As is now traditional, I return from Mobile World Congress with a head full of ideas and views on market evolution, fueled by dozens of meetings and impromptu discussions. The 2015 mobile video monetization report, now in its fourth year, reflects the trends and my analysis of the mobile video market, its growth, opportunities and challenges.
Here is the executive summary from the report to be released this month.
2014 has been a contrasted year for
deployments of video monetization platforms in mobile networks. The market in
deployments and value has grown, but there has been an unease that has gripped
some of its protagonists, forcing exits and pivot strategies, while players
with new value proposition have emerged. This transition year is due to several
factors.
On the growth front, we have seen the
emergence of MVNOs and interconnect / clearing houses as a buying target,
together with the natural turnover and replacement of now aging and fully
amortized platforms deployed 5/6 years ago.
Additionally, the market leaders upgrade
strategies have naturally also created some space for challengers and new
entrants. Mature markets have seen mostly replacements and MVNO green field deployments,
while emerging markets have added new units in markets that are either too
early for 3G or already saturated in 4G. Volume growth has been particularly
sustained in Eastern / Central Europe, North Africa, Middle East and South East
Asia.
On the other hand, the emergence and growth
of traffic encryption, coupled with persisting legal and regulatory threat
surrounding the net neutrality debate has cooled down, delayed and in some
cases shut down optimization projects as operators are trying to rethink their
options. Western Europe and North America have seen a marked slowdown, while
South America is just about starting to show interest.
The value of the deals has been in line
with last year, after sharp erosions due to the competitive environment. The
leading vendors have consolidated their approach, taken on new strategies and
overall capitalizing on installed base, while many new deals have gone to new
entrants and market challengers.
2014 has also been the first year of a commercial
public cloud deployment, which should be followed soon by others. Network
function virtualization has captivated many network operators’ imagination and
science experiment budget, which has prompted the emergence of the notion of traffic
classification and management as a service.
Video streaming, specifically, has
shown great growth in 2014, consolidating its place as the fastest growing service in mobile networks and digital content altogether. 2014 and early 2015
have seen many acquisitions of video streaming, packaging, encoding technology
company. What is new however, is that a good portion of these acquisitions were
not performed by other technology companies but by OTT such as FaceBook and
Twitter.
Mobile video advertising is starting to
become a “thing” again, as investments, inventory and views show triple digit
growth. The trend shows mobile video advertising becoming possibly the single
largest revenue opportunity for mobile operators within a 5 years timeframe,
but its implementation demands a change in attitude, organization, approach
that is alien to most operators DNA. The transformation, akin to a heart
transplant will probably leave many dead on the operating table before the
graft takes on and the technique is refined, but they might not have much
choice, looking at Google’ and Facebook’s announcements at Mobile World Congress
2015.
Will new technologies such as LTE Multicast,
for instance, which are due to make their start in earnest this year, promising
quality assured HD content, via streaming or download, be able to unlock the
value chain?
The mobile industry is embattled and
find itself looking at some great threats to its business model, as the saying goes, those who will
survive are not necessarily the strongest, but rather those who will adapt the fastest.
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