Archives
- December 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- December 2009
- October 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- November 2008
- July 2008
- April 2008
- February 2008
- November 2007
- August 2007
- June 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- August 2006
- September 2005
- May 2005
- October 2004
- June 2004
Category Archives: LBS
It’s time to (re)engage your subscribers
A couple of months ago we were meeting with a product manager for a European mobile operator, who confessed he had a big problem with mobile social networking. His manager had done a “link deal” with one of the big social networks – you can probably guess which one – and with much fanfare, a new link and logo appeared on that operator’s mobile home page.
At first glance, this initiative had a tremendously successful outcome for the MNO. Their mobile Internet usage saw double-digit percentage growth overnight. And kept growing.
A week later, the operator announced increased usage caps for all of its data plans. No great problem here, as subscribers rapidly became new mobile social networking enthusiasts, often in their thousands each day. But certainly less revenue per MB.
In fact everyone was terribly pleased until later in the month they discovered that while overall mobile data was substantially up, their on-portal traffic had actually decreased, by more than 30 percent. And adding to that dilemma, ARPU decreased for nearly every VAS product they offered to their subscribers.
So while the social networking traffic was increasing, the mobile operator had become a dumb pipe – and found themselves dramatically exposed to churn in a competitive market. Because “m-site” social networking on network A is an identical experience on network B. And C. Or even D. Popular social networking sites are attracting millions of unique visitors to their mobile portals every month, and while mobile data usage rises, the ARPU curve – from data usage alone – is trending ever downwards. What should be an opportunity for mobile operators can very quickly become a massive problem.
To help mobile product and VAS managers meet this challenge, we devised the Locatrix (Re)Engage Workshops. Our thesis is this: mobile operators don’t need to “introduce” social networking services – their subscribers are already there. Instead, they need to formulate and execute strategies which provide a re-engagement path, via and through existing social networking services such as Facebook, Twitter and Friendster.
Delivered in either half-day and full-day seminar formats, our (Re)Engage Workshops help mobile product managers and network executives better understand the demographic mix of social networking users, and teaches them how to create a subscriber engagement strategy by working within the social networking paradigm. Creating, for example, a framework for injecting your mobile brand and VAS solutions into social networking portals, and helping your customers promote their favorite services to their friends. And while we of course present engagement examples based on Locatrix solutions and services, there is no ongoing commercial obligation from the (Re)Engage workshop – just an opportunity to learn and refresh your strategies for leveraging mobile social networking within your subscriber base. And (Re)Engaging with your customers!
There’s more information about the Locatrix (Re)Engage Workshops on our website, but for a limited time we are offering a free half-day (Re)Engage Workshop to qualifying operators who are readers of this newsletter: simply mention “Position Update” when you contact us, or use this special e-mail link.
Enabler Access in the Clouds
A major theme from this year’s Mobile World Congress, and a topic I hear repeated when speaking with mobile operators around the world, is how to create “value” in the mobile internet beyond data carriage. (And if you’ve noticed the price of mobile data reducing in every market worldwide, you aren’t alone).
This month we are profiling Locatrix/XLF, our hosted enabler-access and application framework solution. Mobile “enablers” – network elements that provide location, subscriber identity and profile, SMS/MMS messaging and charging – are powerful network assets that can create tremendous value for an operator and their subscribers, through facilitating personalized, interactive and monetizable consumer experiences.
Latitude? Google plays catch up…..
I’m travelling for a couple of weeks, so haven’t been as active on the blog as I ought to have been. However, the new Blackberry was working overtime last week when Google announced Latitude, the friend-finding capability within Google maps. Thanks to all of my friends who called, e-mailed, or texted me to let me know…….there were a lot of you!
Now, to be clear, I’m a fan of Google’s mobile initiatives. Google Maps works great on a GPS-equipped device (I’ve used it on both Nokia N95′s and now the 9000 Bold), and in December 2007 when they launched their cellID capability I personally believed it signified a “sunrise” moment in our industry, as folks began to realise that well, approximate locations were useful things.
Read more
