Wireless News Desk
Giving Text Messages a Voice
A Combination of Text Messaging and Voicemail, Voice SMS is the Latest Twist on the Burgeoning SMS Market
Apr. 9, 2008 01:45 PM
Digg This!
Page 2 of 3
« previous page
next page »
A key advantage of Voice SMS in emerging markets is that
subscribers don’t have to know how to read or write to use it. Even for
subscribers in developing markets who can read and write, text messaging is
somewhat limited because it’s only available in mainstream alphabets and
languages. If a subscriber’s language isn’t supported, Voice SMS provides a
solid messaging alternative. The technology also has obvious benefits for the
visually impaired, who can use it as an alterative to text messaging as well.
One of the most common uses for voice SMS is in the car.
Users can leave a personal message much more safely than trying to key in a
text message while driving downtown in peak rush hour traffic.
A global view
Text messaging has experienced phenomenal growth in the past
few years. SMS messages sent worldwide will jump from more than 900 billion in
2005 to over 2 trillion in 2008, according to industry analyst firm Research
and Markets. Revenues for all of those messages could reach $72 billion by
2010, according to Gartner. New forms of SMS communication including voice and
video will experience rapid growth in the next few years. These represent new
technologies that typically attract younger, tech-savvy subscribers. They also
satisfy increasing subscriber demand for more personalization options.
As has been the case for many new mobile technologies, Asia was the pioneer for VoiceSMS, with Malaysian mobile
services provider DiGi launching its BubbleTalk service in January of 2005.
There are currently about 30 operators offering voice SMS around the world.
That number keeps growing as operators tend to launch voice SMS defensively
once a competitor has beat them to it.
The overall market potential is huge. One reason for the
anticipated growth is that most of the world’s 2.1 billion mobile phones are
capable of handling voice SMS with no handset upgrades or network
infrastructure changes.
And that’s a crucial point for any new mobile service. Those
that are most successful won’t force operators to spend millions of dollars to
upgrade their networks. They won’t force subscribers to buy a new phone. And
they won’t have complicated downloads.
Cost counts
Successful new services all have revenue models that work.
And they all start with the premise that the price an operator charges for a
service is completely arbitrary. Why? The incremental costs of providing any
service on a network that isn’t fully loaded (i.e., during peak traffic
periods) are zero. The network is running 24 hours a day, even at 3 a.m. when
there’s hardly any traffic on it. It’s lost opportunity for revenue much as
empty seats on a plane that has taken off do not bring any additional revenue
to the airline.
Every network has a busy period lasting from 30 minutes to
several hours. For most networks, it occurs in the afternoon. That’s the only
time when operators experience any significant costs. In essence, pricing is
independent of the costs, at least on your own network.
Page 2 of 3
« previous page
next page »
About Brough TurnerBrough Turner oversees the evolution of technology and product architectures and works on business strategy and new market development at NMS. He is a recognized expert in the telecom industry and has been heavily involved in VoIP since 1996. Brough invented the multi-vendor integration protocol (MVIP) and led the MVIP consortium as well as worked within the PCI Industrial Computer Manufacturers Group to drive the creation and adoption of CompactPCI. Brough earned a bachelor?s degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.