difenbaker
10-27-2006, 02:19 AM
A country with text appeal
Neil McCartney
Thursday October 26, 2006
The Guardian
The Philippines has become the first country in the world where mobile users spend more on data services than on voice, according to a leading research company.
Marc Einstein, senior analyst at Pyramid Research, says that the average data revenue per subscription in the Philippines now stands at $3.90 (£2.08) a month, compared with $3.50 a month for voice - meaning that data accounts for 53% of the total.
This compares with last year's Philippines figures of $3.80 for data and $3.90 for month, and figures for 2004 of $3.40 and $4.40. While there are some other examples of operators getting up to 30% of revenue from data, notably O2 and 3 in the UK, and NTT DoCoMo and KDDI in Japan, in the majority of cases the data share is between 10% and 20%.
The main reason for the Philippines figures is that texting is very cheap compared to voice calls, so subscribers use texts as their main means of communication and their spending on voice calls is very low. Einstein says a text costs only about 1 peso (1.1p) compared to about 20 pesos per minute for prepaid voice calls.
more here:
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,1930975,00.html
cheers!
Neil McCartney
Thursday October 26, 2006
The Guardian
The Philippines has become the first country in the world where mobile users spend more on data services than on voice, according to a leading research company.
Marc Einstein, senior analyst at Pyramid Research, says that the average data revenue per subscription in the Philippines now stands at $3.90 (£2.08) a month, compared with $3.50 a month for voice - meaning that data accounts for 53% of the total.
This compares with last year's Philippines figures of $3.80 for data and $3.90 for month, and figures for 2004 of $3.40 and $4.40. While there are some other examples of operators getting up to 30% of revenue from data, notably O2 and 3 in the UK, and NTT DoCoMo and KDDI in Japan, in the majority of cases the data share is between 10% and 20%.
The main reason for the Philippines figures is that texting is very cheap compared to voice calls, so subscribers use texts as their main means of communication and their spending on voice calls is very low. Einstein says a text costs only about 1 peso (1.1p) compared to about 20 pesos per minute for prepaid voice calls.
more here:
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,1930975,00.html
cheers!