ITU Day 3: Look ahead, not behind for new biz models

Joseph Waring
08 Oct 2009
00:00

When looking for new business models, we shouldn’t forget that most of the trusted business models that we believed in and have crashed over the last two years.

In a panel discussion on defining new business models at ITU Telecom yesterday in Geneva, Media Futurist CEO Gerd Leonhard pointed out that what we thought were great business models have turned out to be vapor – just look to Lehman Brothers, Nortel, GM and Enron before that.

He suggests before telcos judge the likes of Facebook and Google for a lack of a model, “we should look at what we have believed in. On the web you do have to have a bit of imagination about where the money will coming from.”

Admob vice president for global alliances, Russell Buckley, pointed to the widespread reluctance of businesses – be it the music industry, publishing or telcos – to acknowledge that the economy is changing.

He said it’s interesting that when businesses are faced with fundamental change, they go through the same process as dealing with death. “They go through a denial stage, an anger stage and finally they come to acceptance and then start to change their business models accordingly.”

He said Admob started talking to lots of operators in the beginning but gave up because the conversations were taking too long – two to three years. “The telecom industry has finally woken up and that there is real revenue to made from mobile social networking and want to be part of it.”

Keith Willetts, chairman of the TM Forum and moderators of the session, said he agrees that it’s taking a long time for telcos to come to terms with the changes, and still continues to feel a sense of anger from some telcos because the web and media companies are unfairly getting a free ride on the network they spent billion developing.

“But what I don’t see is anyone figuring out what the model is for sharing that revenue,” Willetts said.

Willetts said the paradox is that with data the operator is not creating additional value as usage increases, like in the past with voice and SMS. Data plans depress revenue growth and require telcos to continue to invest in their networks to support the expanding capacity.

He fears the industry is heading toward the nightmare scenario of because it couldn’t figure out how to share revenue, it couldn’t renew itself and continue to provide cheap broadband. He asked the panel if the inverted business model is sustainable.

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