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How the Internet and Telecommunications Industry Are Changing Each Other

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The telecommunications industry is changing rapidly-as is the internet-and they're creating a mutual feedback loop. This feedback loop is virtuous if you're a consumer of such services, but it's terrifying if you're a supplier in these industries.

Telecom is changing the internet. The internet is changing telecom. Let’s start with the latter assertion.

How the Internet Is Changing Telecom



Skype-freeware comes to the telephone

The freeware model for software delivery is a proven method for quickly creating a large user base for your product. In the software space, WinZip and Journyx Timesheet are software products that quickly garnered huge market shares due to their zero dollar entry prices. LinkedIn, Yahoo mail, and Gmail have taken off similarly in the software-as-a-service (SaaS) space.

Similarly, Skype, an internet-based PC-to-PC voice communications application, has irrevocably altered the market by proving that many users will accept inferior levels of call quality in return for free or extremely low pricing. This is causing other voice communications firms, including some long established providers, to drop their prices.

But far more important than the commoditization price ‘race to the bottom’ that Skype started is the fact that Skype convinces people to accept that the PC is a voice terminal. Skype has demonstrated that voice over the internet, especially when combined with instant messaging and chat technologies, provides some advantages that are easiest to provide when using your PC as a voice terminal.

There is nothing particularly unique about Skype; any competitor could offer the same service. However, its first-mover advantage, which resulted in a large, established Skype community, limits the likelihood of users switching to another service. This means that the race to the bottom will just quicken as new entrants (like Google, which now offers voice-enabled chat on their Gmail service) enter the market with similar free offerings.

Dick Tracy has finally arrived

Forty years ago people dreamed of video-phones. Now that they’re here and available in online web meetings via services like Webex, it’s surprising they’re not used more than they are. As availability and usage of these internet-native applications grows steadily, it must ultimately affect how people view their telephone. Traditional telecommunications companies have no choice but to innovate quickly or end up as relics.

The result will be that they will ultimately end up only providing the network access. The pace of innovation in the software world is so much faster than it is in the network- provider world that incumbent telcos who are used to longer product life cycles will find it impossible to match a company like Skype, which releases new software every quarter.

How the Telecoms Are Changing the Net

Cell phone pricing

Not long ago, a company like Tivoli or Vignette was able to sell software at high prices to desperate CIOs at cash rich companies. Those days are very over. SaaS providers like Freetimesheet.com or Amicus.com (provider of Zimbra-hosted mail services) have adopted a pricing model lifted from cell phone service providers.

If you had to prepay for five years of cell phone service when you bought a phone, you would examine your options much more carefully than if you were just handed a free phone and a low monthly fee. Every software maker has seen the writing on the wall by now-it was originally written by cell phone companies, and what it says is SaaS.

Speech recognition

Other telecom technologies such as speech recognition are starting to show up in integrated web applications, so you will be able to, for example, fill out your timesheet by talking into your cell phone while you’re stuck in traffic.

Commoditization pricing

When Uncle Sam broke apart AT&T, long distance prices began a plunge from 25 cents per minute to the current pricing of zero. This took about 30 years. Software makers are finding that the twin gravitational forces of SaaS and open source are moving prices similarly for undifferentiated software applications, except software makers will not be given 30 years. Try three years-maybe. The world is flatter now, and things are moving dramatically faster.

The Future

Network providers will slowly but surely give up on providing applications to end users as software makers run away with that prize. Wimax and more prevalent and higher quality video chat capabilities will make us all more able to work from home when the freeways are in gridlock. And it will all happen much more quickly than anyone thinks. Who expected 10-year-olds to be running around with cell phones 20 years ago? “Bet on the innovators” is better advice today than it’s ever been.

About the Author

Curt Finch is the CEO of Journyx (http://pr.journyx.com), a provider of web-based software located in Austin, Texas, that tracks time and project accounting solutions to guide customers to per-person, per-project profitability. Journyx has thousands of customers worldwide and is the first and only company to establish Per Person/Per Project Profitability (P5), a proprietary process that enables customers to gather and analyze information to discover profit opportunities. In 1997, Curt created the world’s first internet-based timesheet application-the foundation for the current Journyx product offering. Curt is an avid speaker and author, and recently published All Your Money Won’t Another Minute Buy: Valuing Time as a Business Resource.
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