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M-Commerce Value Chain Nour El Kadri University Of Ottawa.

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Presentation on theme: "M-Commerce Value Chain Nour El Kadri University Of Ottawa."— Presentation transcript:

1 M-Commerce Value Chain Nour El Kadri University Of Ottawa

2 Business Partnerships Content providers Wireless Application Service Providers Mobile Network Operators Infrastructure Equipment vendors Software vendors Mobile Portals Content Aggregators Third-party billing providers Mobile Device Manufacturers Location Information Brokers

3 Infrastructure Equipment Vendors Equipment vendors provide: –Base Stations –Mobile Switching Systems –Wireless Transmission Solutions for both Data and Voice $50 Billion Market in 2000 $100 Billion in 2005 They are major stakeholders in the m- Commerce market.

4 Software Equipment Vendors They play a critical role in: –Third Generation Partnership Forums (3GPP) –Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) –Mobile electronic Transaction (MeT) –Location Interoperability Forum (LIF)

5 Software Vendors Suppliers of: Operating Systems Databases Microbrowsers Other middleware technologies Major Operating Systems: EPOC, by the Symbian Consortium (Psion, Mstsushita, Ericsson, Nokia, Motorola) Windows CE, by Microsoft PalmOS, runs on 60% of all PDAs (2004)

6 Microbrowsers & Databases Microbrowsers: –Openwave (Phone.com) –Microsoft, Nokia, Ericsson –4thPass has a Java-enabled microbrowser Databases –iAnywhere Solutions, subsidiary of Sybase –Oracle –IBM Most of these key players rely on the business model that combine licensing, consulting and maintenance fees.

7 Content Providers Content can be: News Directory services Directions Shopping and ticketing services Entertainment Services Financial Services Sources of Revenue: Subscription fees Transaction fees Share of traffic charges Sponsorships, advertising, referral fees, commissions.

8 Business Models User Fee Business Models (subscription and usage fees) Shopping Business Models Marketing Business Models Improved Efficiency Business Models Advertising Business Models Revenue-Sharing Business Models

9 User Fee Business Models Subscription Fees i-Mode model – rely on DoCoMo to collect fees Ex: Bandai and its Chara-Pa service, 1.6 million subscribers by 2000. Usage Fees Charge for actual usage of a service –More difficult for small providers to implement on their own due to small charge fees  rely on mobile operators, mobile portals and third party micro-billing operators

10 Shopping Business Models Like wired e-tailers…wireless is a new distribution channel Nokia, Nordia and Visa…cooperating to make full transactions

11 Marketing Business Models Mobile presence is subsidized company’s core business –Buying and selling cars, heavy equipment… –Promoting programs of a university Tsutaya for video and CD rentals –In 2000, 650,000 users –2 million accesses per week Privacy laws and anti-spamming legislation protect customers…if implemented!

12 Improved Efficiency Models Cutting cost and improving customer satisfaction Mobile banking Mobile trading Mobile ticketing Disintermediation…removing extra channels Daiwa Securities in Japan 35% of stock trading on the internet 20% using the i-mode mobile system Mobile transactions were 50% cheaper than traditional ones Boosting company productivity through mobile access

13 Advertising Business Models Flat Fees –Charge flat fee for displaying advertisement over a period of time Traffic-based Fees –Paying based on the number of times an advertisement is placed Performance-based Fees –Fees based on the number of click-throughs or call-throughs

14 Revenue Sharing Business Models Partnership arrangements with other companies Collecting payment from user and distributing it Webraska: Driving maps with real time reporting Revenue sharing with Trafficmaster and Orange, M1, and voice stream.

15 Content Aggregators Value Creation by assembling content from various sources –BuzzCity in Singapore aggregates, repurposes and WAP-enable local, national and international content Redistributed by mobile operators: Telenor in Norway Digi in Malaysia TotalAccess in Thailand Mobile portals, network operators and many ASPs operate as content aggregators

16 Mobile Network Operators MNOs  Mobile Voice Carrier –Mobile Content Provider –Mobile portal –Mobile ISP –Mobile Location Broker –Mobile Transaction Provider

17 MNOs Challenges Biggest threat comes from other competing players: Virtual Mobile Network Operators (VMNOs) –Do not own spectrum, but buy bandwidth from MNOs for resale Mobile portals –MNOs have portals but feel the heat of traditional Portals with mobile presence Third-party Billing Providers –Banks, Credit Card Companies, billing providers

18 Mobile Portals Offer a one-stop shop solution to mobile users Market close to $10 billion per year (2005) In 2001 more than 200 portals launched in Europe alone. Revenues come from different streams To compete a portal needs to offer: –Ease of use, personalization, a critical mass of services and applications - all at a reasonable price

19 Mobile portals Players fall into different categories: –Mobile Operators NTT DoCoMo Traditional Internet Portals –AOL, Yahoo!, MSN, Lycos, Excite –Strategy to offer single integrated portal solution Mass Media Companies –Vivandi Universal Vizzavi portal in cooperation with Vodafone Device Manufacturers –Palm and Nokia through MyPalm and Club Nokia Independent Mobile Portals –Halebop, djuice, Mviva, iobox bought by Terra Mobile Financial Organizations –Nordea specialized WAP portals for shopping and banking

20 Third Party Billing and Payment Providers Early versions of WAP and i-Mode did not provide end-to-end security. This resulted in content providers depending on MNOs and third-party providers for billing. –Pre-paid cards –Variations of mobile wallet by bankc to counter Mobile operators Other initiatives include: –MeT, Mobile electronic Transaction –Mobey forum, the Mobile Forum –Global Mobile Commerce Interoperability Group

21 Mobile Device Manufacturers Their design decisions determine the functionality and standards available on mobile platforms CPU speed and memory capacity OS Communication standards supported – GPRS, WCDMA Microbrowser pre-installed SIM, WIM, certificate-based authentication,… Location tracking functionality Applications, MP3, Videostreaming,…

22 Wireless Application Service Providers Application Development Hosting and Managing the application Developing the wireless bridge Hosting and managing the wireless bridge

23 Location Information Brokers Responsible for determining and updating user’s position Supplying information to content providers, mobile portals,…. Driven by location sensitive applications, regulations like E-911 in the US Players: –Cambridge Positioning Systems –Cell-Loc over AMPS and CDMA


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