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Strategies & Market Trends : Gorilla and King Portfolio Candidates -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mike Buckley who wrote (44128)7/6/2001 12:51:26 PM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 54805
 
--Mike

<< my point is valid in context of the number of GPRS subscribers you mentioned ... Though adoption of GPRS might be prevalent some day, I don't think it has crossed the chasm. >>

As it relates to the subscriber metric, I have to agree.

Likewise with 1xRTT.

Taking your approach and using your metric of choice, and following your logic, not only have they not crossed the chasm, but neither are fully commercialized, even though they are in commercial use and have attracted subscribers, and they will not be fully commercialized in this calendar year.

Subscriber counts as a consequence are minimal for both of these technologies that add "always on" packet-switched data capabilities to circuit-switched voice in a second generation environment.

You and I however are looking at different metrics and applying the TALC differently.

When looking at the evolution (or revolution) of technology I look at technology adoption and the TALC as characterized in both "Crossing the Chasm" and "Inside the Tornado".

In this instance we are talking about 2.5G - which is simply 2G on Steroids.

In simple terms we are talking about the extension of technology and the addition of features within existing technology that consumers are already demanding. features that the lack of has recently caused a dramatic slowing of growth in handset sales. Without new features why should you are I - maybe scratch the you <g>- buy a new mobile phone.

Were not talking about chasm crossings here, we're talking about Main Street.

In the case of GPRS we are dealing with the natural evolution of second generation technology that has already crossed the chasm.

[We can save debates about whether 1xRTT is 2,5G or 3G for another time, but Hambrecht put 1xRTT into the 2.5G category like most analysts do, and for purposes of technology adoption or technology pervasiveness the same comments I make about GPRS - or Christensen made - can be applied to 1xRTT, and Hambrecht did that].

In the case of GPRS we are NOT looking at 3G multimedia technology we are looking at second generation voice and data, and consequently there is no chasm to cross.

The GSM voice chasm was crossed long ago, and the period of hypergrowth was long.

The rampant GSM data tornado commenced 18 months ago in GSMland with point to point messaging.

The CDMA camp has picked up on the existence of the point to point messaging wireless data tornado and major carriers are scrambling to implement 2-way SMS, and IM because they missed the early revenue producing opportunities it affords, and they are attempting to shoehorn EMS (a standardized version championed by Ericsson of Nokia's 'Smart Messaging') into the current cdma2000 standards so it can be uniformly implemented across carriers, which was (and is) the key to the success of messaging in GSM.

While not yet across the chasm "crummy" (crappy) WAP enabled internet access (common to both CDMA & GSM) is starting to gain some measure of meaningful acceptance and, following the example of "i-mode", there is good reason to believe that "always on", with enhanced WAP (cHTML & xHTML), and useable content will lift wireless web access out of the chasm reasonably quickly, even before 3G multimedia data with its uncertain business case is widely deployed.

Bottom line is that 2.5G adds new capabilities that enhance existing ones.

<< I believe it's premature to make any assumptions about it enjoying the incremental, sustained adoption Christensen asserts in defense of his statement that GPRS will have a longer life than manufacturers of competing products would have us believe. >>

I believe it is NOT premature to begin to make assumptions about GPRS (or 1xRTT) enjoying incremental, sustained adoption, and eventually prolonged life, and in fact I started doing that 9 months ago.

All you have to do for starters is look at this Qualcomm slide and ask yourself what technology the other 1.25 Billion mobile wireless users will be using at the end of 2005:

qualcomm.com

You can then ask yourself how quickly those users will migrate to 3GSM or cdma2000, both of which will provide revenue for Qualcomm. The answer to this of course, holds real significance for those of us that hold Qualcomm.

Dr. Jacobs has already made it a point to inform us that WCDMA will not be commercially viable till 2004 or 2005. He is correct, but this is not just a matter of a carriers choice of air-interface technology. There currently are all to few Early Adopters or Visionaries (like DoCoMo, SKT, Sprint, Or BT) out there to drive 3G, and outvote the Pragmatists, and there are some technology hurdles to overcome.

Relative to the technology adoption life cycle it is important to realize that both GPRS & 1xRTT are a technology push and not a consumer pull, and that just happens to be a most important consideration.

In the case of both GPRS & 1xRTT, while the consumer (subscriber) has not yet voted, or even been franchised, the carriers have voted. They have adopted technology, plunked down hard cash, and are now rapidly upgrading their networks, and the services that support them.

We subscribers may never get to vote. The Pragmatists have made decisions for us, and two years from now you'll be hard pressed to find a mobile phone that is NOT 1xRTT or GPRS enabled.

The Pragmatists - the Early Majority Carriers - the "people [that] make the bulk of all technology infrastructure purchases" - the people that are "in charge of the company's [carriers] mission-critical systems" - the people that believe in evolution, not revolution, have made decisions for us [Geoffrey Moore from "Inside the Tornado" page 16 in his introduction to the TALC].

Technology adoption has occurred, and the Conservatives - the Late Majority - will soon follow the Pragmatists. GSM is relatively ubiquitous today, and GSM with GPRS is likely to be relatively ubiquitous tomorrow. GSM subscribers will be pushed. Their overwhelming acceptance of wireless data in the form of messaging as a supplemental method of communicating by voice on the same appliance, allows them to be pushed further. Their subscriber numbers will grow, rapidly. The research institutions that specialize in wireless can now make reasonably informed assumptions in the form of forecasts of subscriber growth By technology) and subscriber appliance sales.

<< Similarly, because it hasn't crossed the chasm, I also don't put any stock in the manufacturers' assessment. >>

I happened to choose a manufacturer for the assessment I offered for three reasons. The first because it was handy. The second because it paralleled the Hambrecht supplemental comments to Christnsen's presentations in that it somewhat agnosticlly included 1xRTT & GPRS 2.5G packet-switched data combined. The third because that particular manufacturer has an enviable track record of forecasting market demand.

This is the way that particular manufacturer looks at the market (for 1xRTT & GPRS packet-switched data enabled combined), from the perspective of handset shipments for the near term.

* 2001 - 5% of  unit volume
* 2002 - 29% of unit volume
* 2003 - 41% of unit volume


Feel free to choose your own source for forecasting the wireless data tornado, but you probably won't find all that much variance from the above, and if this forecast is in any way accurate, the wireless data tornado (not the wireless multimedia data tornado), is at hand.

For all these reasons, I believe it is NOT premature to begin to make assumptions about GPRS (or 1xRTT) enjoying incremental, sustained adoption, and eventually prolonged life. The significance of this for the majority of thread participants that hold Qualcomm is that in the case of GPRS, its "adequacy" is a barrier to the timely adoption of any flavor of CDMA. Conversely, to the degree that it is inadequate, CDMA growth (most likely WCDMA growth) will accelerate.

I'd like to add one important comment about the all important subscriber metric, that I have given a lot of thought to (without reaching useable conclusions).

While it will always be an important metric in wireless, I do not believe that it is useable by itself, to track the growth of wireless data, or wireless multimedia data. I'll leave it at that for the moment as this post is already too long, but this needs to be discussed.

I would also like to add that on this thread, we tend to primarily look now at Qualcomm when examining the forthcoming wireless data tornado or tornados - that wireless internet nexus Cha2 refers to. My interest in keeping a vigilant eye peeled for these pending tornados goes beyond Qualcomm. I firmly believe and hope that the tornados will spawn other Gorilla and King candidates for consideration and discussion.

Respectfully,

- Eric -



To: Mike Buckley who wrote (44128)7/6/2001 1:03:13 PM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 54805
 
--Mike,

<< Similarly, because it hasn't crossed the chasm, I also don't put any stock in the manufacturers' assessment. In my opinion, it's simply too early to know the impact GPRS will have on adoption of 3G technologies. >>

Just thought I'd tack this post on to my previous post to you on the Christensen/Hambrecht subject, and get one step away from a "manufacturers' assessment".

While you (unlike me) are not yet ready to make assumptions about the growth or pervasiveness of 2.5G technologies, the research houses are of course making assumptions and drawing some conclusions. That is after all, how they produce revenue.

Below are some excerpts from a recent Cahners In-Stat Report. A Fool of your means, can buy the full report for $152 per page. Given my budget, I have to deal with the summary. <g>

Cahners In-Stat runs to the aggressive side of forecasting, but this report is typical of many that are currently hitting the streets. I'm looking for a recent clip from Gartner's Dataquest for contrast.

Like Hambrecht Cahner's is lumping 1xRTT into the 2.5G category, and at least till 1xRTT and 1xEV-DO are integrated, I think this is proper.

>> Handset Sales Lagging, but Should Quicken in 2002

Research Highlights
Cahners In-Stat Report
Report Title: "Down, But Not Out. '01-'05 Wireless Handset Forecast"
Date: June 2001
Pages: 23
Report number: WH01-03MS
Price: $3,495 USD

Growth in handset sales will slow this year due to several factors but the slowdown in the economy may not be the major one. Bigger factors could be a dearth of advanced devices and features such as PDA functionality, GPRS and UMTS and growing consumer indifference to me-too products, says Ray Jodoin, group manager and principal analyst with Cahners In-Stat Group.

Though handset unit sales will rise to nearly 466 million in 2001, up from 402 million last year, the pace of growth has slowed substantially from recent years. Jodoin points to manufacturers as a possible source of lagging sales growth.

"Manufacturers appear to be unable or unwilling to produce state-of-the-art multifunction, multi-band, data-enabled handsets at the required price and quantity," Jodoin says.

Over the next few years, however, manufacturers will get their act together and handset sales will resume a rapid growth pattern. By 2005, annual handset unit sales will approach one billion, In-Stat forecasts.

Digital handsets will lead the way as analog models begin to be phased out over the next couple of years. There will be a short period of increased replacement sales, Jodoin says, as customers flock to WAP-enabled and GPRS-ready handsets. "The duration of this period will largely be determined by 3G deployment, handset availability, services, and cost issues," he says.

New features will boost sales. "Messaging and the promise of m-commerce are transforming the 'nice-to-have' wireless phone into a 'must-have' information appliance," Jodoin says.

One limiting factor that could throw the industry off track is cost. If the high cost of 3G spectrum auctions in the United Kingdom becomes a worldwide trend, 3G services could suffer. "3G may never reach its promise because it could be too expensive for the average user," Jodoin says. "And don't forget that the average new subscriber is approaching the credit-challenged limitation that mandates pre-paid service."

Thus, In-Stat does not expect a dramatic shift from 2G to 3G by 2005. 2G and 2.5G service will actually peak in early 2005, with many 2G systems remaining in use after 2010. Wireless voice services will supplant wireline service as the preferred media by 2005 in many areas, but wireless data services will not overtake wireline data by that time.

2G and 2.5G services will predominate through 2005, according to In-Stat's forecast. GSM will be the top air link over this period with the majority of 2.5G deployments using GPRS, EDGE, and EGPRS. The major exceptions to that trend will be Korea, China, and Australia (US, Brazil, & Japan), which will deploy some CDMA 1x.

Handset sales will grow most rapidly in emerging nations where a large number of new deployments are made, particularly in Brazil, China and Eastern Europe. Growth in the developed world will continue too, albeit at a slower pace.

Though 3G deployment will be slow through 2005, the handset market will get a significant boost from new 2.5G services. In fact, 2.5G will make the wireless handset the most pervasive Internet access device, though not necessarily the preferred one, within the next two years. An obstacle to handset sales growth over the next few years may be a possible component shortage, especially semiconductors and displays, as dual and triple-mode handsets with PDA functionality come into vogue. If a shortage does not cause a drag on manufacturing, the industry should return to rapid growth in 2002, In-Stat believes. <<

Eric--