Top 10 Banks | ($m) | vs. Prev Period* | M&A | Equity | Bonds | Loans | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
JP Morgan | 5,931.29 |
+10%
|
| |||||||
Bank of America Merrill Lynch | 5,455.47 |
+22%
|
| |||||||
Goldman Sachs | 4,791.85 |
+20%
|
| |||||||
Morgan Stanley | 4,174.06 |
+13%
|
| |||||||
Citi | 3,809.59 |
+7%
|
| |||||||
Deutsche Bank | 3,421.03 |
+6%
|
| |||||||
Credit Suisse | 3,327.84 |
0%
|
| |||||||
Barclays | 3,294.17 |
+5%
|
| |||||||
Wells Fargo | 2,136.43 |
+15%
|
| |||||||
RBC Capital Markets | 1,901.07 |
+7%
|
| |||||||
Total | 78,678.70 |
+6%
|
|
Friday, January 31, 2014
Top Investment Banks - FT List
10 ways telecom can make money in the future a.k.a. telecom revenue 2.0
LTE roll-outs
are taking place in America and Europe. Over-the-top-players are likely
to start offering large-scale and free HD mobile VoIP over the next
6-18 months. Steeply declining ARPU will be the result. The telecom
industry needs new revenue: telecom revenue 2.0. How can they do it?
1. Become a Telecom Venture Capitalist
Buying the number 2 o 3 player in a new market or creating a copy-cat
solution has not worked. Think about Terra/Lycos/Vivendi portals,
Keteque, etc. So the better option is to make sure innovative startups
get partly funded by telecom operators. This assures that operators will
be able to launch innovative solutions in the future. Just being a VC
will not be enough. Also investment in quickly launching the new startup
services and incorporating them into the existing product catalog are
necessary.
2. SaaSification & Monetization
SaaS monetization is not reselling SaaS and keeping a
30-50% revenue share. SaaS monetization means offering others the
development/hosting tools, sales channels, support facilities, etc. to
quickly launch new SaaS solutions that are targeted at new niche or long
tail segments. SaaSification means that existing license-based on-site
applications can be quickly converted into subscription-based SaaS
offerings. The operator is a SaaS enabler and brings together SaaS
creators with SaaS customers.
3. Enterprise Mobilization, BPaaS and BYOD
There are millions of small, medium and large enterprises that have
employees which bring smartphones and tablets to work [a.k.a. BYOD -
bring-your-own-device]. Managing these solutions (security,
provisioning, etc.) as well as mobilizing applications and internal
processes [a.k.a. BPaaS - business processes as a service] will be a big
opportunity. Corporate mobile app and mobile SaaS stores will be an
important starting point. Solutions to quickly mobilize existing
solutions, ideally without programming should come next.
4. M2M Monetization Solutions
At the moment M2M is not having big industry standards yet. Operators
are ideally positioned to bring standards to quickly connect millions
of devices and sensors to value added services. Most of these solutions
will not be SIM-based so a pure-SIM strategy is likely to fail.
Operators should think about enabling others to take advantage of the
M2M revolution instead of building services themselves. Be the
restaurant, tool shop and clothing store and not the gold digger during a
gold rush.
5. Big Data and Data Intelligence as a Service
Operators are used to manage peta-bytes of data. However converting
this data into information and knowledge is the next step towards
monetizing data. At the moment big data solutions focus on storing,
manipulating and reporting large volume of data. However the Big Data
revolution is only just starting. We need big data apps, big data app
stores, “big datafication” tools, etc.
6. All-you-can-eat HD Video-on-Demand
Global content distribution can be better done with the help of
operators then without. Exporting Netflix-like business models to
Europe, Asia, Africa, Latin-America, etc. is urgently necessary if
Hollywood wants to avoid the next generation believing “content = free”.
All-you-can-eat movies, series and music for €15/month is what should
be aimed for.
7. NFC, micro-subscriptions, nano-payments, anonymous digital cash, etc.
Payment solutions are hot. Look at Paypal, Square,
Dwolla, etc. Operators could play it nice and ask Visa, Mastercard, etc.
how they can assist. However going a more disruptive route and helping
Square and Dwolla serve a global marketplace are probably more
lucrative. Except for NFC solutions also micro-subscriptions (e.g.
€0.05/month) or nano-payments (e.g. €0.001/transaction) should be looked
at.
Don’t forget that people will still want to buy things in a digital
world which they do not want others to know about or from people or
companies they do not trust. Anonymous digital cash solutions are needed
when physical cash is no longer available. Unless of course you expect
people to buy books about getting a divorce with the family’s credit
card…
8. Build your own VAS for consumers and enterprises – iVAS.
Conference calls, PBX, etc. were the most advanced
communication solutions offered by operators until recently. However
creating visual drag-and-drop environments in which non-technical users
can combine telecom and web assets to create new value-added-services
can result in a new generation of VAS: iVAS. The VAS in which personal
solutions are resolved by the people who suffer them. Especially in
emerging countries where wide-spread smartphones and LTE are still some
years off, iVAS can still have some good 3-5 years ahead. Examples would
be personalized numbering schemas for my family & friends,
distorting voices when I call somebody, etc. Let consumers and small
enterprises be the creators by offering them visual do-it-yourself
tools. Combine solutions like Invox, OpenVBX, Google’s App Inventor,
etc.
9. Software-defined networking solutions & Network as a Service
Networks are changing from hardware to software. This means network
virtualization, outsourcing of network solutions (e.g. virtualized
firewalls), etc. Operators are in a good position to offer a new
generation of complex network solutions that can be very easily managed
via a browser. Enterprises could substitute expensive on-site hardware
for cheap monthly subscriptions of virtualized network solutions.
10. Long-Tail Solutions
Operators could be offering a large catalog of long-tail solutions
that are targeted at specific industries or problem domains. Thousands
of companies are building multi-device solutions. Mobile & SmartTV
virtualization and automated testing solutions would be of interest to
them. Low-latency solutions could be of interest to the financial
sector, e.g. automated trading. Call center and customer support
services on-demand and via a subscription model. Many possible services
in the collective intelligence, crowd-sourcing, gamification, computer
vision, natural language processing, etc. domains.
Basically operators should create new departments that are
financially and structurally independent from the main business and that
look at new disruptive technologies/business ideas and how either
directly or via partners new revenue can be generated with them.
What not to do?
Waste any more time. Do not focus on small or
late-to-market solutions, e.g. reselling Microsoft 365, RCS like Joyn,
etc. Focus on industry-changers, disruptive innovations, etc.
Yes LTE roll-out is important but without any solutions for telecom
revenue 2.0, LTE will just kill ARPU. So action is required now. Action
needs to be quick [forget about RFQs], agile [forget about standards -
the iPhone / AppStore is a proprietary solution], well subsidized [no
supplier will invest big R&D budgets to get a 15% revenue share]
and independent [of red tape and corporate control so risk taking is
rewarded, unless of course you predicted 5 years ago that Facebook and
Angry Bird would be changing industries]…
Refer: http://telruptive.com/2012/03/26/10-ways-telecom-can-make-money-in-the-future-a-k-a-telecom-revenue-2-0/
Refer: http://telruptive.com/2012/03/26/10-ways-telecom-can-make-money-in-the-future-a-k-a-telecom-revenue-2-0/
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