Smorgasbourg 1
2
3
4
5 6
7
8 9
10
11
12
13
Featured Article
How
Can a Small Consumer VoIP Provider Survive?
There is a lot of buzz about
VoIP Internet phone service. On the consumer side everyone is
getting a lot of exposure to Vonage commercials as well as
triple play offers from Cable Companies. From a technology
standpoint, VoIP is now much more mature than in its nascent
days when Internet telephony meant a scratchy voice
conversation over two computers. Whereas VOIP Services has
been used by Telcos to carry voice traffic over long portions
of their networks for years, it is now positioned to become
the standard technology used to carry voice traffic over the
last mile from every consumer’s home. Increased broadband
penetration and advances in VoIP technology make this
possible, and now there is a long line of VoIP providers out
there looking for a piece of the action. They range from
giants like Verizon and Comcast to relatively small unknowns.
For the first time in the history of telecommunications it is
possible to be a telephony provider without the huge barriers
of capital needed for switches and network operation centers (NOCS).)
nor the regulatory barrier of being a Local Exchange Carrier.
So will the industry be marked by many small nimble players?
What is the likelihood of survival for small consumer VoIP
service providers?
The Cable TV companies have a
strong position in the telephony market. They already have a
large embedded base of customers. They also have a local
presence, with field installers regularly driving around
neighborhoods and customer service locations in every town in
which they have a franchise. Having the field installers is a
major advantage since they can install VoIP service and also
hook up inside wiring so the service experience is no
different than before. Therefore a person doesn’t have to be
the least bit technically inclined to adopt the service,
thereby opening the market to the masses. The pure-plays like
Vonage just can’t reach the mass market like this.
Cable companies also have
huge brand awareness in their markets. What is also
potentially important is that they are perceived as a utility
company and people are used to getting phone service from this
type of entity. There is a familiarity and comfort level of
going to a utility company for phone service.
They also have tremendous
strength in both billing and customer service. While some may
hate the cable company because they have lengthy time windows
for showing up for an installation, may show up late, and may
keep you on hold at the call center, the Cable companies are
in actuality very good at managing the complexities of their
operations. For example, RCN entered some markets years ago as
an alternate cable provider thinking they could leverage
people’s dislike of the cable companies’ service record and do
it better; instead they ended up realizing how very complex it
is and ended up doing it worse. If a company wants to scale as
a major VoIP provider, they will have to manage the
complexities of billing and customer service. The cable
companies have been down this road already.
Here is what could be the
biggest factor to why the Cable companies will be most
successful at VoIP and ruin the chances of other smaller
entrants - They provide a broadband connection. Since this is
required for VoIP, the incumbent provider has the first dibs
on providing voice service. Also, since broadband connections
have high margins and VoIP has low margins, broadband
providers could treat voice service as a loss leader to get
and keep customers on their high-speed connections. NetZero,
for instance, is giving away free telephone numbers and low
priced VoIP service presumably with the hopes of signing on
users for their ISP. Voice service could in fact become so
commoditized that it will be given away with broadband service
the same way email is today. If this becomes a reality, there
would be very little market opportunity and a bleak survival
outlook for smaller pure-play VoIP service providers unless
they could offer a differentiated value proposition.
The Local Phone Company also
shares many of the same advantages as Cable in that they have
strong brands, ability to bill effectively, established
customer service, and field technicians. They also should
provide the greatest comfort level to people for providing a
phone service. However, the Phone Companies have dismal
showing compared to the Cable companies who have the greatest
number of VoIP subscribers. Verizon VoiceWing and AT&T
CallVantage each have only 5.5% of the 2.9 million pure-play
VoIP subscribers (Telephia Q2 2006). Those 320k subs are
dwarfed by the Cable Companies like Time Warner Cable who
alone had 1.6 million VoIP customers as of October 2006. Why
have the Phone Companies had such a dismal result? Internal
confliction between POTS and VoIP is one reason. They can not
put emphasis on a low margin VoIP product in their core offer
and have struggled to create an effective bundled product
strategy with advanced services. They are also expending more
resources and internal focus on better broadband offerings
than DSL and trying to break into video services. Nonetheless,
they still hold second and third positions for share of
pure-play VoIP subscribers and have deep pockets, which will
allow them to far outspend a small VoIP provider to get
mindshare.
Vonage, with 53.9% of the 2.9
million pure-play VoIP subscribers, is spending a ton of money
to get mindshare and customers. This is good in that it raises
awareness of the product category, which helps a smaller
pure-play. However, it also presents a huge challenge for
smaller providers to compete head to head for customers when a
single provider has such a dominant voice.
There are a number of
challenges facing a smaller VoIP provider. Small providers
have to compete for share of voice against companies that are
spending a lot of money. As far as the business case goes,
VoIP has relatively small margins and the ROI for marketing
campaigns and generating brand awareness is a challenge. Yet
without spending money on marketing, it is difficult to
capture customers.
Then there is the challenge
of the market size. Pure-play providers don’t have local
installers and technicians, which limit the market to those
who have the technical savvy to set up the service or the
willingness to do so. If the target market is defined as
people who have the technical savvy to set up VoIP on a home
network, then this market is comprised largely of younger
people. This group is increasing mobile based and has little
use for a landline phone. Also, consider how the overall
telephony market will change over the years. People in college
now that will be graduating over the next couple of years and
getting apartments are 100% mobile based and have never had a
landline phone. Thus the market for pure-play VoIP will be
shrinking as fast as it grows.
However, there is still an
opportunity for small VoIP providers in this challenging
market. The opportunity is to focus on niche markets and
leverage specific advantages of VoIP that are particularly
important to specific customers segments. In such segments,
word of mouth advertising is a viable strategy if the service
can meet a strong need. This solves the dilemma of investing
in media to build a strong brand and maintains better
profitability.
ReVoS Internet phone service
is an example of a small VoIP provider taking just this
strategy. They are focusing on a niche segment of people who
make a lot of international calls. ReVoS offers VoIP service,
which includes unlimited international calling to over 40
countries including the standard VoIP product offering for
$24.95 per month. They have also developed a VoIP product that
works over a mobile phone that doesn’t require a broadband
connection. This is geared to people of international origin
who, by the way, have the greatest propensity to use cell
phones of any demographic in the U.S. This niche makes sense
since carrying long distance call traffic is an inherent
strength of the VoIP networks. Also these customer groups are
better reached through a niche strategy and would be missed by
mass-market strategies. This market is comprised largely of
people living in the U.S. who have moved here from other
countries. These are tight communities where word of mouth can
flourish and the value proposition is strong when saving
people money on high cost international calls. This is an
example of how a small VoIP provider can successfully compete
against much more formidable competitors such as the Cable
Companies and Vonage.
However, the future of the
telephony industry and the role that VoIP takes still needs to
be fully defined and there are many uncertainties. There is a
long list of unknowns, which include such things as Google
getting into Voice and whether Microsoft includes a softphone
and VoIP service as a standard part of their operating
systems. Fixed Mobile Convergence (FMC) is another technology
wildcard that could change the shape of the competitive
landscape. The overwhelming penetration of mobile phone
service and mobile carriers’ ability to steal the show with a
FMC offer is very real. This may be the competing technology
that upsets the MSOs stronghold on VoIP. The question then
becomes which bundled product offer is greater 1) Broadband
and VoIP or 2) Mobile phone and VoIP. Another thing to
consider is how Wireless VoIP (wVoIP) could change the
competitive landscape and underlying telephony ecosystem if
municipal hotspots and/or WiMax take off.
Whatever the future the
holds, the economies of the telephony industry are likely to
place a few large carriers in control of the majority of the
market. People want simplicity in their lives and the winners
will be those who provide the most seamless solutions to
people’s basic communications needs. For smaller VoIP
providers to survive and make profit, they will need to meet
strong niche needs that get overlooked by the mass adoption
strategy, have a well defined and differentiated value
proposition (Recall ESPN Mobile’s problem), efficient
operations to control cost and low margins, low churn in order
to compensate for limited total average revenue per subscriber
(ARPU) absent a larger bundled product strategy, and the
ability to benefit from viral marketing within the target
markets. With all of this in place, there is a chance of
survival for small VoIP providers.
RNK Telecom is a
privately held phone company offering wholesale and
residential telecommunications services including
VOIP Services.
They market ReVoS, an Internet telephony product which
offers superior
International Calling.
|
Many people prefer to
have articles on various topics rather than in the categories
that we have here at successfuloffice.com . So in the
tradition of a 'sampling' or cross section of articles that we
have here on this site, and subdomain's like
SuccessfulOffice Weekly, and
Arts &
Entertainment, Marketing
Help,
Financial Advice & Ideas , and
Pandora's, we
present to you our own smorgasbourg.
Your E-zine 13 - A Formatting
Checklist
By Alexandria K. Brown
Discover the Key to Self-confidence
By
Colin
Dunbar
22 Ways to Grow Your Subscriber
List
By Catherine Franz
Forums – Should you have them
on your website?
By:
Anne Moss
How To Create A Website In Less
Than A Week
By:
Andre Grisby
Goal Setting: Pops Proves Its
Never Too Late
By:
Vic
Johnson
Unlimited Wealth Creation
Through Reseller Hosting
By:
Ninad Gupte
Are You Getting The Most Out Of
Your Ezine?
By Tim Bossie
Outsourcing Your Web Marketing
By
Philippa Gamse
Rich Media - Exploring New
Territory
By Ronni Rhodes
Write an Ezine? But I Don't
Know HOW!
By Priya Shah
Top Ten Ways to Live
Authentically
By:
Ann
Ronan, Ph.D.
Every Passing Minute Is A
Chance To Turn It All Around
By:
Maria E.
Andreu
Business Partners & Marital
Partners, Will the Marriage Survive? Part 1
by Chuck & Sue DeFiore
The Feature
Articles of the past
|