The
insatiable demand for smartphones, tablets, and other connected devices is
generating staggering amounts of mobile data and placing a crushing burden on
networks. One barometer is the recently released Cisco
Visual Networking Index (VNI), which predicts
that global mobile data traffic will increase 13-fold from 2012 to 2017,
reaching 11.2 exabytes per month. The study
also predicted that two-thirds of all mobile traffic will be video by 2015, and
an additional 20 percent of this traffic will be devoted to both the mobile web
and mobile data.
In
parallel, we are witnessing a “perfect storm” in both Wi-Fi availability and
customer acceptance that is resulting in a worldwide rise in the popularity of
Wi-Fi. Consumers can now readily use
their numerous Wi-Fi enabled devices in their homes, offices and increasingly
in many of the other places where they spend their lives. Mobile users are actively searching out Wi-Fi
connectivity as a cost-effective and adequate substitute or complement to
mobile access to the Internet.
Based on this Wi-Fi “perfect storm” and the explosion of mobile
data traffic traversing their networks, Service Providers realize that they now
need to pay attention to Wi-Fi. In our
conversations with SPs around the world they now recognize that that Wi-Fi is
more than just data-off load and needs to be part of an integrated access
strategy and architecture. However, they
are all anxious to understand how they can make money from Wi-Fi. They want to understand what are the winning
Wi-Fi business models?
Cisco views the Wi-Fi monetization opportunities as a pyramid, or
set of layers. Each of the layers
supports the subsequent layer above. Not
only is it extremely difficult to make a compelling business case for a
stand-alone layer without successfully implementing some of the business models
in the previous layers, but it is not in the SP’s strategic interests to focus
on only one of the layers. However, the
SP and its customers derive increasing value as they move up the Wi-Fi
Monetization Pyramid.
The core layers of Wi-Fi monetization opportunities in the
pyramid, starting at the bottom, include:
1. Baseline – using
Wi-Fi for broadband retention or mobile data offload offer a very compelling
return on investment, largely based on cost reductions, to justify further
investment in other layers of monetization.
2. New
Revenues – leveraging the Wi-Fi network deployed in the Baseline layer to
offer premium connectivity services, managed hotspots or Wi-Fi roaming offers
opportunities to generate significant new revenues from Wi-Fi.
3. Value
Added Services – increasing new opportunities are emerging to leverage the Wi-Fi
network developed in the previous layers to provide new and innovative services
related to advertising, location, analytics, retail store interactions and
special venues, such as sporting facilities.
My recent white paper (Wi-Fi: Service Providers Can Make Money with New BusinessModels) by Cisco IBSG describes each of these business models in much
more detail – laying out the economics and providing case studies of success
operators.
The rapid growth of mobile data and the popularity of Wi-Fi
have created a number of new and innovative money-making opportunities for SPs.
The question is no longer “Can SPs make money from Wi-Fi?” Rather, it is “Where
should they focus their efforts, and when should they deploy?” By methodically climbing the layers of the
Wi-Fi monetization pyramid, SPs can create compelling new business models and
sources of revenues and business benefits to readily justify investments in
building robust Wi-Fi networks and operational capabilities.Download the document
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