Good read to start the 2010! Mobile Trends 2020 compiled by Rudy de Waele of MobileMonday Barcelona. Top trends for the next decade of mobile technology… a collaborative effort of the top bloggers in mobile industry.
Enjoy!
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Hi All : A note from our friend Alan Quayle which might interest you.
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“Hi, my name is Alan Quayle, on my weblog, www.alanquayle.com/blog, you can see I’ve been writing about the importance of application developers to operators for several years. I recently presented on why operators need developers: (click here)
I’m helping the leading SDP supplier identify application developers that should be part of its solution to operators. Local applications are important to mobile and broadband operators, because:
a) its just easier for operators to work with a local developer
b) local developers better understand the subtleties of their culture to create better applications
Please let me know and if you’re deployed with an operator. I’ll put it into a list and recommend to the supplier they need to partner with you to win deals in your country. I hope it generates some business for you.”
If you remember Christopher Billich from Infinita, Japan. He visited us during MobileMonday Indonesia launch on December 2007 sharing the great things about mobile industry in Japan. You can still grab his slides “Mobile 2.0 and Next Generation of Mobile Applications” here.
Infinita have just released three new reports on the top mobile social networking services in Japan. Without a doubt, all three – mobagetown, GREE and mixi - are doing some incredibly cool things in terms of service design, strategy and business model that are highly relevant to social networking plays, advertisers/brands, agencies, carriers and mobile games studios/publishers trying to figure out the SNS equation on mobile anywhere.
mobagetown Research Report (V2.0) – 206 pages
“Social Networking, Games and Avatars: The Incredible Success Story of
Japan’s No. 1 Mobile Portal”
Info: http://infinita.co.jp/en/research/mobagetown_research_report_v20.html
Samples: http://www.slideshare.net/cbillich/mobagetown-research-report-v20
Mobile GREE Research Report (V1.0) – 180 pages
“Rags to Riches: GREE’s Transformation into a Top Player”
Info: http://infinita.co.jp/en/research/mobile_gree_research_report_v10.html
Samples: http://www.slideshare.net/cbillich/mobile-gree-research-report-v10
mixi Mobile Research Report (V2.0) – 111 pages
“Going Mobile: Japan’s Most Successful Social Networking Service on the Big Small Screen”
Info: http://infinita.co.jp/en/research/mixi_mobile_research_report_v20.html
Samples: http://www.slideshare.net/cbillich/mixi-mobile-research-report-v20
All three are priced at US$ 3,000 each for a company license; they also distribute them as a bundle for US$ 6,750:
Info: http://infinita.co.jp/en/research/mega_bundle.html
Widi Sagita Abadi – Member of Mobile Monday Indonesia
Published in Selular, October 2008
(English version in progress…
)
Dalam perspektif persaingan di industri selular saat ini, tampak jelas para operator baru mau tak mau harus terjun ke pasar tarif voice murah. Seiring waktu berjalan, persaingan tak terbatas pada segmen penyediaan tarif voice murah, untuk bisa eksis dalam kompetisi para operator harus menyiapkan strategi pengembangan konten yang menarik. Nah, bagaimana posisi pengembangan konten bagi keunggulan bersaing di segmen operator baru?
Dimensi keunggulan bersaing operator telekomunikasi bisa dilihat dari tiga hal. Pertama adalah Network dan Infrastruktur, kedua adalah Kualitas Layanan (Customer Intimacy), dan yang ketiga, Diferensiasi Service dan Konten. Sebagai operator baru, bisa jadi susah untuk bersaing dalam hal network infrastruktur dan juga kualitas layanan. Sehingga sangat menarik untuk bisa menonjolkan keunggulan bersaing dari sisi value added services (VAS) terutama dalam hal pengembangan mobile content. Apalagi jika diamati, layanan suara dan SMS sepertinya makin turun dari hari ke hari, tetapi bisa dibilang jarang terjadi penurunan tarif untuk layanan nilai tambah.
From the blogosphere, our friends at MOPocket wrote about an online survey re. mobile social networking. Indonesia, being one of the largest fan of MoSocNet, should definitely take part in a survey.
The results of this survey will be compiled during the month of July 2008. Findings report will be made available in August 2008 and will be blogged about on MOPocket. Your input and comments are invaluable to this study.
To help out and take the quick survey click here.
[via MOpocket]
Another shocking interesting fact from Google. Andrew McGlinchey shared with us that search done from mobile in Indonesia is growing tremendously since September 2007. And for the last 6 months, basically the number has doubled already.

The why is still a mystery, but also this is an encouraging trend that mobile Internet is potentially a big market here in our country. Interestingly, the same trend is confirmed by other global and regional (mobile) Internet players, like Opera Mini, AdMob, Buzzcity, etc.
One more thing.
Could you help Google to validate their findings (search log) by doing this search on your mobile phone?
Please enter a search in the format of
“Momo1234 operator plan phonetype”
Example:
“Momo1234 Telkomsel Prepaid 3G Nokia N95″
“Momo1234 Indosat Matrix Huawei Modem”
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A recent article from Business Week: Welcome to the Weekend Web. Highlights the differences of people (US people, at least) browsing behavior between weekend and weekdays. On weekends, they tend to use mobile browsing more, doing other things and looking for different information: classified ads, wheather, local listings.
Welcome to the weekend Web, where people are spending a bigger slice of time online via wireless devices—and using a different set of sites than during the workweek. “At Google, we see the majority of our desktop traffic [in the U.S.] during weekdays,” says Matt Waddell, chief of staff for Google Mobile. “On mobile, the situation is completely reversed.” Mobile browsing surged 89% in the past year, with mobile page views increasing by 127%, according to researcher M:Metrics. The increase reflects growing availability of all-you-can eat data plans and increasingly sophisticated handheld devices such as the Apple iPhone.
Do you see the same trend in Indonesia? But, nevertheless, one thing for sure is “there’s an opportunity to do things that are unique” with mobile. Mobile technology was originally viewed as a way to extend the PC Web, not anymore? Understand the differences, and exploit it. Welcome to Mobile.
Bonus link:
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ACNielsen Indonesia reported (quoted in Kompas) that Indonesia ad spending for Q1/2008 is growing by 23% compared to the same period last year. Total revenue is estimated at 8.7 trillion Rupiah compared to 7.0 trillion in Q1/2007.
Ed.: that’s one quarter, so is it going to be like 35-40 trillion Rupiah a year? That’s a significant number, right? As a comparison, my consultant’s revenue estimate for Indonesia Telco operators is around 90 trillion rupiah.
Overall ad revenue growth was driven by ad spending in telco (operator and handset promotion). This category is growing by 78% to about 815 billion rupiah. Contributing about a quarter of the ad revenue growth.
Lastly, based on media type, TV still dominates where companies spend their ad dollars (62%), followed by newspaper (34%) and magazine / tabloids (4%). However, newspaper ad revenue grows by 38%.
Which makes me wonder, actually, what is the portion of ad served by mobile and online media? AdMob latest MobileMetric (March 2008) reported that Indonesia is serving 133 million ad impressions in March alone. That should count as something…
How we, the mobile player, are going to grab a significant portion of the ad spending?
Link:
Graphics (courtesy of Kompas)
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Gerd Leonhard from mediafuturist.com released a very interesting video about Music 2.0 (embedded below).
He challenges the old perspective of monetizing music as product as wrong by starting “Instead of try to sell music in a particular way that they want to sell it, they must start offering in the way that people actually want to buy it”. A very good argument on how music industry should change to adapt to the new consumer in order to survive.
A move from “content is king” concept to “open is king” which is also my personal business religion. If you like the video, you may also want to visit Gerd at his blog at www.mediafuturist.com. He had recently published a book titled Mobile 2.0 (off course), which PDF version also provided as downloadable with “pay as you like” business model.
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Warming up for the upcoming MobileMonday Indonesia Peer Awards… Here’s a short profile about what one of the Barcelona Peer Awards winner is doing.
[update: company name/link correction] mobilestance.com interviewed Nihal Mehta, founder and CEO of Buzzd – the winner of MobileMonday Peer Awards 2008 Barcelona: here’s the link.
Buzzd combined social networking, LBS, behavior analytics into a very interesting mobile marketing services. Recently they struck a deal with Helio (another interesting MVNO to watch – albeit their recent challenges). Head on the above link for the interview and a YouTube video about how Buzzd works on Helio handset.