Executive Summary
Significant Regulatory Developments within 12 months Impact on Business Transformation of Telecommunications Challenge for the Future
Today's communications industry is being shaped by several key factors: a rapid growth in mobile communications, explosive growth in the Internet, stagnating revenues from core telephone services, falling prices and spreading competition, liberalization and privatization.
But there are also big regional differences, mostly a consequence of continuing economic inequality, and, in some cases, resistance to reforms aimed at increasing competition. In Africa, most of Asia and parts of Latin America, there are far fewer than ten phones per hundred people. In the poorest countries, fewer than one in ten thousand people can access the Internet, compared to almost one in ten in the most advanced nations. Yet there are many beacons of light in the developing world too, with China, India, parts of Eastern Europe and much of Latin America seeing strong growth in all the key markets. As more markets open their doors to competition following the 1997 World Trade Organization agreement, rapid growth is likely to be the most notable feature of telecommunications markets around the world.
The first Global Communications Report from BT, published in 1996, summarized the state of the telecommunications world and its impact on the way organizations do business. The trends identified in that report have continued and strengthened. Today, the ability of business to work effectively is even more dependent on information and communications technologies. The aim of the BT World Communications Report 1998/9 is to provide a useful insight into the changing shape of the communications industry and to outline how business can use technology to gain competitive edge.
The world that we are entering is neither simple nor predictable. But business must understand that communications technology is critical to survival – and understanding technology is the key to success.
Significant Regulatory Developments within 12 Months
Three sets of agreements which came into effect at the beginning of this year have ensured that, for businesses and customers everywhere, the telecoms marketplace has changed forever. First, the World Trade Organization's Agreement on Basic Telecommunications Services came into force on February 5, 1998. As a result 69 countries, accounting for 90 per cent of the world's $650 billion telecoms services market, agreed to move from the rigid bilateral agreements of the old telecoms structure to embrace national and international competition. The WTO predicts that free competition could turn the $650 billion market into a $1 trillion market by the end of 1998.
Secondly, the European Union – home to a third of the world's telephone lines – decreed an open telecommunications market, effective from January 1, 1998. Europe's transformation, from one of the world's most protected markets to one of the most open, signals that governments are beginning to recognize and accept the link between competitive telecommunications and economic prosperity. That increased prosperity is founded on widely-accepted forecasts of cost reduction, service improvement, and greater competitiveness. Thirdly, the Japanese telecommunications market – the world's second biggest and by far the largest in Asia Pacific – fully opened up. The Japanese Diet passed a raft of legislation during 1997 and was one of the first governments to ratify the WTO Treaty protocol. This marked the spread of full competition to the world's three great trading blocs.
Liberalization has been long anticipated and businesses are now waiting to see the benefits of a competitive marketplace. Potentially, prices could fall dramatically in the global market, enabling business to increase its use of telecoms. However, the telecoms industry is booming, not suffering. Despite falling prices, total industry revenue is growing at twice the rate of the world economy as a whole.
Impact on Business
Business trends worldwide show how information and communications technologies and management strategies are increasingly becoming locked together. And as companies are able to develop new business strategies, technology companies are rising to the challenge to deliver more innovative solutions at lower prices.
This is a virtuous circle for those quick enough and imaginative enough to seize opportunities. For those who cannot or will not innovate fast enough the future is less sure.
The trends affecting business across the world include:
Accelerating pace of change: the pressure to find out what the market wants and bring new products to market fast is becoming more intense.
Globalization: as trade barriers fall and Internet usage grows, geography is disappearing as a business constraint. This means more opportunities, but also more competition.
Increasing competition: ‘unexpected competitors' threatening the core business of traditional organizations. For example, as banks become insurance and financial service businesses, their core business is being attacked by retailers
Technological awareness: organizations which do not understand what technology can do for their business are finding that competitors who do are taking over their markets.
Skills shortage: The world is facing a massive skills shortage in information management and IT: global skills shortages and ‘employment insecurity' are endemic as organizations are forced to review strategy and refocus, creating a flexible, knowledge-based workforce, with skills to respond to change quickly and effectively.
Information and knowledge management are critical issues: the lean organization has few support staff and uses ‘what it knows' effectively. Businesses succeeding in this dynamic environment Þnd ways of using that knowledge to gain competitive edge.
Increasingly sophisticated solutions: to meet the needs of increasingly sophisticated customers, who demand ease-of-use and global access in the age of virtual businesses and teams.
For the first time, we are entering a world where our reach is not limited by mechanical systems, the number of people we have, or our geographical position. Today, organizations must be creative and connected to succeed.
Transformation of Telecommunications
Once populated by staid, government-owned monopolies, the telecommunications industry is now moving towards being the largest, most highly competitive and dynamic market in the world, underpinning almost everything we do.
The industry is changing beyond recognition and is merging with other industries to create a new sector: a global information and communications industry.
Three forces are fuelling this change:
Technology: Telecoms equipment is digital and is sharing the benefits of computing technology improvements. Falling satellite channel costs and better cable technologies help, too. Telecom companies can offer better, more reliable and more intelligent services at lower cost.
Competition: The commitment to competition shown by virtually all governments across the world is creating an infrastructure where liberalization and increased competition are the only options. Telecom providers must respond by innovating, cutting prices and increasing service quality – or lose customers to new competitors.
Demand for change: Surveys show that telecom business customers want and expect more supplier competition and lower prices. Political pressure on governments to deregulate telecom markets is significant.
Challenge for the Future
The transition to an Information Society can be likened to the Industrial Revolution in Europe and the Americas in the 18th Century. Then, change was accompanied by massive social and economic dislocation. In the far more complex and interconnected world of today, failure by politicians, by business leaders, or by the technology itself, could create havoc and despair. The stakes are high.
This report suggests that the potential wealth and freedom created by the Information Society will be overwhelming. |