MOMO Monsoon kicks off in Bangalore
By Jayakishore Bayadi
Bangalore: It was chilling cold outside. But it
could not deter the enthusiasm of tehies who attended Mobile Monsoon held at IIM
Bangalore on last the weekend of September month.
Prof.Dr.Sridhar Varadarajan, Professor in Information
Management at the Management Development Institute, delivered inaugural
keynote. While speaking on current challenges and opportunities in Indian
mobile VAS space, he said that India today has the lowest tariff for voice
calls in the world. However, interesting fact is that usage of mobile call
minutes is increasing but ARPU is declining. ARPU in India is one of the lowest
in the world today.
India
remains a fascinating mobile market and possesses huge opportunity for VAS.
Recent growth has exceeded the expectations, and the regulator’s enthusiastic
predictions for future market development seems great. Growth will largely come
from rural areas going forward. For operators this means significant network
investments and lower call charges in order to make mobile communications
affordable for the majority of consumers. But can operators continue to perform
in this environment beyond this initial acquisition phase? And as ARPU reaches
new lows, will they be able to invest for growth? Along with that, Will they be
able to face the competition? Today no single operator is
dominating the market. Competition is inevitable for them. So, managing ARPU levels while
countering the competition is the key challenge for the operators, said
Sridhar.
Sridhar said that last month 9.2 million mobile
subscribers were added to the total subscribers base in India. Though growth
numbers are exciting mobile VAS is still in an infancy stage. Because of the
low adoption rate and lack of promotion conducive ecosystem. If you take urban
India population it is 320 million, out of which 240 million have mobile phones
and teledensity is 85 percent. And most them are have access to cable TV
(80million) DTH, Internet. 70% of India is rural. Considering low PC penetration and lower
internet/broadband penetration, the mobile has the potential to emerge as the
content and communication platform for rural India. Rural
India has population of around 850 million with mobiles 63 million and
teledensity 8.5 percent.
Hence each of this sectors choice, tastes and needs
are different as different categories of adopters differ by social and economic
status, affinity to risk, custom made VAS services have to be delivered. So,
player’s success lies in catering to the interests of the users and in
understanding the lead users, he said.
He also said that VAS players could look at
disadvantaged segment of life. In India there are 116.11 million visually
impaired people, while 280 million people with disability of hearing loss. They
want connectivity, mobility, and community. Hence mobile firms can offer
technology platform or services pertaining to them.
He also iterated that forthcoming 3G deployments would
create huge opportunity for mobile VAS. Understanding the needs of the user and
collaborating to compete is the only way to gain success in the extremely
competitive mobile market, he said.
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