Description
People are communicating more things to more people than ever before, and not just by phone anymore. Internet-enabled communication models are gaining audience, attention and market share at the expense of traditional telecommunication providers.
Telecommunications
IBM Institute for Business Value
IBM Global Business Services
The changing
face of
communication
Social networking’s
growing influence on
telecom providers
IBM Institute for Business Value
IBM Global Business Services, through the IBM Institute for Business Value,
develops fact-based strategic insights for senior executives around critical public
and private sector issues. This executive brief is based on an in-depth study by
the Institute’s research team. It is part of an ongoing commitment by IBM Global
Business Services to provide analysis and viewpoints that help companies realize
business value. You may contact the authors or send an e-mail to [email protected]
for more information.
1
People are communicating more things to more people than ever before, and not
just by phone anymore. Internet-enabled communication models are gaining audience,
attention and market share at the expense of traditional telecommunication providers
(Telcos). Can Telcos fight back and find new growth opportunities in this rapidly
changing ecosystem? The challenge is not just in understanding the technology, but
also the unfolding fundamental shifts in human communication behavior.
The changing face of communication
Social networking's growing influence on telecom providers
By Rob van den Dam, Ekow Nelson and Zygmunt Lozinski
The changing face of communication
communicate with geographically dispersed
employees, suppliers and partners.
The widespread social networking
phenomenon reflects shifts in two long-term
communication trends. First, there is a shift in
communication patterns – from point-to-point,
two-way conversations, to many-to-many,
collaborative communications. Secondly,
control of the communication environment
is transitioning from Telcos to open Internet
platform providers, enabled by better,
cheaper technology, open standards, greater
penetration of broadband services and
wireless communication networks.
The combined effect of these trends is altering
the competitive landscape in communications
and giving rise to emerging business models
that include:
• Open and Free – This model features
companies that offer one-to-one communi-
The face of communication has changed
dramatically over the past few years. Traditional
Telcos, which have historically dominated
two-way interpersonal conversations, are
increasingly being challenged by new market
entrants that use open platforms to meet
diverse and rapidly changing user wants and
needs.
Social networking Web sites and services,
such as Facebook, MySpace and Cyworld,
have become primary communication
media for a new generation of digitally aware
consumers. Driven by high broadband
penetration, maturing “social software”
and readily available, affordable Internet-
enabled multimedia devices, these sites and
services are making inroads with enthusi-
astic users and garnering the attention of
advertisers, consumer product companies
and enterprises that are using social media to
reach their customers, build brand loyalty and
2 IBM Global Business Services
cation services, but through an open Internet
platform and at no – or very little – cost.
These services potentially threaten profitable
traditional services, such as long distance
calling and mobile roaming.
• Gated Communities – Companies using
this model focus on many-to-many commu-
nications, rather than point-to-point, within
telecom-controlled environments. They are,
essentially, a “walled-garden” for opera-
tor-led collaboration services and are likely
to appeal to users and enterprises that
desire secure and reliable communication
environments.
• Shared Social Spaces – This rapidly
growing model facilitates collaboration
on the open Internet. Key players include
social networking sites such as MySpace
and Facebook. These providers have the
potential to become de facto integrated
communication platforms, bringing together
social networking, voice communication,
e-mail, instant and text messaging, as well
as content. They are drawing attention away
from traditional Telcos and contributing to
the fragmentation of the market. Beyond
gaining audience share, these services
pose an operational challenge to Telcos as
they “piggyback” on the existing commu-
nications infrastructure, imposing network
capacity issues and increased costs for the
network providers.
In the short term, as the industry transitions to
more open and collaborative communication
models, the traditional model will likely remain
dominant. Over the long term, however, the
industry can expect a shift toward models
that facilitate collaboration and sharing, with
Shared Social Spaces attracting a more
significant and impactful share of people’s
communication time.
Over the short to medium term, Telcos should
focus on laying the foundation for a more open
and collaborative future. They can begin by
taking advantage of the window of opportunity
in mobile social networking and also bolster
their capabilities to serve the evolving, broader
communication needs of enterprises. They
should partner with, or acquire, existing players
to proactively develop the capabilities required
for success, or enable other participants in the
value chain to benefit from distinctive telecom
capabilities. Using network and computing
infrastructure optimization techniques, they can
reduce the cost of delivering high bandwidth
content and potentially capture value from it.
Over the long term, Telcos should embrace
a broader definition of communication – one
that encompasses everything from two-way
conversations to many-to-many commu-
nications – and align the organization with
this reality. Also, Telcos are well positioned
to enable a cross-platform, fully integrated
experience across mobile, fixed and IPTV
services.
A new ecosystem is emerging from these long
term shifts in communication trends that will
require bold, significant changes by existing
telecom providers. The option of doing nothing
is not a luxury many providers can afford, as
revenues from traditional services continue
to decline and highly resourceful Internet
information providers and IT companies enter
the communications space to claim a larger
share of communication time.
2 IBM Global Business Services
3 The changing face of communication
The changing face of communication
Social networking's growing influence on telecom providers
The changing face of communication
A burgeoning market in social networking
Social networking, perhaps considered
a “communication fad” in recent years, is
transcending that phase and becoming
an activity woven into the intrinsic fabric of
the Internet. Throughout the world, Internet
users are turning en masse to such sites as
Facebook and MySpace to meet their commu-
nication needs. Consider, for example, that
before 2005, not a single social media network
was ranked among the world’s top 20 English-
language Web sites.
1
By June 2008, social
networking sites comprised half of the same
list, displacing many traditional Internet “stars,”
such as AOL (see Figure 1).
Overall, the number of unique monthly visitors
to the top six social networking sites increased
95 percent between June 2006 and June
2007 – and then another 50 percent from
June 2007 to June 2008.
2
According to data
from comScore, the global Internet information
provider, unique visitors to social networking
sites in June 2008 represented approximately
two-thirds of the world’s Internet audience.
3
Based on the projected growth of the global
Internet audience, we estimate that by 2012,
the number of unique monthly visitors to social
networking sites will surpass 800 million.
4
In South Korea, considered by many to be
the world’s most developed social networking
FIGURE 1.
Top 20 English language Web sites.
Social media sites
Note 1: The traffic rank is based on three months of aggregated historical traffic data, and is a combined measure of page views and users (reach).
Note 2: Due to the way Alexa assigns “language”, multilingual Wikipedia, which is in global top 20, is not shown in this list.
Source: Institute for Business Value (IBV) Analysis; Alexa Internet Web Search – top 20 English Language Web Sites.
Rank Aug 2004 Aug 2006 Aug 2008
1 Yahoo! Yahoo! Yahoo!
2 MSN MSN Google
3 Google Google Youtube
4 Microsoft MySpace Live
5 Passport Live Facebook
6 eBay eBay MSN
7 Amazon Youtube MySpace
8 Offeroptimizer Microsoft Hi5
9 Fastclick Amazon Orkut
10 Doubleclick Orkut Rapidshare
11 Go Blogger Blogger
12 Alibaba Google UK Megaupload
13 CNN Passport Fotolog
14 BBC BBC Friendster
15 165.254.12.202 Craigslist Microsoft
16 AOL Go eBay
17 Google UK CNN Megarotic
18 Gator Alibaba Google UK
19 eBay UK Megaupload Amazon
20 Searchscout IMDB Internet Movie
4 IBM Global Business Services
nation, 90 percent of teens and 40 percent
of the entire population are members of the
social networking site Cyworld.
5
In the United
States, 80 percent of young adults, 60 percent
of teens and 30 percent of adults use social
networks.
6
Not only are social networks generating a
significant amount of online traffic, visitors
to leading social networking sites also view
more pages per visit than any other category
of Internet site, including such online portals
as Google and Yahoo.
7
This opens the door
for potential revenue generation as social
networks, like most online service providers,
base their business model on trading page
views for advertising dollars.
Already, savvy marketers have begun to
experiment more heavily with this concept.
They spent US$2.1 billion on social network
advertising in 2008, almost double the
US$1.2 billion spent in 2007.
8
By 2012, if the
current trend continues, social networking ad
revenues could reach $3.8 billion, provided the
right business model can be found.
9
The new online portal
Social networks have done more than attract
users and ad revenue away from traditional
Internet sites. They have become a primary
destination for online users and represent
the next stage in the evolution of the online
experience, serving as control points for
managing and enriching a user’s digital
lifestyle. They bring together user-generated
and professional content, communication tools
and services, online connections, applica-
tions and collaborative tools from blogs and
podcasts, to wikis and widgets (see Figure 2).
Communication and content distribution
With numerous communication tools at their
disposal, social networks are becoming
integrated communication hubs. The
integration of MySpace and Skype, for
example, illustrates how social networks and
communication applications can converge
to benefit users. With more than 118 million
active MySpace users and over 370 million
Skype registered users around the world,
this partnership connects two of the most
Directories
Browse
Late 1990’s
Portal aggregator
Early 2000s
Content search/discovery
Search
Mid-late 2000s
Social networks
Shared social spaces
User A User B
User C
RSS
Mashups Tagging
Widgets
Web
content
User-generated content
Podcasts
Network of user connections
and relationships
FIGURE 2.
Social networking sites are becoming online portals.
Source: Institute for Business Value analysis.
Blogs
Wikis
Social networks have
become primary
destinations for online
users to organize their
Internet experience.
Meta data and tools
5 The changing face of communication
popular communication platforms on the
Internet “to create the world’s largest online
voice network.
10
MySpace members can make
Internet phone calls using Skype’s telephony
network and MySpace’s instant messaging
program.”
11
Social networks are also increasingly
becoming channels for digital content distri-
bution, using their network of relationships
to push information to users. In November
2007, for instance, Bebo launched its “Open
Media” platform that offers media companies
such as BBC, MTV and BSkyB an additional
distribution outlet.
12
And Apple is tapping into
the popularity of social networking sites by
embedding its iTunes Internet music download
service into the Bebo Web site.
13
Expansion and extension
Traditional mainstream Internet sites and major
consumer brands are beginning to recognize
the value of social networking, not just for the
potential advertising dollars it may generate,
but also for e-commerce and the built-in
mechanisms it employs to communicate with
customers.
eBay, for example, has created more than
600 micro-social networks called eBay
Neighborhoods, where members can access
blogs, guides, reviews and product searches,
and then click to visit related auctions.
14
And big-name brands, such as Coca-Cola,
Victoria’s Secret and Webkinz, have ventured
into this newly charted arena by using social
networks to generate brand awareness and
affinity.
15
Depending on a brand’s goals,
affiliating with a social network site – or
possibly creating its own – can bring in an
audience of customers, contain them and
allow them a voice whenever appropriate.
Enterprises are also learning the value of a
solution that facilitates communication and
collaboration among employees, partners
and suppliers. Social networks provide the
opportunity to bridge the gap in communi-
cation and collaboration created by enterprise
globalization. For example, General Motors
uses social networking tools to facilitate
communication between executives and
employees, as well as to give product experts
the opportunity to present new designs to the
employee community.
16
Motorola’s “Intranet 2.0”
initiative has met with considerable success,
with 70,000 people using it every day, including
partners.
17
The company now has 4,400 blogs
and 4,200 wiki pages. It uses, among other
technologies, social networking, bookmarking
and tagging.
18
Telcos are getting in on the act
A number of Telcos are already responding
to the challenges and opportunities of social
networking. Many have initiatives underway
that range from simply enabling online social
networking sites, to extending their offerings
to the mobile communication environment,
to even building their own, proprietary social
networks.
For example, SK Communications, a
subsidiary of SK Telecom in South Korea,
acquired Cyworld in 2003 and is now
generating approximately US$200 million
per year from selling digital items and adver-
tising.
19
In 2005, the company started a joint
venture with EarthLink to launch a mobile
virtual network operator called Helio, which
merged into Virgin Mobile in July, 2008.
20
Enterprises are
leveraging social network
applications to improve
collaboration with
customers, employees,
partners and suppliers.
6 IBM Global Business Services
In early 2007, Vodafone struck a deal with
MySpace to enable MySpace users to access
their profiles from Vodafone cell phones.
21
Today, Vodafone has a similar arrangement
with Facebook.
22
U.S. telecom operators
Sprint, Verizon, AT&T and Virgin Mobile provide
MySpace and Facebook on their mobile
devices.
23
Vodafone’s “Connect to Friends” is an
application embedded within social networks
that facilitates communication with friends,
regardless of where they are, with SMS (short
message service) and MMS (multimedia
message service) from either a PC or a mobile
phone (see sidebar, Vodafone – Extending
telecom capability to open social networking).
Vodafone – Extending telecom capability
to open social networking
The “Connect to Friends” application from
Vodafone is a messaging application users can
download from Facebook. It is open to Vodafone
and non-Vodafone customers and allows them
to send messages and photos directly from
Facebook.
24
Free messaging credits are offered
to attract users and to encourage viral marketing.
Further messaging credit packs are applied to
the customer’s phone bill using the e-commerce
service Pay4it. The provision of “Connect to
Friends” enables Vodafone to reach out to
customers across other online channels and helps
drive customer conversion.
25
Trends in communication evolution
The widespread social networking
phenomenon is a reflection of shifts in two
long-term underlying trends in communication:
1. Communication patterns are shifting from
point-to-point, two-way conversations to
many-to-many, group communications and
collaboration.
2. Shift in communication control is
transitioning from provider-controlled envi-
ronments to open Internet platform service
providers with greater opportunities for user
participation.
Shifts in communication patterns
“Communications overall is
shifting from ‘point-to-point’
to ‘many-to-many,’ in order to
socialize and enjoy an experience
more deeply – people consuming
content together and interacting
during that experience from
virtually anywhere in the world.”
– John Stankey, President and CEO, AT&T
Operations
Communication patterns are changing from
personal and conversational, to sharing and
collaborative, augmented with links, videos,
photos and other multimedia content that
substantially enrich the communications
experience. This is being enabled by greater
global connectivity, the availability of affordable,
high-quality content and communication
devices, and the rise of social software.
Traditional interpersonal communication,
usually via the telephone, allows expression,
but does not provide group or collaborative
capabilities. As Professor Clay Shirky, a leading
authority on the social and economic effects of
the Internet at New York University’s Interactive
Telecommunication Program observes, “The
telephone, the technological revolution that
put the most expressive power in the hands
of the individual, didn’t create an audience;
telephones were designed for conversation.”
26
7 The changing face of communication
The availability and convergence of mobile
communication and the Internet are now
creating a platform that enables group
communication encompassing many partici-
pants through shared spaces in virtually any
geographic location.
The so-called “Net Generation,” composed
of “digital natives” who have grown up in a
technology-enabled environment, is at the
forefront of this phenomenon. According
to Pew Research, on average, a typical
21-year-old in the United States entering the
workforce today has played video games
for 5,000 hours, exchanged 250,000 e-mails,
instant messages and phone text messages,
has 10,000 hours of cell phone use and has
spent 3,500 hours online.
27
The new generation of digital natives is far
more likely than their parents to own a digital
music player, to have posted writing, pictures
or video on the Internet, to have created a blog
or profile on a social networking site, to have
downloaded digital content such as songs,
games, movies, or software, to have shared a
remix or “mashup” creation with friends and
to have snapped a photo or video with a cell
phone.
28
For many of this generation, social networking
is even supplanting e-mail as the preferred
method of communication. But they also use
social networking for more than commu-
nication and content sharing. They use it
to develop their identities, meet friends or
form relationships that become part of their
individual social graphs, which are becoming
key resources for harnessing collective
wisdom or opinion from “trusted” individuals.
But the shift away from traditional telecom-
munication to social networking is not limited
to digital natives. A growing number of adults
now use technology to get what they need
from each other, instead of from traditional
media and institutions. Nineteen percent of
consumers in the 2007 IBM Digital Consumer
survey said they spent more than 6 hours
per day on personal Internet activities.
29
Only
9 percent indicated they watch the same
amount – or more – of television.
30
As shown in Figure 3, social networks are
used instrumentally to reinforce social ties.
Talk to friend/family a lot
Talk to friend/family I rarely see
Look for old friends I have lost touch with
Look at other peoples’ sites without leaving a message
Talk to people who are friends of friends
Listen to music/find out about bands
Talk to people I don’t know
Look at campaigns and petitions
Other
69%
65%
47%
40%
35%
29%
17%
6%
4%
FIGURE 3.
The most popular activities in social networking are communications/staying in touch.
Source: Institute for Business Value analysis; “Social Networking,” United Kingdom Office of Communications (Ofcom) 2008,http://www.ofcom.
org.uk/advice/media_literacy/medlitpub/medlitpubrss/socialnetworking/report.pdf
Brought up in the connected
and collaborative world
of the Internet, the Net
Generation is at the
forefront of shifting social
communication patterns.
8 IBM Global Business Services
Shift in communication control
Widespread availability and affordability of
connectivity and communication tools/devices
are also shifting control of communication
media away from the domain of Telcos and
toward a more open communication platform.
The majority of households, individuals and
businesses in developed nations have Internet
access, and the number of Internet users
in emerging economies is growing rapidly.
31
In September 2008, there were 452 million
broadband subscribers worldwide (more than
the total number of households in the United
States, Britain, France, Japan, Korea and
Germany), expected to grow to 876 million by
2012.
32
At the same time, data connectivity
speeds have increased considerably – from
56Kbps modem connectivity speeds only
a decade ago to 8-16Mbps today.
33
Some
countries support bandwidth up to 90Mbps
currently.
34
The costs of connectivity and
storage have also declined significantly, and
the availability of Internet-enabled devices,
with increasing user interface sophistication, is
enabling richer, more immersive experiences.
With better, cheaper technologies and greater
use of broadband, the Internet, and wireless
networks, “Over the Top” (OTT) providers, such
as social networking sites, are becoming
ever-more viable platforms for communication
services – and consumers are responding
eagerly.
Impact of shifts on the emerging
communication landscape
The combination of shifts in communi-
cation control and patterns is redefining the
competitive landscape, giving rise to new
business models. In contrast with traditional
communication models, emerging models
are based on open platforms that support
many-to many and/or collaborative communi-
cation patterns (see Figure 4).
Collaborative
Two-way
conversational
Gated Communities
Traditional Communication
Shared Social Space
Open and Free
Mobile subscribers
2007-2012 CAGR 6.8% 2007-2012 CAGR 3%
Fixed subscribers
Skype
IM accounts
Mobile social
networking users
SN unique visitors
±2/3 of Internet users
2007-2012
CAGR 20%
2007-2012
CAGR 13%
2007-2012
CAGR 64%
Online SN Active
Members
2007-2012
CAGR 18.5%
Communications environment
C
o
m
m
u
n
i
c
a
t
i
o
n
s
p
a
t
t
e
r
n
M
a
r
k
e
t
d
i
r
e
c
t
i
o
n
Communication
provider-controlled
Open internet
All types of VoIP in
2012: 1.2 billion
2007
2012
FIGURE 4.
Shifts in communication control and patterns give rise to new business models.
Source: IBM Institute for Business Value analysis based on publicly available data from eMarketer, Datamonitor, Skype, ABI Research and
The Radicati Group, Inc.
Audience and attention migration
9 The changing face of communication
Traditional communication
The traditional model, characterized by
two-way point-to-point communication is
the domain of traditional Telco providers. It is
the largest segment in terms of revenue and
subscribers, but it is showing signs of slow
growth as other models take hold. Wireline
revenue is declining and although, according
to Gartner Inc., global mobile services revenue
is forecast to grow 7.6 percent from 2007-2012,
the mobile subscriber base has reached
saturation in key developed markets.
35
Open and Free
This model offers alternatives to traditional
point-to-point communication services on
open Internet platforms. Companies in this
domain provide basic communication services
such as VoIP for free or at very low cost. Many
of these services threaten profitable traditional
services such as long distance calling and
mobile roaming.
Providers in this space include VoIP provider
Skype, Google with GoogleTalk and Microsoft
with Windows Live Messenger, which offer
PC-to-PC voice services along with instant
messaging and chat.
36
With over 370 million
registered users worldwide, Skype has, in a
matter of five years, come close to creating a
truly global telecom service.
37
While Skype’s
level of growth is impressive, there remains
some skepticism about the ability of these
types of new entrants to provide the high
quality of service required to support profes-
sional, error-free business communications.
Many of the players in the “open and free”
space, such as Microsoft and Google, have
considerable resources and leave little room
for a commercially viable response from Telcos
beyond repackaging existing services into
“convenience bundles.” Some Telcos, however,
seemingly have embraced the model and are
partnering with disruptive new entrants. The
mobile operator 3 in the United Kingdom and
Italy, for example, has partnered with Skype
to launch the 3 Skypephone, which enables 3
subscribers to make free calls and send free
Skype instant messages from their 3G mobile
phones to other Skype users.
38
As first movers,
this partnership has the potential to attract and
retain customers. However, while the benefits
to Skype are obvious, it is too early to assess
the true commercial value to 3.
Gated Communities
This model is also the domain of traditional
communication service providers, but the
focus is more on many-to-many commu-
nications rather than point-to-point. This
is essentially a “walled-garden” approach
in which operators facilitate collabo-
ration services that will appeal to users
and enterprises with a preference for the
more secure and reliable communications
environment traditionally provided by telecoms.
Gated Communities include both fixed (online)
and mobile social networking. It is our view,
however, that walled-garden social networking
sites are unlikely to be successful as the
majority of consumers have demonstrated a
10 IBM Global Business Services
preference for open social networking sites.
Telecom companies do have a window of
opportunity in this model, however, by enabling
mobile social networking on existing mobile
network architectures, which, for the most part,
remain closed platforms. Developments in
smartphones and the mobile Internet, however,
will gradually blur the advantage of mobile
exclusivity. Forecasters estimate that by 2012,
mobile social networking will represent a
market opportunity of between US$22.5 and
US$52 billion.
39
Recent studies have revealed that more than
40 percent of iPhone users in the United
States, Germany, France and the United
Kingdom are visiting social networking sites.
40
In South Korea, a mobile user visits Cyworld
on average 11 times per day.
41
The mobile
service of the Japanese social network Mixi,
which started as an online site, has turned
out to be hugely successful with mobile page
views already outnumbering online page
views.
42
A number of traditional communication service
providers have formed partnerships with open
social networking providers to incorporate
such services into their telecom environments.
For example in October 2008, Telefonica
signed a global agreement with Facebook
allowing it to integrate access to Facebook’s
mobile service and applications from all of
Telefonica’s mobile portals.
43
Enterprise-level collaboration has significant
potential in this “Gated Communities” space.
Many governments and corporations are
redefining their communication needs beyond
voice telephony and e-mail, and are looking
to productively employ Web-based collabo-
ration tools such as blogs, wikis and social
networking to help transform their organi-
zations by achieving greater coordination
and communication with their customers,
employees and partners (see Figure 5).
While traditional telecom companies are
often perceived as conduits of information,
the opportunity exists for them to serve
enterprises – and governments – with a
broader set of innovative communication
solutions that encompass collaboration in
a secure, reliable environment with agreed
service level guarantees.
Increase collaboration
Raise awareness of “what we know”
Increase agility/responsiveness
Faster communication
Increase innovation and reduce time to market
Reduction of IT costs
Accelerate brokering of people
69%
56%
56%
FIGURE 5.
Businesses and organizations are leveraging social network applications to improve collaboration with
customers, employees and partners.
Source: AIIM Market IQ: Enterprise 2.0, Agile, Emergent & Integrated, March 2008.
55%
39%
36%
21%
Mobile social networking
provides a short-term
opportunity to increase
use of SMS, MMS and
even voice traffic.
11 The changing face of communication
Shared Social Spaces
Shared Social Spaces facilitate collaboration
on the open Internet. The main providers
in this space are OTT applications such as
MySpace, Bebo, YouTube and Facebook. But
also virtual worlds such as Second Life belong
to this domain and have integrated voice and
text-based communication capabilities to
connect to friends, even from mobile phones.
44
A number of key players in the “Open and
Free” model are also offering services in
this space, such as Google with its social
network Orkut.
45
Other companies entering
the fray include Microsoft with investments
in Facebook, and Nokia with its OVI/Share
platform.
46
As many of these players integrate
telephony services, they have the potential to
become fully integrated, end-to-end communi-
cation platforms.
While there has been significant growth in
social networking, we believe the revenue
model remains unproven. Regardless, these
media are drawing attention away from
traditional communication service providers
and are contributing to their slowing growth.
Over the long run, they have the potential to
generate reasonable revenue streams from
advertising and other sources as dollars begin
to follow “eyeballs.”
Still, telecom providers need to care about
Shared Social Spaces and, especially, OTT
applications that put additional strain on
already-burdened network infrastructure,
particularly with the rapid increase in video
content sharing and distribution. According
to a BBC News report, the United Kingdom
communications regulator Ofcom estimates
these types of OTT services will impose
additional £830m (US$1.4 billion) in bandwidth
costs on UK Internet service providers (see
sidebar, Free OTT services cost network
providers).
47
It is projected that by 2012, the sum of all
forms of online video, including TV, VoD,
Internet and peer-to-peer (P2P), will account
for nearly 90 percent of all consumer Internet
traffic, a large portion of which will flow through
OTT applications (see Figure 6).
48
Shared Social Spaces have
the potential to become
fully-integrated, end-to-end
communication platforms.
Internet video to TV
Internet video to PC
VoIP
Video communicaions
Gaming
P2P
Web//data
104%
57%
24%
44%
30%
31%
34%
CAGR
2007-2012
20,000
16,000
10,000
6,000
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
P
e
t
a
b
y
t
e
/
m
o
n
t
h
FIGURE 6.
Global consumer Internet traffic forecast, 2006–2012.
Source: Global consumer Internet traffic forecast, 2006 - 2012.
12 IBM Global Business Services
The dramatic increase in OTT traffic alters
the equation for telecom operators and will
likely force them to develop new business
and revenue models. However the massive
investment required to satisfy consumer
appetites for rich content is likely to
exacerbate the tension between network
providers and OTT providers.
To deal with over-burdening OTT traffic,
telecom operators have options that include
filtering or blocking OTT traffic, but this is
unsustainable in many jurisdictions as it
violates net-neutrality principles. Another
option is to use Content Delivery Network
(CDN) technology to relieve the load over
the backbone and the Telcos’ servers. By
caching replicas of content and applications
at multiple locations in the network, the CDN
allows telecom operators to distribute content
and applications closer to the end user and to
realize more effective P2P traffic routing. This
overcomes issues such as network bandwidth
availability and congestion during peak usage
periods and reduces the need for increasing
core network capacity. Telecom operators
can pass the cost of CDN investments on to
customers through higher or differentiated
broadband fees and/or reaching agreements
with CDN providers to jointly fund these
additional costs (see Figure 7).
Free OTT services costly for network
providers
The launch of BBC’s iPlayer Internet TV service in
December 2007, an OTT service based on a P2P
architecture, created a bandwidth capacity crunch
for a number of Internet service providers (ISP).
For the UK ISP PlusNet, there was a 72 percent
increase in the number of customers using more
than 250 megabytes of streaming video per month
and 100 percent growth in those using more
than 1 gigabyte.
49
The cost for PlusNet to carry
this OTT service increased by more than 200
percent per month, and was not recoverable from
customers.
50
Massive growth of OTT
traffic is driving costs up
for Telcos, forcing them to
develop new business and
revenue models.
Access
Wireless and fixed
Internet access
providers
Internet core
CDN
Large network and
cache of a variety of
content
Internet core
Global networks
transporting Internet
traffic
OTT providers
Content, media and
applications
Typically no charge
Pay per use
Charges for amount
of data cached
Peering charges for
access to content
Possibly charges for
bandwidth used
Per click or basic
ad revenue
Advertisers End customer
End customer
Subscriptions
Variety of transactions/
models
Peering/CoLo
charges to shift
content around CDN
Telco/ISP access
CDN
$
$
$
OTT providers
AT&T
Limelight
networks
Akamai
Telco
environment
Facebook
youTube
myspace
iTunes
FIGURE 7.
New business models to capture value from OTT traffic.
Source: IBM Institute for Business Value.
13 The changing face of communication
Toward an open and collaborative
future
Emerging communication models are
fragmenting audiences and shifting customers
away from traditional telecom providers. While
traditional providers continue to claim the
largest number of subscribers, it is the users
of social networking sites and open Internet
communication services that are growing at
significantly faster rates, even as take-up of
traditional services accelerates in emerging
economies. YouTube and Facebook, for
example, claim the third- and fourth-highest
share of global online minutes respectively.
51
In France, user time spent on Telco services in
2005 constituted only 53 percent of the total
time spent on communication, down from 95
percent in 2000 (see Figure 8).
52
In the United
Kingdom, BT’s share of voice call minutes
declined from 62 percent in 2000 to less than
50 percent in 2006.
53
At the same time, UK adults spend an average
of 3 hours a week on social networks, with
6 percent of the population engaging for
11 hours.
54
Not surprisingly, teenagers are
spending significantly more hours on social
networking than other segments of the
population.
55
As many more people use social
networking – and for potentially increasing
periods of time – traditional providers’ share of
overall communication minutes will continue
to decline and long-term revenues are likely
to fall as a result of increased competition and
greater availability of lower cost alternatives.
Estimated time spent on communication
per person in France per week
2000 2005
IM
e-mail
SMS
Wireless
voice
Wireline
(ind. VoIP)
2%
5%
18%
75%
30%
15%
8%
21%
26%
BT market share for fixed voice
call volumes
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
14.5%
10%
13.4%
62.1%
16.7%
10.1%
13.5%
59.7%
20.9%
9.4%
14.3%
55.4%
24.8%
8.7%
14.6%
51.9%
48%
14.9%
9%
28.2%
Online
players
Direct
Cable
BT
Telcos
53%
Online
players
47%
Telcos
95%
2 hrs 23 mins 4 hrs 25 mins
FIGURE 8.
Communication has gradually been shifting toward Web-based applications, decreasing Telcos’ share in
communication services.
Source: Left chart: iDate:”Telecom 2.0: emerging usage and implication for carriers, June 2006: Capgemini, Telecom versus Online, August,
2007. Right chart: OfCom: Communications Market report, August, 2007.
Over the long-term, the
largest share of incremental
communication time will
trend toward new providers
and models.
14 IBM Global Business Services
Although there is a substantial migration from
the traditional communication model to the
alternative Shared Social Spaces model, in
the short-term, all four models will co-exist.
Traditional models will continue to be attractive
to those who place a premium on reliability
and quality of service, including corporations
and enterprises. But, over the long-term, the
largest share of incremental communication
time will trend toward new providers and
models.
Recommendations and next steps
The social networking phenomenon arose
from significant shifts in communication,
driven by the widespread growth of Internet
connectivity and the emergence of interactive
online communication tools. These shifts have
been redefining a century-old industry, with
the result that the advantages enjoyed by
traditional communication service providers
are beginning to wane. Telcos can, however,
remain relevant in the face of changing user
sentiments and demands if they take bold
steps to adapt to this evolving marketplace.
Over the short to medium term, telecom
providers should focus on the following to lay
the foundation for a more open and collab-
orative future:
1. Exploit opportunities in the Gated
Communities by enabling mobile social
networking in current “closed” networks to
capture a share of potential revenues, which
are forecast to reach between US$22 billion
and US$52 billion by 2012.
56
2. Partner with, or acquire, existing social
networking players to proactively develop
the capabilities required for success,
including experimenting with new revenue-
generating services. For example, Vodafone’s
acquisition of Zyb – the social networking
and online management tool for backing
up and sharing contact and calendar
information – demonstrates how a mobile
operator can extend social networking
from PCs to the mobile device with a view
toward increasing data services revenue
while delivering a much richer and unified
communication experience.
57
3. Enable other participants in the value chain
– including advertisers, virtual operators
and application developers – to benefit
from telecom capabilities such as location,
presence, text/multimedia messaging
services, and conference calling, while
providing access to customer analytics to
help enhance services and offerings.
4. Bolster capability to deliver fully integrated
enterprise communication services that
combine voice, Internet-based communi-
cation and collaborative communication
models. Enterprise spending on Web 2.0
collaboration technologies is forecast to
grow to US$4.6 billion globally by 2013,
with social networking as the top spending
category.
58
Partnerships with enterprise
communication providers, software vendors
and/or system integrators can be an efficient
path to delivering these services.
15 The changing face of communication
5. Work more closely with CDN and/or OTT
providers to reduce the cost of delivering
high bandwidth content (e.g. video, music)
in response to increasing demands for
such services. This can be achieved
through network and computing infra-
structure optimization techniques such as
traffic shaping, use of faster-than-realtime
progressive downloads in place of realtime
streaming, and caching of content close to
the edge of the network using CDNs.
59
Such
approaches can potentially lead to new
business models that capture more value
from this increasing OTT traffic, enabling
an enhanced user experience through
improved quality of service and innovative
service partnerships that take advantage of
this optimized environment.
Over the long-term, as communications
transition to Shared Social Spaces, telecom
providers should:
1. Broaden the scope of their traditional tele-
communications business to more actively
encompass both point-to-point communi-
cations and many-to-many collaborative
communication models, and align their
organizations and industry partnerships
accordingly. This has strategic and trans-
formational implications for the business,
impacting areas such as product and
services offerings, skills, platforms, revenue
models and markets, among others.
2. Create more compelling Gated Communities
by delivering a cross-platform, fully inte-
grated communication and collaboration
experience across mobile, fixed and IPTV
services. This will enable Telcos to stem their
loss-of-share of communication time, as well
as reduce churn, by offering a differentiated,
premium-value service that promises greater
flexibility, ease-of-use and a consistent
experience on any communication platform,
anytime, anywhere.
The nature and medium of communications
are being rapidly altered by the move of users
to environments that offer less expensive –
but more expressive – capabilities to facilitate
both one-to-one and group communica-
tions with more people than ever before.
These shifts are creating a new communi-
cation services ecosystem that will require
significant and bold changes by existing
providers if they wish to remain an integral
part of a changing landscape. The journey will
not be without risks, but the option of doing
nothing is a luxury few can afford. Revenues
from traditional services continue to decline,
and highly resourceful Internet information
providers and IT companies are entering this
space to accommodate the collaborative,
many-to-many services that are claiming a
significantly larger share of the overall commu-
nications marketplace.
16 IBM Global Business Services
About the authors
Rob van den Dam is the telecommunica-
tions leader at the IBM Institute for Business
Value for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
In this role he develops industry outlooks
and business value realization studies for
the telecom sector. He has more than 15
years experience of working in telecom-
munications. Rob has written or co-written
numerous papers and articles on telecom-
munications and media, including “Fighting
for Viewers – IPTV versus Internet TV.” “A
Future in Content(ion),” “Primetime for Mobile
Television,” “Cash, Credit, or Phone” and
“Mobile Advertising, Ads on the Move.” He can
be contacted at [email protected].
Ekow Nelson leads strategic thought
leadership for telecommunications, media &
entertainment and utilities at the IBM Institute
for Business Value. A management and
information technology consultant for over 20
years, Ekow has worked in a range of advisory
and implementation roles, from strategy and
business development to systems integration
and project management for major telecom-
munications and media organizations. He
is author of numerous papers and articles
in telecommunications including “Telecom
switches emphasis,” “A Future in Content(ion)”
and “The Innovation Paradox in the Telecom
Industry,” published both by IBM and external
publications including The Annual Review
of Communications and the Journal of
Telecommunications Management. He can be
contacted at [email protected].
Zygmunt Lozinski is the IBM technical leader
for the telecom industry in Europe. His focus
is on the application of software technology
to the next generation network, the definition
of open APIs for the network, implementation
of open APIs using Web services and Java
in service delivery platforms, and the use of
Web 2.0, including linking mobile networks to
Facebook and Second Life. His most recent
work is on the implications of cloud computing
for telecom providers. He can be contacted at
[email protected].
Executive sponsors and contributing editors
Chris Pearson, Partner and Global Telecom
Industry Leader, IBM Global Business Services
Mike Hill, General Manager, Global
Telecommunications Industry, IBM
Nick Gurney, Partner and Communications
Sector Leader Asia Pacific, IBM Global
Business Services
Daniel W. Latimore, Executive Director, Institute
for Business Value, IBM Global Business
Services
Contributors
We would like to thank all those who provided,
guidance and assistance in the development
of this paper, in particular Geoff Parkins,
Joseph Ziskin, Stephen Chey, Thomas Ross,
Paul Reilly, Matthew Stankey, Andreas Neus,
Karen Feldman and executives of companies
who agreed to be interviewed for this paper.
About IBM Global Business Services
With business experts in more than 170
countries, IBM Global Business Services
provides clients with deep business process
and industry expertise across 17 industries,
using innovation to identify, create and deliver
value faster. We draw on the full breadth of IBM
capabilities, standing behind our advice to
help clients implement solutions designed to
deliver business outcomes with far-reaching
impact and sustainable results.
17 The changing face of communication
10
Brown, Erika. “MySpace Says: Skype Me.”
Forbes.http://www.forbes.com/2007/10/16/
skype-myspace-internet-technology-cz_
eb_1016skype_print.html
11
Ibid.
12
“Bebo launches ‘Open Media.’” Bebo in
the News.http://www.bebo.com/Press.
jsp?PressPageId=5037676804
13
“Apple to sell music through Bebo network.”
Financial Times. June 12, 2007.http://www.
ft.com/cms/s/2/104bad26-1925-11dc-a961-
000b5df10621.html
14
“Neighborhoods.” eBay.http://neighbor-
hoods.ebay.com/
15
”Promoting a thirst for Sprite in teenage
cellphone users. The New York Times. June
7, 2007, ; “Pink Victoria’s Secret. Facebook;
“Webkinz, Come in and Play.” Webkinz.http://www.webkinz.com/us_en/
16
Holtz, Shel. “GMnext: A preview of corporate
communications in the social media era.”
January 3, 2008.http://blog.holtz.com/index.
php/gmnext_a_preview_of_corporate_
communications_in_the_social_media_era/
17
Hoover, J. Nicholas. “Motorola’s IT
Department Takes on Enterprise 2.0.”
Intelligent Enterprise. June 20, 2007. http://
www.intelligententerprise.com/showArticle.jht
ml;jsessionid=A3SDGIXSOTXI4QSNDLPSKH
SCJUNN2JVN?articleID=199905898
18
Ibid.
19
“Chinese Social Network site QQ.com
beats Facebook almost 4:1 revenue
wise.” Watblog.com. March 28, 2008,http://www.watblog.com/2008/03/28/
chinese-social-networking-site-qqcom-
beats-facebook-almost-41-revenue-wise/
References
1
IBM Institute for Business Value Analysis
based on information from the Alexa, the
Web Information Company, website. http://
www.alexa.com
2
Institute for Business Value analysis based
on information from Comscore, the global
Internet information provider.
3
“Social Networking Explodes Worldwide
as Sites Increase their Focus on Cultural
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asp?press=2396
4
“Internet Users worldwide by region,
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Schonfeld, Erick. “Cyworld ready to attack
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6
Li, Charlene. “How Consumers use Social
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2007.
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Institute for Business Value analysis based
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Internet information provider, June 2008
8
eMarketer: “Social Networking Marketing:
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December 2007; “eMarketer lowers Social
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May 20, 2008,http://www.emarketer.com/
Article.aspx?id=1006321
9
Ibid.
18 IBM Global Business Services
20
”Earthlink mobile venture rename Helio.”
cnet.com. October 25, 2005,http://news.
cnet.com/EarthLink-mobile-venture-
renamed-Helio/2100-1039_3-5914186.html
21
Gray, Tim. “Vodafone, MySpace Team on
Mobile Social Networking.” E-Commerce
Times. February 7, 2007.http://www.
ecommercetimes.com/story/55629.
html?welcome=1211232337
22
Ibid.
23
IBM Institute for Business Value analysis.
24
“Vodafone Connect to Friends.” Mobile Tech
News. September 2008.
25
Ibid.
26
Shirky, Clay. Here Comes Everybody: The
Power of Organizing Without Organizations.
Penguin Press. February 28, 2008.
27
Rainie, Lee. “Digital Natives Invade
the Workplace.” PewResearchCenter
Publications. September 28, 2006.
28
Boyd, Danah. “Socializing digitally.” Thinker’s
corner.http://www.danah.org/papers/
VodafoneReceiver.pdf.
29
“IBM Consumer Survey shows decline of TV
as primary media device.” August 22, 2007.
IBM Institute for Business Value.
30
Ibid.
31
IBM Institute for Business Value analysis;
“Entertainment and Media Outlook
2008—2012.” PricewaterhouseCoopers.
2008; Broadband Penetration. OECD.www.
oecd.org/sti/ict/broadband)
32
“World Broadband Subscriber Forecast.”
In-Stat. October 2008.http://www.instat.com/
catalog/Ccatalogue.asp?id=288
33
“Average advertised broadband download
speed, by country, Mbit/s, Oct. 2007.”
Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development. www.oecd.org/sti/ict/
broadband
34
Ibid
35
“Hahn, William L. and Nhat Pham. “Dataquest
Insight: Global Telecommunications Market
Take.” Gartner, Inc. July 22, 2008.
36
“What’s New on Google Talk?”, available athttp://www.google.com/talk/whatsnew.html;
Windows Live Messenger features over
available athttp://get.live.com/messenger/
features
37
Isenmann, Thomas R. “Skype.” Harvard
Business School case study. March 2006.
38
“3 Skypephone Delivers Free Skype to
Skype Mobile Calls and Instant Messages at
the Touch of a Button.” Skype.com. October
29, 2007.http://about.skype.com/2007/10/3_
skypephone_delivers_free_sky.html
39
“Mobile Social Networking Revenues Could
Reach US$52 Billion by 2012.” Cellular-news.
February 11, 2008; “Mobile Web 2.0 revenues
to reach $22.4bn by 2013, driven by User
Generated Content and Social Networking.”
Juniper Research press release. May 14,
2008.http://juniperresearch.com/shop/view-
pressrelease.php?pr=91
40
“iPhone hype holds up.” M:Metrics. March
2008.http://www.mmetrics.com/press/
PressRelease.aspx?article=20080318-
iphonehype
41
Mobile-korea.blogspot.com. November 14,
2007.
19 The changing face of communication
42
”FY 2007 Fourth Quarter (January-March
2008) and Full-Year (April 2007-March
2008) Earning Results Briefing Session.”
Mixi, Inc. May 12, 2008.http://eir.eol.
co.jp/EIR/View.aspx?template=ir_
material&sid=1095&code=2121
43
“Telefonica, Facebook strike global partner-
ship deal.” Telecom Paper. October 6, 2008.http://www.telecompaper.com/news/article.
aspx?cid=639352
44
Roush, Wade. “New Portal to Second Life:
You’re Phone.” Technology Review. MIT.
February 16, 2007.http://www.technologyre-
view.com/Infotech/18195/?a=f
45
About Orkut. Orkut.com.http://www.orkut.
com/About.aspx
46
Stone, Brad. “Microsoft to Pay $240
million for Stake in Facebook.” The New
York Times. October 25, 2007.http://www.
nytimes.com/2007/10/25/technology/24cnd-
facebook.html; Zoller, Eden. “Nokia’s social
media strategy: muddle or masterplan?”
Ovum. 2008.http://www.ovum.com/news/
euronews.asp?id=7123
47
Wakefield, Jane. “BBC and ISPs clash over
iPlayer.” BBC News. April 9, 2008. http://
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stm
48
“Cisco Visual Networking Index. – Forecast
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solutions/collateral/ns341/ns525/ns537/
ns705/ns827/white_paper_c11-481360_
ns827_Networking_Solutions_White_Paper.
html.
49
“iPlayer usage effect – a bandwidth
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usage-effect-a-bandwidth-explosion/
50
Ibid.
51
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52
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Digital_Natives.pdf
53
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research/cm/cmr07/
54
“UK’s MySpace and Facebook addicts.”
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channel4.com/news/articles/science_tech-
nology/uks+myspace+and+facebook+addi
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“Mobile Social Networking Revenues Could
Reach US$52 Billion by 2012.” Cellular-news.
February 11, 2008; “Mobile Web 2.0 revenues
to reach $22.4bn by 2013, driven by User
Generated Content and Social Networking.”
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pressrelease.php?pr=91
57
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datamonitor.com/industries/news/
article/?pid=6A58957F-4BB1-42CD-A1EE-
62D53B810155&type=CommentWire
20 IBM Global Business Services
58
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doc_251948208.pdf
People are communicating more things to more people than ever before, and not just by phone anymore. Internet-enabled communication models are gaining audience, attention and market share at the expense of traditional telecommunication providers.
Telecommunications
IBM Institute for Business Value
IBM Global Business Services
The changing
face of
communication
Social networking’s
growing influence on
telecom providers
IBM Institute for Business Value
IBM Global Business Services, through the IBM Institute for Business Value,
develops fact-based strategic insights for senior executives around critical public
and private sector issues. This executive brief is based on an in-depth study by
the Institute’s research team. It is part of an ongoing commitment by IBM Global
Business Services to provide analysis and viewpoints that help companies realize
business value. You may contact the authors or send an e-mail to [email protected]
for more information.
1
People are communicating more things to more people than ever before, and not
just by phone anymore. Internet-enabled communication models are gaining audience,
attention and market share at the expense of traditional telecommunication providers
(Telcos). Can Telcos fight back and find new growth opportunities in this rapidly
changing ecosystem? The challenge is not just in understanding the technology, but
also the unfolding fundamental shifts in human communication behavior.
The changing face of communication
Social networking's growing influence on telecom providers
By Rob van den Dam, Ekow Nelson and Zygmunt Lozinski
The changing face of communication
communicate with geographically dispersed
employees, suppliers and partners.
The widespread social networking
phenomenon reflects shifts in two long-term
communication trends. First, there is a shift in
communication patterns – from point-to-point,
two-way conversations, to many-to-many,
collaborative communications. Secondly,
control of the communication environment
is transitioning from Telcos to open Internet
platform providers, enabled by better,
cheaper technology, open standards, greater
penetration of broadband services and
wireless communication networks.
The combined effect of these trends is altering
the competitive landscape in communications
and giving rise to emerging business models
that include:
• Open and Free – This model features
companies that offer one-to-one communi-
The face of communication has changed
dramatically over the past few years. Traditional
Telcos, which have historically dominated
two-way interpersonal conversations, are
increasingly being challenged by new market
entrants that use open platforms to meet
diverse and rapidly changing user wants and
needs.
Social networking Web sites and services,
such as Facebook, MySpace and Cyworld,
have become primary communication
media for a new generation of digitally aware
consumers. Driven by high broadband
penetration, maturing “social software”
and readily available, affordable Internet-
enabled multimedia devices, these sites and
services are making inroads with enthusi-
astic users and garnering the attention of
advertisers, consumer product companies
and enterprises that are using social media to
reach their customers, build brand loyalty and
2 IBM Global Business Services
cation services, but through an open Internet
platform and at no – or very little – cost.
These services potentially threaten profitable
traditional services, such as long distance
calling and mobile roaming.
• Gated Communities – Companies using
this model focus on many-to-many commu-
nications, rather than point-to-point, within
telecom-controlled environments. They are,
essentially, a “walled-garden” for opera-
tor-led collaboration services and are likely
to appeal to users and enterprises that
desire secure and reliable communication
environments.
• Shared Social Spaces – This rapidly
growing model facilitates collaboration
on the open Internet. Key players include
social networking sites such as MySpace
and Facebook. These providers have the
potential to become de facto integrated
communication platforms, bringing together
social networking, voice communication,
e-mail, instant and text messaging, as well
as content. They are drawing attention away
from traditional Telcos and contributing to
the fragmentation of the market. Beyond
gaining audience share, these services
pose an operational challenge to Telcos as
they “piggyback” on the existing commu-
nications infrastructure, imposing network
capacity issues and increased costs for the
network providers.
In the short term, as the industry transitions to
more open and collaborative communication
models, the traditional model will likely remain
dominant. Over the long term, however, the
industry can expect a shift toward models
that facilitate collaboration and sharing, with
Shared Social Spaces attracting a more
significant and impactful share of people’s
communication time.
Over the short to medium term, Telcos should
focus on laying the foundation for a more open
and collaborative future. They can begin by
taking advantage of the window of opportunity
in mobile social networking and also bolster
their capabilities to serve the evolving, broader
communication needs of enterprises. They
should partner with, or acquire, existing players
to proactively develop the capabilities required
for success, or enable other participants in the
value chain to benefit from distinctive telecom
capabilities. Using network and computing
infrastructure optimization techniques, they can
reduce the cost of delivering high bandwidth
content and potentially capture value from it.
Over the long term, Telcos should embrace
a broader definition of communication – one
that encompasses everything from two-way
conversations to many-to-many commu-
nications – and align the organization with
this reality. Also, Telcos are well positioned
to enable a cross-platform, fully integrated
experience across mobile, fixed and IPTV
services.
A new ecosystem is emerging from these long
term shifts in communication trends that will
require bold, significant changes by existing
telecom providers. The option of doing nothing
is not a luxury many providers can afford, as
revenues from traditional services continue
to decline and highly resourceful Internet
information providers and IT companies enter
the communications space to claim a larger
share of communication time.
2 IBM Global Business Services
3 The changing face of communication
The changing face of communication
Social networking's growing influence on telecom providers
The changing face of communication
A burgeoning market in social networking
Social networking, perhaps considered
a “communication fad” in recent years, is
transcending that phase and becoming
an activity woven into the intrinsic fabric of
the Internet. Throughout the world, Internet
users are turning en masse to such sites as
Facebook and MySpace to meet their commu-
nication needs. Consider, for example, that
before 2005, not a single social media network
was ranked among the world’s top 20 English-
language Web sites.
1
By June 2008, social
networking sites comprised half of the same
list, displacing many traditional Internet “stars,”
such as AOL (see Figure 1).
Overall, the number of unique monthly visitors
to the top six social networking sites increased
95 percent between June 2006 and June
2007 – and then another 50 percent from
June 2007 to June 2008.
2
According to data
from comScore, the global Internet information
provider, unique visitors to social networking
sites in June 2008 represented approximately
two-thirds of the world’s Internet audience.
3
Based on the projected growth of the global
Internet audience, we estimate that by 2012,
the number of unique monthly visitors to social
networking sites will surpass 800 million.
4
In South Korea, considered by many to be
the world’s most developed social networking
FIGURE 1.
Top 20 English language Web sites.
Social media sites
Note 1: The traffic rank is based on three months of aggregated historical traffic data, and is a combined measure of page views and users (reach).
Note 2: Due to the way Alexa assigns “language”, multilingual Wikipedia, which is in global top 20, is not shown in this list.
Source: Institute for Business Value (IBV) Analysis; Alexa Internet Web Search – top 20 English Language Web Sites.
Rank Aug 2004 Aug 2006 Aug 2008
1 Yahoo! Yahoo! Yahoo!
2 MSN MSN Google
3 Google Google Youtube
4 Microsoft MySpace Live
5 Passport Live Facebook
6 eBay eBay MSN
7 Amazon Youtube MySpace
8 Offeroptimizer Microsoft Hi5
9 Fastclick Amazon Orkut
10 Doubleclick Orkut Rapidshare
11 Go Blogger Blogger
12 Alibaba Google UK Megaupload
13 CNN Passport Fotolog
14 BBC BBC Friendster
15 165.254.12.202 Craigslist Microsoft
16 AOL Go eBay
17 Google UK CNN Megarotic
18 Gator Alibaba Google UK
19 eBay UK Megaupload Amazon
20 Searchscout IMDB Internet Movie
4 IBM Global Business Services
nation, 90 percent of teens and 40 percent
of the entire population are members of the
social networking site Cyworld.
5
In the United
States, 80 percent of young adults, 60 percent
of teens and 30 percent of adults use social
networks.
6
Not only are social networks generating a
significant amount of online traffic, visitors
to leading social networking sites also view
more pages per visit than any other category
of Internet site, including such online portals
as Google and Yahoo.
7
This opens the door
for potential revenue generation as social
networks, like most online service providers,
base their business model on trading page
views for advertising dollars.
Already, savvy marketers have begun to
experiment more heavily with this concept.
They spent US$2.1 billion on social network
advertising in 2008, almost double the
US$1.2 billion spent in 2007.
8
By 2012, if the
current trend continues, social networking ad
revenues could reach $3.8 billion, provided the
right business model can be found.
9
The new online portal
Social networks have done more than attract
users and ad revenue away from traditional
Internet sites. They have become a primary
destination for online users and represent
the next stage in the evolution of the online
experience, serving as control points for
managing and enriching a user’s digital
lifestyle. They bring together user-generated
and professional content, communication tools
and services, online connections, applica-
tions and collaborative tools from blogs and
podcasts, to wikis and widgets (see Figure 2).
Communication and content distribution
With numerous communication tools at their
disposal, social networks are becoming
integrated communication hubs. The
integration of MySpace and Skype, for
example, illustrates how social networks and
communication applications can converge
to benefit users. With more than 118 million
active MySpace users and over 370 million
Skype registered users around the world,
this partnership connects two of the most
Directories
Browse
Late 1990’s
Portal aggregator
Early 2000s
Content search/discovery
Search
Mid-late 2000s
Social networks
Shared social spaces
User A User B
User C
RSS
Mashups Tagging
Widgets
Web
content
User-generated content
Podcasts
Network of user connections
and relationships
FIGURE 2.
Social networking sites are becoming online portals.
Source: Institute for Business Value analysis.
Blogs
Wikis
Social networks have
become primary
destinations for online
users to organize their
Internet experience.
Meta data and tools
5 The changing face of communication
popular communication platforms on the
Internet “to create the world’s largest online
voice network.
10
MySpace members can make
Internet phone calls using Skype’s telephony
network and MySpace’s instant messaging
program.”
11
Social networks are also increasingly
becoming channels for digital content distri-
bution, using their network of relationships
to push information to users. In November
2007, for instance, Bebo launched its “Open
Media” platform that offers media companies
such as BBC, MTV and BSkyB an additional
distribution outlet.
12
And Apple is tapping into
the popularity of social networking sites by
embedding its iTunes Internet music download
service into the Bebo Web site.
13
Expansion and extension
Traditional mainstream Internet sites and major
consumer brands are beginning to recognize
the value of social networking, not just for the
potential advertising dollars it may generate,
but also for e-commerce and the built-in
mechanisms it employs to communicate with
customers.
eBay, for example, has created more than
600 micro-social networks called eBay
Neighborhoods, where members can access
blogs, guides, reviews and product searches,
and then click to visit related auctions.
14
And big-name brands, such as Coca-Cola,
Victoria’s Secret and Webkinz, have ventured
into this newly charted arena by using social
networks to generate brand awareness and
affinity.
15
Depending on a brand’s goals,
affiliating with a social network site – or
possibly creating its own – can bring in an
audience of customers, contain them and
allow them a voice whenever appropriate.
Enterprises are also learning the value of a
solution that facilitates communication and
collaboration among employees, partners
and suppliers. Social networks provide the
opportunity to bridge the gap in communi-
cation and collaboration created by enterprise
globalization. For example, General Motors
uses social networking tools to facilitate
communication between executives and
employees, as well as to give product experts
the opportunity to present new designs to the
employee community.
16
Motorola’s “Intranet 2.0”
initiative has met with considerable success,
with 70,000 people using it every day, including
partners.
17
The company now has 4,400 blogs
and 4,200 wiki pages. It uses, among other
technologies, social networking, bookmarking
and tagging.
18
Telcos are getting in on the act
A number of Telcos are already responding
to the challenges and opportunities of social
networking. Many have initiatives underway
that range from simply enabling online social
networking sites, to extending their offerings
to the mobile communication environment,
to even building their own, proprietary social
networks.
For example, SK Communications, a
subsidiary of SK Telecom in South Korea,
acquired Cyworld in 2003 and is now
generating approximately US$200 million
per year from selling digital items and adver-
tising.
19
In 2005, the company started a joint
venture with EarthLink to launch a mobile
virtual network operator called Helio, which
merged into Virgin Mobile in July, 2008.
20
Enterprises are
leveraging social network
applications to improve
collaboration with
customers, employees,
partners and suppliers.
6 IBM Global Business Services
In early 2007, Vodafone struck a deal with
MySpace to enable MySpace users to access
their profiles from Vodafone cell phones.
21
Today, Vodafone has a similar arrangement
with Facebook.
22
U.S. telecom operators
Sprint, Verizon, AT&T and Virgin Mobile provide
MySpace and Facebook on their mobile
devices.
23
Vodafone’s “Connect to Friends” is an
application embedded within social networks
that facilitates communication with friends,
regardless of where they are, with SMS (short
message service) and MMS (multimedia
message service) from either a PC or a mobile
phone (see sidebar, Vodafone – Extending
telecom capability to open social networking).
Vodafone – Extending telecom capability
to open social networking
The “Connect to Friends” application from
Vodafone is a messaging application users can
download from Facebook. It is open to Vodafone
and non-Vodafone customers and allows them
to send messages and photos directly from
Facebook.
24
Free messaging credits are offered
to attract users and to encourage viral marketing.
Further messaging credit packs are applied to
the customer’s phone bill using the e-commerce
service Pay4it. The provision of “Connect to
Friends” enables Vodafone to reach out to
customers across other online channels and helps
drive customer conversion.
25
Trends in communication evolution
The widespread social networking
phenomenon is a reflection of shifts in two
long-term underlying trends in communication:
1. Communication patterns are shifting from
point-to-point, two-way conversations to
many-to-many, group communications and
collaboration.
2. Shift in communication control is
transitioning from provider-controlled envi-
ronments to open Internet platform service
providers with greater opportunities for user
participation.
Shifts in communication patterns
“Communications overall is
shifting from ‘point-to-point’
to ‘many-to-many,’ in order to
socialize and enjoy an experience
more deeply – people consuming
content together and interacting
during that experience from
virtually anywhere in the world.”
– John Stankey, President and CEO, AT&T
Operations
Communication patterns are changing from
personal and conversational, to sharing and
collaborative, augmented with links, videos,
photos and other multimedia content that
substantially enrich the communications
experience. This is being enabled by greater
global connectivity, the availability of affordable,
high-quality content and communication
devices, and the rise of social software.
Traditional interpersonal communication,
usually via the telephone, allows expression,
but does not provide group or collaborative
capabilities. As Professor Clay Shirky, a leading
authority on the social and economic effects of
the Internet at New York University’s Interactive
Telecommunication Program observes, “The
telephone, the technological revolution that
put the most expressive power in the hands
of the individual, didn’t create an audience;
telephones were designed for conversation.”
26
7 The changing face of communication
The availability and convergence of mobile
communication and the Internet are now
creating a platform that enables group
communication encompassing many partici-
pants through shared spaces in virtually any
geographic location.
The so-called “Net Generation,” composed
of “digital natives” who have grown up in a
technology-enabled environment, is at the
forefront of this phenomenon. According
to Pew Research, on average, a typical
21-year-old in the United States entering the
workforce today has played video games
for 5,000 hours, exchanged 250,000 e-mails,
instant messages and phone text messages,
has 10,000 hours of cell phone use and has
spent 3,500 hours online.
27
The new generation of digital natives is far
more likely than their parents to own a digital
music player, to have posted writing, pictures
or video on the Internet, to have created a blog
or profile on a social networking site, to have
downloaded digital content such as songs,
games, movies, or software, to have shared a
remix or “mashup” creation with friends and
to have snapped a photo or video with a cell
phone.
28
For many of this generation, social networking
is even supplanting e-mail as the preferred
method of communication. But they also use
social networking for more than commu-
nication and content sharing. They use it
to develop their identities, meet friends or
form relationships that become part of their
individual social graphs, which are becoming
key resources for harnessing collective
wisdom or opinion from “trusted” individuals.
But the shift away from traditional telecom-
munication to social networking is not limited
to digital natives. A growing number of adults
now use technology to get what they need
from each other, instead of from traditional
media and institutions. Nineteen percent of
consumers in the 2007 IBM Digital Consumer
survey said they spent more than 6 hours
per day on personal Internet activities.
29
Only
9 percent indicated they watch the same
amount – or more – of television.
30
As shown in Figure 3, social networks are
used instrumentally to reinforce social ties.
Talk to friend/family a lot
Talk to friend/family I rarely see
Look for old friends I have lost touch with
Look at other peoples’ sites without leaving a message
Talk to people who are friends of friends
Listen to music/find out about bands
Talk to people I don’t know
Look at campaigns and petitions
Other
69%
65%
47%
40%
35%
29%
17%
6%
4%
FIGURE 3.
The most popular activities in social networking are communications/staying in touch.
Source: Institute for Business Value analysis; “Social Networking,” United Kingdom Office of Communications (Ofcom) 2008,http://www.ofcom.
org.uk/advice/media_literacy/medlitpub/medlitpubrss/socialnetworking/report.pdf
Brought up in the connected
and collaborative world
of the Internet, the Net
Generation is at the
forefront of shifting social
communication patterns.
8 IBM Global Business Services
Shift in communication control
Widespread availability and affordability of
connectivity and communication tools/devices
are also shifting control of communication
media away from the domain of Telcos and
toward a more open communication platform.
The majority of households, individuals and
businesses in developed nations have Internet
access, and the number of Internet users
in emerging economies is growing rapidly.
31
In September 2008, there were 452 million
broadband subscribers worldwide (more than
the total number of households in the United
States, Britain, France, Japan, Korea and
Germany), expected to grow to 876 million by
2012.
32
At the same time, data connectivity
speeds have increased considerably – from
56Kbps modem connectivity speeds only
a decade ago to 8-16Mbps today.
33
Some
countries support bandwidth up to 90Mbps
currently.
34
The costs of connectivity and
storage have also declined significantly, and
the availability of Internet-enabled devices,
with increasing user interface sophistication, is
enabling richer, more immersive experiences.
With better, cheaper technologies and greater
use of broadband, the Internet, and wireless
networks, “Over the Top” (OTT) providers, such
as social networking sites, are becoming
ever-more viable platforms for communication
services – and consumers are responding
eagerly.
Impact of shifts on the emerging
communication landscape
The combination of shifts in communi-
cation control and patterns is redefining the
competitive landscape, giving rise to new
business models. In contrast with traditional
communication models, emerging models
are based on open platforms that support
many-to many and/or collaborative communi-
cation patterns (see Figure 4).
Collaborative
Two-way
conversational
Gated Communities
Traditional Communication
Shared Social Space
Open and Free
Mobile subscribers
2007-2012 CAGR 6.8% 2007-2012 CAGR 3%
Fixed subscribers
Skype
IM accounts
Mobile social
networking users
SN unique visitors
±2/3 of Internet users
2007-2012
CAGR 20%
2007-2012
CAGR 13%
2007-2012
CAGR 64%
Online SN Active
Members
2007-2012
CAGR 18.5%
Communications environment
C
o
m
m
u
n
i
c
a
t
i
o
n
s
p
a
t
t
e
r
n
M
a
r
k
e
t
d
i
r
e
c
t
i
o
n
Communication
provider-controlled
Open internet
All types of VoIP in
2012: 1.2 billion
2007
2012
FIGURE 4.
Shifts in communication control and patterns give rise to new business models.
Source: IBM Institute for Business Value analysis based on publicly available data from eMarketer, Datamonitor, Skype, ABI Research and
The Radicati Group, Inc.
Audience and attention migration
9 The changing face of communication
Traditional communication
The traditional model, characterized by
two-way point-to-point communication is
the domain of traditional Telco providers. It is
the largest segment in terms of revenue and
subscribers, but it is showing signs of slow
growth as other models take hold. Wireline
revenue is declining and although, according
to Gartner Inc., global mobile services revenue
is forecast to grow 7.6 percent from 2007-2012,
the mobile subscriber base has reached
saturation in key developed markets.
35
Open and Free
This model offers alternatives to traditional
point-to-point communication services on
open Internet platforms. Companies in this
domain provide basic communication services
such as VoIP for free or at very low cost. Many
of these services threaten profitable traditional
services such as long distance calling and
mobile roaming.
Providers in this space include VoIP provider
Skype, Google with GoogleTalk and Microsoft
with Windows Live Messenger, which offer
PC-to-PC voice services along with instant
messaging and chat.
36
With over 370 million
registered users worldwide, Skype has, in a
matter of five years, come close to creating a
truly global telecom service.
37
While Skype’s
level of growth is impressive, there remains
some skepticism about the ability of these
types of new entrants to provide the high
quality of service required to support profes-
sional, error-free business communications.
Many of the players in the “open and free”
space, such as Microsoft and Google, have
considerable resources and leave little room
for a commercially viable response from Telcos
beyond repackaging existing services into
“convenience bundles.” Some Telcos, however,
seemingly have embraced the model and are
partnering with disruptive new entrants. The
mobile operator 3 in the United Kingdom and
Italy, for example, has partnered with Skype
to launch the 3 Skypephone, which enables 3
subscribers to make free calls and send free
Skype instant messages from their 3G mobile
phones to other Skype users.
38
As first movers,
this partnership has the potential to attract and
retain customers. However, while the benefits
to Skype are obvious, it is too early to assess
the true commercial value to 3.
Gated Communities
This model is also the domain of traditional
communication service providers, but the
focus is more on many-to-many commu-
nications rather than point-to-point. This
is essentially a “walled-garden” approach
in which operators facilitate collabo-
ration services that will appeal to users
and enterprises with a preference for the
more secure and reliable communications
environment traditionally provided by telecoms.
Gated Communities include both fixed (online)
and mobile social networking. It is our view,
however, that walled-garden social networking
sites are unlikely to be successful as the
majority of consumers have demonstrated a
10 IBM Global Business Services
preference for open social networking sites.
Telecom companies do have a window of
opportunity in this model, however, by enabling
mobile social networking on existing mobile
network architectures, which, for the most part,
remain closed platforms. Developments in
smartphones and the mobile Internet, however,
will gradually blur the advantage of mobile
exclusivity. Forecasters estimate that by 2012,
mobile social networking will represent a
market opportunity of between US$22.5 and
US$52 billion.
39
Recent studies have revealed that more than
40 percent of iPhone users in the United
States, Germany, France and the United
Kingdom are visiting social networking sites.
40
In South Korea, a mobile user visits Cyworld
on average 11 times per day.
41
The mobile
service of the Japanese social network Mixi,
which started as an online site, has turned
out to be hugely successful with mobile page
views already outnumbering online page
views.
42
A number of traditional communication service
providers have formed partnerships with open
social networking providers to incorporate
such services into their telecom environments.
For example in October 2008, Telefonica
signed a global agreement with Facebook
allowing it to integrate access to Facebook’s
mobile service and applications from all of
Telefonica’s mobile portals.
43
Enterprise-level collaboration has significant
potential in this “Gated Communities” space.
Many governments and corporations are
redefining their communication needs beyond
voice telephony and e-mail, and are looking
to productively employ Web-based collabo-
ration tools such as blogs, wikis and social
networking to help transform their organi-
zations by achieving greater coordination
and communication with their customers,
employees and partners (see Figure 5).
While traditional telecom companies are
often perceived as conduits of information,
the opportunity exists for them to serve
enterprises – and governments – with a
broader set of innovative communication
solutions that encompass collaboration in
a secure, reliable environment with agreed
service level guarantees.
Increase collaboration
Raise awareness of “what we know”
Increase agility/responsiveness
Faster communication
Increase innovation and reduce time to market
Reduction of IT costs
Accelerate brokering of people
69%
56%
56%
FIGURE 5.
Businesses and organizations are leveraging social network applications to improve collaboration with
customers, employees and partners.
Source: AIIM Market IQ: Enterprise 2.0, Agile, Emergent & Integrated, March 2008.
55%
39%
36%
21%
Mobile social networking
provides a short-term
opportunity to increase
use of SMS, MMS and
even voice traffic.
11 The changing face of communication
Shared Social Spaces
Shared Social Spaces facilitate collaboration
on the open Internet. The main providers
in this space are OTT applications such as
MySpace, Bebo, YouTube and Facebook. But
also virtual worlds such as Second Life belong
to this domain and have integrated voice and
text-based communication capabilities to
connect to friends, even from mobile phones.
44
A number of key players in the “Open and
Free” model are also offering services in
this space, such as Google with its social
network Orkut.
45
Other companies entering
the fray include Microsoft with investments
in Facebook, and Nokia with its OVI/Share
platform.
46
As many of these players integrate
telephony services, they have the potential to
become fully integrated, end-to-end communi-
cation platforms.
While there has been significant growth in
social networking, we believe the revenue
model remains unproven. Regardless, these
media are drawing attention away from
traditional communication service providers
and are contributing to their slowing growth.
Over the long run, they have the potential to
generate reasonable revenue streams from
advertising and other sources as dollars begin
to follow “eyeballs.”
Still, telecom providers need to care about
Shared Social Spaces and, especially, OTT
applications that put additional strain on
already-burdened network infrastructure,
particularly with the rapid increase in video
content sharing and distribution. According
to a BBC News report, the United Kingdom
communications regulator Ofcom estimates
these types of OTT services will impose
additional £830m (US$1.4 billion) in bandwidth
costs on UK Internet service providers (see
sidebar, Free OTT services cost network
providers).
47
It is projected that by 2012, the sum of all
forms of online video, including TV, VoD,
Internet and peer-to-peer (P2P), will account
for nearly 90 percent of all consumer Internet
traffic, a large portion of which will flow through
OTT applications (see Figure 6).
48
Shared Social Spaces have
the potential to become
fully-integrated, end-to-end
communication platforms.
Internet video to TV
Internet video to PC
VoIP
Video communicaions
Gaming
P2P
Web//data
104%
57%
24%
44%
30%
31%
34%
CAGR
2007-2012
20,000
16,000
10,000
6,000
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
P
e
t
a
b
y
t
e
/
m
o
n
t
h
FIGURE 6.
Global consumer Internet traffic forecast, 2006–2012.
Source: Global consumer Internet traffic forecast, 2006 - 2012.
12 IBM Global Business Services
The dramatic increase in OTT traffic alters
the equation for telecom operators and will
likely force them to develop new business
and revenue models. However the massive
investment required to satisfy consumer
appetites for rich content is likely to
exacerbate the tension between network
providers and OTT providers.
To deal with over-burdening OTT traffic,
telecom operators have options that include
filtering or blocking OTT traffic, but this is
unsustainable in many jurisdictions as it
violates net-neutrality principles. Another
option is to use Content Delivery Network
(CDN) technology to relieve the load over
the backbone and the Telcos’ servers. By
caching replicas of content and applications
at multiple locations in the network, the CDN
allows telecom operators to distribute content
and applications closer to the end user and to
realize more effective P2P traffic routing. This
overcomes issues such as network bandwidth
availability and congestion during peak usage
periods and reduces the need for increasing
core network capacity. Telecom operators
can pass the cost of CDN investments on to
customers through higher or differentiated
broadband fees and/or reaching agreements
with CDN providers to jointly fund these
additional costs (see Figure 7).
Free OTT services costly for network
providers
The launch of BBC’s iPlayer Internet TV service in
December 2007, an OTT service based on a P2P
architecture, created a bandwidth capacity crunch
for a number of Internet service providers (ISP).
For the UK ISP PlusNet, there was a 72 percent
increase in the number of customers using more
than 250 megabytes of streaming video per month
and 100 percent growth in those using more
than 1 gigabyte.
49
The cost for PlusNet to carry
this OTT service increased by more than 200
percent per month, and was not recoverable from
customers.
50
Massive growth of OTT
traffic is driving costs up
for Telcos, forcing them to
develop new business and
revenue models.
Access
Wireless and fixed
Internet access
providers
Internet core
CDN
Large network and
cache of a variety of
content
Internet core
Global networks
transporting Internet
traffic
OTT providers
Content, media and
applications
Typically no charge
Pay per use
Charges for amount
of data cached
Peering charges for
access to content
Possibly charges for
bandwidth used
Per click or basic
ad revenue
Advertisers End customer
End customer
Subscriptions
Variety of transactions/
models
Peering/CoLo
charges to shift
content around CDN
Telco/ISP access
CDN
$
$
$
OTT providers
AT&T
Limelight
networks
Akamai
Telco
environment
youTube
myspace
iTunes
FIGURE 7.
New business models to capture value from OTT traffic.
Source: IBM Institute for Business Value.
13 The changing face of communication
Toward an open and collaborative
future
Emerging communication models are
fragmenting audiences and shifting customers
away from traditional telecom providers. While
traditional providers continue to claim the
largest number of subscribers, it is the users
of social networking sites and open Internet
communication services that are growing at
significantly faster rates, even as take-up of
traditional services accelerates in emerging
economies. YouTube and Facebook, for
example, claim the third- and fourth-highest
share of global online minutes respectively.
51
In France, user time spent on Telco services in
2005 constituted only 53 percent of the total
time spent on communication, down from 95
percent in 2000 (see Figure 8).
52
In the United
Kingdom, BT’s share of voice call minutes
declined from 62 percent in 2000 to less than
50 percent in 2006.
53
At the same time, UK adults spend an average
of 3 hours a week on social networks, with
6 percent of the population engaging for
11 hours.
54
Not surprisingly, teenagers are
spending significantly more hours on social
networking than other segments of the
population.
55
As many more people use social
networking – and for potentially increasing
periods of time – traditional providers’ share of
overall communication minutes will continue
to decline and long-term revenues are likely
to fall as a result of increased competition and
greater availability of lower cost alternatives.
Estimated time spent on communication
per person in France per week
2000 2005
IM
SMS
Wireless
voice
Wireline
(ind. VoIP)
2%
5%
18%
75%
30%
15%
8%
21%
26%
BT market share for fixed voice
call volumes
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
14.5%
10%
13.4%
62.1%
16.7%
10.1%
13.5%
59.7%
20.9%
9.4%
14.3%
55.4%
24.8%
8.7%
14.6%
51.9%
48%
14.9%
9%
28.2%
Online
players
Direct
Cable
BT
Telcos
53%
Online
players
47%
Telcos
95%
2 hrs 23 mins 4 hrs 25 mins
FIGURE 8.
Communication has gradually been shifting toward Web-based applications, decreasing Telcos’ share in
communication services.
Source: Left chart: iDate:”Telecom 2.0: emerging usage and implication for carriers, June 2006: Capgemini, Telecom versus Online, August,
2007. Right chart: OfCom: Communications Market report, August, 2007.
Over the long-term, the
largest share of incremental
communication time will
trend toward new providers
and models.
14 IBM Global Business Services
Although there is a substantial migration from
the traditional communication model to the
alternative Shared Social Spaces model, in
the short-term, all four models will co-exist.
Traditional models will continue to be attractive
to those who place a premium on reliability
and quality of service, including corporations
and enterprises. But, over the long-term, the
largest share of incremental communication
time will trend toward new providers and
models.
Recommendations and next steps
The social networking phenomenon arose
from significant shifts in communication,
driven by the widespread growth of Internet
connectivity and the emergence of interactive
online communication tools. These shifts have
been redefining a century-old industry, with
the result that the advantages enjoyed by
traditional communication service providers
are beginning to wane. Telcos can, however,
remain relevant in the face of changing user
sentiments and demands if they take bold
steps to adapt to this evolving marketplace.
Over the short to medium term, telecom
providers should focus on the following to lay
the foundation for a more open and collab-
orative future:
1. Exploit opportunities in the Gated
Communities by enabling mobile social
networking in current “closed” networks to
capture a share of potential revenues, which
are forecast to reach between US$22 billion
and US$52 billion by 2012.
56
2. Partner with, or acquire, existing social
networking players to proactively develop
the capabilities required for success,
including experimenting with new revenue-
generating services. For example, Vodafone’s
acquisition of Zyb – the social networking
and online management tool for backing
up and sharing contact and calendar
information – demonstrates how a mobile
operator can extend social networking
from PCs to the mobile device with a view
toward increasing data services revenue
while delivering a much richer and unified
communication experience.
57
3. Enable other participants in the value chain
– including advertisers, virtual operators
and application developers – to benefit
from telecom capabilities such as location,
presence, text/multimedia messaging
services, and conference calling, while
providing access to customer analytics to
help enhance services and offerings.
4. Bolster capability to deliver fully integrated
enterprise communication services that
combine voice, Internet-based communi-
cation and collaborative communication
models. Enterprise spending on Web 2.0
collaboration technologies is forecast to
grow to US$4.6 billion globally by 2013,
with social networking as the top spending
category.
58
Partnerships with enterprise
communication providers, software vendors
and/or system integrators can be an efficient
path to delivering these services.
15 The changing face of communication
5. Work more closely with CDN and/or OTT
providers to reduce the cost of delivering
high bandwidth content (e.g. video, music)
in response to increasing demands for
such services. This can be achieved
through network and computing infra-
structure optimization techniques such as
traffic shaping, use of faster-than-realtime
progressive downloads in place of realtime
streaming, and caching of content close to
the edge of the network using CDNs.
59
Such
approaches can potentially lead to new
business models that capture more value
from this increasing OTT traffic, enabling
an enhanced user experience through
improved quality of service and innovative
service partnerships that take advantage of
this optimized environment.
Over the long-term, as communications
transition to Shared Social Spaces, telecom
providers should:
1. Broaden the scope of their traditional tele-
communications business to more actively
encompass both point-to-point communi-
cations and many-to-many collaborative
communication models, and align their
organizations and industry partnerships
accordingly. This has strategic and trans-
formational implications for the business,
impacting areas such as product and
services offerings, skills, platforms, revenue
models and markets, among others.
2. Create more compelling Gated Communities
by delivering a cross-platform, fully inte-
grated communication and collaboration
experience across mobile, fixed and IPTV
services. This will enable Telcos to stem their
loss-of-share of communication time, as well
as reduce churn, by offering a differentiated,
premium-value service that promises greater
flexibility, ease-of-use and a consistent
experience on any communication platform,
anytime, anywhere.
The nature and medium of communications
are being rapidly altered by the move of users
to environments that offer less expensive –
but more expressive – capabilities to facilitate
both one-to-one and group communica-
tions with more people than ever before.
These shifts are creating a new communi-
cation services ecosystem that will require
significant and bold changes by existing
providers if they wish to remain an integral
part of a changing landscape. The journey will
not be without risks, but the option of doing
nothing is a luxury few can afford. Revenues
from traditional services continue to decline,
and highly resourceful Internet information
providers and IT companies are entering this
space to accommodate the collaborative,
many-to-many services that are claiming a
significantly larger share of the overall commu-
nications marketplace.
16 IBM Global Business Services
About the authors
Rob van den Dam is the telecommunica-
tions leader at the IBM Institute for Business
Value for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
In this role he develops industry outlooks
and business value realization studies for
the telecom sector. He has more than 15
years experience of working in telecom-
munications. Rob has written or co-written
numerous papers and articles on telecom-
munications and media, including “Fighting
for Viewers – IPTV versus Internet TV.” “A
Future in Content(ion),” “Primetime for Mobile
Television,” “Cash, Credit, or Phone” and
“Mobile Advertising, Ads on the Move.” He can
be contacted at [email protected].
Ekow Nelson leads strategic thought
leadership for telecommunications, media &
entertainment and utilities at the IBM Institute
for Business Value. A management and
information technology consultant for over 20
years, Ekow has worked in a range of advisory
and implementation roles, from strategy and
business development to systems integration
and project management for major telecom-
munications and media organizations. He
is author of numerous papers and articles
in telecommunications including “Telecom
switches emphasis,” “A Future in Content(ion)”
and “The Innovation Paradox in the Telecom
Industry,” published both by IBM and external
publications including The Annual Review
of Communications and the Journal of
Telecommunications Management. He can be
contacted at [email protected].
Zygmunt Lozinski is the IBM technical leader
for the telecom industry in Europe. His focus
is on the application of software technology
to the next generation network, the definition
of open APIs for the network, implementation
of open APIs using Web services and Java
in service delivery platforms, and the use of
Web 2.0, including linking mobile networks to
Facebook and Second Life. His most recent
work is on the implications of cloud computing
for telecom providers. He can be contacted at
[email protected].
Executive sponsors and contributing editors
Chris Pearson, Partner and Global Telecom
Industry Leader, IBM Global Business Services
Mike Hill, General Manager, Global
Telecommunications Industry, IBM
Nick Gurney, Partner and Communications
Sector Leader Asia Pacific, IBM Global
Business Services
Daniel W. Latimore, Executive Director, Institute
for Business Value, IBM Global Business
Services
Contributors
We would like to thank all those who provided,
guidance and assistance in the development
of this paper, in particular Geoff Parkins,
Joseph Ziskin, Stephen Chey, Thomas Ross,
Paul Reilly, Matthew Stankey, Andreas Neus,
Karen Feldman and executives of companies
who agreed to be interviewed for this paper.
About IBM Global Business Services
With business experts in more than 170
countries, IBM Global Business Services
provides clients with deep business process
and industry expertise across 17 industries,
using innovation to identify, create and deliver
value faster. We draw on the full breadth of IBM
capabilities, standing behind our advice to
help clients implement solutions designed to
deliver business outcomes with far-reaching
impact and sustainable results.
17 The changing face of communication
10
Brown, Erika. “MySpace Says: Skype Me.”
Forbes.http://www.forbes.com/2007/10/16/
skype-myspace-internet-technology-cz_
eb_1016skype_print.html
11
Ibid.
12
“Bebo launches ‘Open Media.’” Bebo in
the News.http://www.bebo.com/Press.
jsp?PressPageId=5037676804
13
“Apple to sell music through Bebo network.”
Financial Times. June 12, 2007.http://www.
ft.com/cms/s/2/104bad26-1925-11dc-a961-
000b5df10621.html
14
“Neighborhoods.” eBay.http://neighbor-
hoods.ebay.com/
15
”Promoting a thirst for Sprite in teenage
cellphone users. The New York Times. June
7, 2007, ; “Pink Victoria’s Secret. Facebook;
“Webkinz, Come in and Play.” Webkinz.http://www.webkinz.com/us_en/
16
Holtz, Shel. “GMnext: A preview of corporate
communications in the social media era.”
January 3, 2008.http://blog.holtz.com/index.
php/gmnext_a_preview_of_corporate_
communications_in_the_social_media_era/
17
Hoover, J. Nicholas. “Motorola’s IT
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Intelligent Enterprise. June 20, 2007. http://
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ml;jsessionid=A3SDGIXSOTXI4QSNDLPSKH
SCJUNN2JVN?articleID=199905898
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Ibid.
19
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beats Facebook almost 4:1 revenue
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chinese-social-networking-site-qqcom-
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3
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18 IBM Global Business Services
20
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Shirky, Clay. Here Comes Everybody: The
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19 The changing face of communication
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20 IBM Global Business Services
58
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