R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T

Free email newsletters




ADVERTISEMENT

Western Europe unimpressed by fixed-mobile convergence

Services still at the starting gate, according to IDC

Robert Jaques, vnunet.com 05 Jun 2007
ADVERTISEMENT

Mobile operators are finding it "truly difficult" to sign customers to new fixed-mobile convergence (FMC) services in Western Europe, market watchers revealed today.

IDC's recent study of FMC examined the experiences of Western European operators in launching services, and noted that many are struggling to get offerings off the ground.

"Orange has had the most positive start with its Unik service in France, but other operators have struggled," said Jill Finger Gibson, EMEA research director at IDC.

"This shows that FMC technology is moving in the right direction and is not the major hurdle to FMC adoption, at least in the consumer segment.

"That hurdle is getting the customer proposition correct, launching the service only when the necessary prerequisites are in place, and positioning an FMC service as a must-have rather than a nice-to-have."

IDC's report advises operators considering consumer services to avoid positioning FMC as a new standalone product. Instead, it should be positioned as a complement to existing broadband and mobile services.

In particular, IDC stressed that operators planning on launching an FMC service need to ensure that a "significant number" of their existing broadband subscribers are already familiar with and using home networking equipment.

Ultimately, home broadband penetration combined with home network penetration is the necessary prerequisite for the launch of an FMC service, the analyst firm believes.

Based on the technology and service developments over the past year, IDC estimates that the FMC services market in Western Europe will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 173 per cent to reach $2.65bn by 2011.

During the forecast period, the major FMC opportunity will be in the consumer and small/medium business segments rather than the large enterprise segment.

The first deployments of FMC have been with consumers and have shown that people will buy the service if the messaging, pricing and device offers are right.

IDC believes that significant penetration of FMC in the enterprise sector will only occur after 2011, as the technologies needed for enterprise FMC to appeal to business technology decision-makers are still in the development stages, and enterprise adoption of new technologies is a gradual process.


All Mobile Communications

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
United Kingdom | Advent Computer Training
Are you stuck in a dead end job? Do you want to take control of your salary, life and career? Advent IT and computer training offers advanced, professional training and helps you find the right ... more >
United Kingdom | University of east anglia
WEB DEVELOPER £22,332 to £27,466 per annum (Grade 6), with agreed progression to £28,290 to £33,780 (Grade 7). Pay award pending from October 2008. We are looking for an experienced Web Developer to join a ... more >
United Kingdom | ESRC
Web/Project Manager - £33,118 to £35,694 + Benefits Cutting-edge research is our business. You'll give us the cutting-edge web technologies to match. The Economic and Social Research Council is the UK's leading research agency for ... more >
Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom | Tesco.com
Middle Tier solution Designer - Welwyn Garden CityWho's behind the world's most successful online retailer? Just over 10 years ago we started Tesco.com (aka Dotcom). Today, we've an incredible 750,000 active customers and sales at ... more >
More job opportunities