Research Overview
Telecom Carriers Resort to Bundling Due to Alarming Drops in Prices
Telecom carriers have been involved in aggressive price wars due to intense competition in the communications market. The prices of most services have fallen by 10 percent every year even while their adoption increased by around 15 percent. This makes it difficult to create a defendable and profitable niche within the market because dozens of competitors can deliver the same service. Telecom carriers see a way out of the situation with service bundling. Apart from reducing customer churn, it enables carriers to provide commoditized services at prices higher than the market value. Bundling can also help save costs in areas of bill statement creation, paper, printing, and postage.
This Frost & Sullivan research service provides an overview of and outlook for the U.S. communication service markets. It provides the prospects for various segments including wireless, local wireline, long distance, international long distance, cable and satellite TV, and burgeoning satellite radio. The study illustrates the analyses with graphs comparing revenue, subscribers, cell sites, and employee growth. Trends in market size and share are also included.
Wireless Steals the March over Wireline Services
The biggest trend in the communications market is the replacement of wireline with wireless services. In 2002, with the enabling of number portability, customers could keep original phone numbers even after transferring them to different carriers. When this scheme was announced, 800,000 wireline consumers switched to wireless numbers. With only 100 million consumer home phone lines, the wireline market is receding rapidly.
Wireless services can capitalize on e911 location-based capabilities to win over customers that are averse to mobile services because of safety concerns. Service providers can also make handsome profits by pursuing wireless Internet applications such as the hugely successful data-only broadband wireless. Although the revenue was threatened by price-based competition, the wireless segment has been able to stay profitable mainly because of economy of scale. While the average price per minute dropped from 43.9 cents to 10.3 cents, the minutes per user grew from 140 to 483.
Internet Services Become a Major Money Spinner for the Market
Internet services follow at the heels of wireless services in terms of growth. While it is not growing quite as rapidly as wireless in terms of new subscribers, broadband replacement of dial-up is causing Internet access revenue to increase faster than wireless'. This is because its prices are too low for the value proposition and most consumers would pay much more for Internet access. "Carriers should charge by speed to increase current pricing and competitors would be wise to compete on speed instead of price," notes the analyst.
Even though Internet services' increase in subscriber numbers is not as impressive as its revenue contributions, it is not anything to be dismissed either. "At the end of 2003, about 21.2 percent of U.S. households with cable TV had subscribed to cable modem broadband Internet access ? that is roughly 16.1 million users," says the analyst. The Internet is expected to penetrate more than 85 percent of households in the United States in 2010 at million homes a year, and thereby, generate huge revenue for the communications market.
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Benefits of this Service
- This research service includes coverage of the growth in the wireless industry over the last few years and has graphs comparing revenue, subscribers, cell sites, and employee growth. Trends in market size and share are also included.
- This study details the decline of the wireline communications segment, displaying revenue, minutes of use, and price along with current market size and share.
- This service contains key insights into technology trends such as VoIP, cable telephony, 3G wireless, and video on demand and their impact on the market.
- This study contains valuable information about the current trend of upgrading from dial-up to broadband Internet access. It is also segmented by DSL and cable modem technology.
- This research service details the market size and share of the premium television market including cable and satellite providers. The market is segmented by vertical revenue streams and forecasts are also included.
- The key benefit of this study is not that it covers wireless, wireline, cable and satellite television, and Internet access, but that it puts all four verticals in perspective and is able to detail where each vertical overlaps offering comparable services to consumers. The holistic view of the U.S. communications market is critical to proper market strategies as the industry is still restrained by too many competitors.
- A key point of this study is that the investment bubble in the late 1990s and early 2000s has reaped a large dividend for consumers. The profit margin for the entire industry is under 5 percent because of fierce competition brought about by over-investment in high-tech and telecom over the last decade. This means that the perceptive consumer, by going with the lowest or even a cheaper communication carrier, can receive services below cost.
- This research contains a thorough end-user analysis section. Historical subscriber numbers for all markets are included along with forecasts for every vertical, and even historical and forecast penetration rates.
Market Sectors
Expert Frost & Sullivan analysts thoroughly examine the following market sectors in this research:
- Wireless
- Local Wireline
- Long Distance
- International Long Distance
- Cable and Satellite TV and Burgeoning Satellite Radio
- Internet Access