Apr 23, 2013

M2M service provider metrics

This note is part of my occasional series dealing with business metrics for the M2M sector. On this occasion I examine a few operational benchmarks for an M2M service provider. In this case, I have drawn on data for Numerex in the US which is one of a few publicly quoted entities in the M2M market.

Numerex was established in 1992 and has focused on wireless connectivity since 1999 after divesting its wire line business to BT. The company recently passed the 2m connections milestone during Q1-2013. While this connections base is small in relation to the M2M business units of the large mobile operators (many of which fall in roughly the 5–10m range) it serves as a useful reference point for business planning, performance benchmarking and investor due diligence insights. These are highly topical in the present climate where companies are expanding their M2M operations; this earlier post on building a billion dollar M2M business, for example, has been the most read item on this site in recent months.

Apr 16, 2013

Competing for In-Home Services


Late last year, in the course of some project-related research, I took a look at the home security market in the context of 'smart-home' service concepts. Fixed- and mobile-network operators view this as one of several promising market opportunities to offer home automation and home security types of service.

A great deal is made about mobile operators pursuing new opportunities such as these in what are referred to as ‘adjacent markets’. However, it is as well to recognize that incumbent providers from those 'adjacent' markets may also have ambitions of their own in the communications arena.

Apr 9, 2013

IoT Business Models

A few weeks ago, I had the pleasure to be a stimulus speaker at a New Digital Economics event in San Francisco. I spoke about IoT Business Models during a full day session - entitled Digital Things – which was devoted to new opportunities from the ‘Internet of Things’.

Digital Things ran in parallel to sessions on Digital Commerce and Digital Entertainment so there was definite competition for conference delegates. As a measure of how seriously Silicon Valley is taking the IoT market, the Digital Things session drew by far the largest audience.

Since the IoT market is still comparatively underdeveloped in commercial terms, my presentation focused on lessons learned from the M2M market. In particular, I highlighted several insights from the business strategies that service suppliers and providers are implementing.

Apr 3, 2013

Launch Strategies for Digital Business Units

Among the many announcements and presentations from Mobile World Congress 2013, one that caught my attention came from Matthew Key, the CEO of Telefónica Digital.

In a post-event blog post Key highlighted how the mobile industry is moving beyond the realm of “phone calls and pure connectivity” with particular reference to M2M and mCommerce opportunities. He observed that “Despite the realization by all telcos of the need to become digital to leverage these opportunities, there is a lack of consensus on how to get there. What then is the way forward?” His own position involves “driving open partnerships and using mobile and digital technology to address pressing social needs”. Partnerships, in a variety of forms, is something I have previously described as a key aspect of business model innovation.

Stepping back, however, what are the key characteristics of other mobile operator ‘digital’ initiatives? And, what does this imply as the way forward as other operators strive to become Digital?

Mar 20, 2013

M2M valuation

Connected device applications are not all equal. Consumer-oriented devices may have a revenue generating life of 2-3 years while cars and industrial machinery a life of 5-8 years. In extreme cases, utility-like devices related to smart grid or smart city transport may be operational for even longer periods of time.

As a result of these variations, business developers and CFOs need suitable tools to manage both the risks and the rewards associated with different application opportunities. This is where valuation techniques become useful. They not only help to quantify new opportunities but they can also drive business model innovation.

Mar 7, 2013

Two Aspects to Business Model Innovation

New business models and business model innovation have become very topical in the M2M industry over the past year. Now, companies are talking less about eye-catching use-cases and more about the business of commercializing the most promising ones. The IoT market, currently preoccupied with cool and quirky devices, has yet to make this transition.

For any company in the M2M market, there are two aspects to business model innovation. The first deals with business-unit organization at a corporate level. The second applies to any special approach that is needed to capitalize on a specific market opportunity.

Feb 14, 2013

M2M Platform Permutations

Ericsson’s 5 February announcement to supply its M2M Device Connection Platform (DCP) in support of XL Axiata in Indonesia has prompted this update to an earlier article on the competitive dynamics of international alliances and M2M platforms.

The DCP deal is something of a coup, providing Ericsson with a meaningful customer reference in the highest population country in South East Asia. The news announcement actually formalizes a business relationship that dates back to early 2012. In October 2012, both companies highlighted an achievement of 89,000 M2M connections. The pace of growth seems to have accelerated with XL Axiata’s M2M base reaching a total of 125,000 in the intervening months. The latest announcement provides some timely marketing collateral for Ericsson to use with mobile operators that cannot justify an investment in their own M2M platforms and the delegations of mobile-operator executives who will shortly be congregating at Mobile World Congress.

The move by XL Axiata is not unique in the market. Other mobile operators have partnered for M2M platform capabilities to handle large scale application opportunities using processes that are geared specifically to M2M operational needs and economics. AT&T was an early partner of Jasper Wireless, for example, while Everything Everywhere in the UK has been working with another platform provider, Transatel.

These developments and the changing competitive dynamics for M2M platforms will have far-reaching implications for all device vendors, service providers and users in the M2M eco-system.