrester defines an MVNO
as: "A company that buys network capacity from a network operator to offer its
own branded mobile subscriptions and value-added services."
"We believe that executives must snap out of their brand MVNO dreams; firms that
have spent hundreds of millions on marketing and customer service to build their
brands and earn customers' trust have far more to lose than to gain from an MVNO
play," said Forrester Analyst Michelle de Lussanet. "Few MVNOs will execute
perfectly or compete against cutthroat mobile operators effectively using a
targeted market approach; in fact, such an approach can lead to failure, brand
damage, and loss of customers in core product lines. We expect dozens of
potential brand MVNOs to ignore these risks and flood Europe's telecom markets.
As indirect support from regulators' demand for competition creates fertile
ground, network operators with spare capacity will cave in to MVNO requests,
forcing their rivals to follow suit fearing traffic loss. The result will be a
brand MVNO boom which will bust in three short years."
This doesn't mean that firms shouldn't launch mobile services -- instead, they
should adopt alternative strategies with lower levels of commitment and
associated risk than the brand MVNO approach to the market. Companies face the
least risk by creating an SMS offering or a WAP site with no long-term
commitments required of customers or carriers. Or they can take a middle-of-the-road
approach by finding an existing driver of mobile traffic by distributing via a
mobile portal. That comarkets the service. While this involves a commitment to a
specific partner, short-term contracts can keep exit barriers low.
"But for a wide range of companies, including automakers, consumer electronics
companies, and utilities providers, a device MVNO has the potential to bring
important benefits with little risk beyond financial investments in equipment
and product development," de Lussanet added. "Device MVNO capabilities can help
firms drive sales, reduce costs, and differentiate themselves from competitors.
Firms will become device MVNOs because no network operator solution will support
the connections to back-office systems they need. But we expect the introduction
of device MVNOs to take time -- it will take months or years to design, develop,
and test new capabilities. High prices for data traffic and embedded GSM
receivers will keep manufacturing runs low as long as returns remain difficult
to quantify. Furthermore, network operators can't yet meet device MVNOs' high
requirements for reliability, uptime, and coverage. As a result, Europe''s
device MVNO count will stay in the single digits until 2004.
"As mobile data speeds increase and networks can guarantee higher service levels,
device MVNO barriers will erode. At the same time, consumers will come to expect
their PDAs to have mobile network connections and their MP3 players to download
songs anytime. Furthermore, machine-to-machine communication with a device MVNO
approach will form the next frontier of productivity gains after ERP and supply
chain systems have become de rigeur. The number of device MVNOs will rise
tenfold between 2004 and 2006."
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