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Mobility tech firm Dexterra secures 21.5 million USD funding round

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Dexterra, a provider of software to automate and manage mobile workforces, has today announced the close of 21.5 million USD in funding. New Enterprise Associates led the round with additional investment from the company's existing investors Canaan Partners, Intel Capital, Mesirow Financial, Motorola Ventures and Sigma Partners.  

The round of funding will support the advancement of Dexterra's mobile business platform and applications, partner and wireless carrier ecosystem and future opportunity in one of the fastest-expanding segments in the enterprise software market.  Dexterra's has experienced double digit percent growth year-over-year.

"With this additional round of financing we aim to continue driving the direction of the mobile enterprise software market and reinforce our position as the leading provider of mobile business platform and applications," said Michael Liebow, chief executive officer, Dexterra.  "Reinvestment in the company from the existing investors demonstrates their continuing support in our team, technology, business vision and the overall market opportunity for advanced mobile business software that help organisations maximise their enterprise application investments through mobility."

"Today's challenging economic environment makes deciding which companies to invest in more difficult than ever," said Scott Sandell, general partner at New Enterprise Associates.  "We've been closely watching the growth of enterprise mobility and Dexterra is well positioned as a market leader.  We are impressed by Dexterra's revenue traction in both enterprise and carrier markets, strong suite of products targeted at growing markets and unwavering dedication to product excellence and customer success."

Business Logic Systems launches new managed service

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Business Logic Systems, a developer of business intelligence and marketing campaign software for mobile telecoms companies, has launched InTelestage Revenue Optimiser, a new managed service which is said to help mobile telcos increase revenues from pre-paid customers, while building long-term loyalty.

Revenue Optimiser is an automated recharge management and measurement tool that enables mobile operators to incentivise and reward notoriously fickle and hard-to-monitor pre-paid customers via personalised SMS marketing campaigns. As a managed service, it can be funded from operating, rather than capital expenditure, for a fast ROI with little risk.

By enabling marketeers to segment pre-paid customers based on often unused usage data from billing systems, Revenue Optimiser minimises revenues lost through value destructive, scattergun offers and blanket discounts that do not necessarily change customer behaviour.

Subscribers are rewarded for profitable behaviour with bonuses paid, for example, on the value, timing or method of their recharge. As they become more engaged in interactive text marketing, subscribers also become more willing to buy extra services. This enables mobile telcos to significantly increase the lifetime value of their customers.

Because the entire process is automated, multiple campaigns can run simultaneously to different micro segments of the subscriber base.  Offers can be applied directly to subscriber accounts, without any need for manual intervention.

"Revenue Optimiser resolves a huge headache for mobile operators," says Stewart Goldberg, Executive Chairman, Business Logic Systems, "As markets reach saturation, mobile operators must focus on reducing churn while increasing the lifetime value of prepaid customers to sustain revenue growth. To do this in the current economic climate where there is increasing pressure to reduce capital expenditure presents a real challenge to operators.

"Revenue Optimiser is a cost effective solution that requires no up front investment, no technical know-how and empowers marketeers to quickly and easily roll out targeted loyalty campaigns to reward and retain profitable customers."

Set-up is said to be simple. A data collection server is installed on the customer premises and is connected via VPN to equipment located in one of Business Logic Systems' secure data centres. Once the system is up and running, a monthly consultation session can be provided for maintenance purposes. User rights on different levels can be established for increased security.

MTS to bring iPhone 3G to Russia

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Mobile TeleSystems, said to be the largest mobile operator in Russia and the CIS, has today announced that it will launch iPhone 3G in Russia tomorrow (October 3). 
 
"We are very excited to partner with Apple to launch iPhone 3G in Russia, a testimony to our success in bringing mobile communications to the largest customer base in the country," said Aleksander Popovskiy, Head of MTS Russia. "MTS was the first Russian operator to develop a pan-regional 3G network, and we are focused on offering our 61 million subscribers the most innovative multimedia content and mobile broadband Internet solutions."

The company will start offering iPhone 3G at midnight on Friday, October 3, in Moscow, St. Petersburg, Vladivostok and Yekaterinburg, followed by other major cities in Russia later that day.
MTS will sell iPhone 3G in around 1,400 MTS-branded retail stores, as well as through its dealer networks.

mobilePeople receives $8million USD investment from Via Venture Partners

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mobilePeople, a local mobile search company, has today received $8million USD investment from Nordic based venture capitalist firm Via Venture Partners. The funding is said to mean that mobilePeople has the ability to expand its international reach within the global mobile search and advertising space.

Via Venture Partners is a multi stage venture fund investing in companies in the Nordic region. The company invests in internet, communication software and ICT growth companies.

"Via Venture Partners only invests in the best of breed technology and companies and mobilePeople is a case in point. Mobile People has consistently proved that mobile local search and advertising is a fantastic monetisation opportunity and that dedication to customers pays dividends in the long run," said Peter Thorlund Haahr, Senior Partner at Via Ventures.

Jens Andersen, CEO and co-founder of mobilePeople commented on the funding: "This injection of funds will allow us to ensure our global expansion and to focus on the continuous roll-out of innovative mobile services and local advertising solutions for our customers in the directory publishing space."

What does a vendor need to do to be successful in LTE?

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PA Consulting experts offer some answers

After some years of underachievement, mobile data is finally taking off. Sales of HSDPA dongles are growing rapidly and key internet services (such as Facebook and Google Maps) are going mobile, with the result that mobile operators' data traffic uptake in the UK has shown growth of between 100% and 400%over a twelve month period.

For now, operators are looking to expand capacity on their existing mobile networks to cope with this growth. This will be achieved through successive upgrades to HSDPA, HSUPA and HSPA+. However, as this growth in data traffic continues, operators will still need extra capacity in addition to their existing networks by early 2013 and this will be achieved through the introduction of 4G network technologies. LTE will be the dominant such technology as many of the cdma2000 operators around the world are looking to LTE, as well as the traditional GSM/WCDMA operators.

But while this market will be very large, it will also be very tough. Alcatel-Lucent and Nokia Siemens Networks have struggled to overcome the integration difficulties of bringing their organisations together. Even Ericsson, the leader in mobile network infrastructure, has seen profits dropping recently.

So, all this begs the question – What does a vendor need to do to be successful in LTE? At a high-level, this means vendors have to get ever better at putting themselves in the minds of the operators, seeing things from their position and helping operators overcome the challenges that they in turn will face in deploying these networks. There are a number of areas where this can be seen in practical terms.

Deliver on time – but vendors need to accelerate LTE development

Operators are going to need LTE networks to take significant volumes of data traffic by early 2013, meaning mature networks and significant terminal penetrations will have to be achieved by then. 

Vendors are happy to talk up the near-term availability of LTE equipment.  But on closer examination, the time-scales for delivering these networks are looking particularly challenging.
Operators are going to need LTE networks to take significant volumes of data traffic by early 2013, meaning mature networks and significant terminal penetrations will have to be achieved by then.  Working back from this, the following milestones have to be put in place:

  • Given the introduction and churn rates for new handset technologies, LTE terminals must be available by mid-2010, if a significant market penetration is to be achieved by early 2013.
  • New networks also take some time to deploy and are a pre-requisite to enable the introduction of LTE terminals.  LTE equipment must be deployed from early 2010, with reasonable network coverage available from early to mid-2011.

However, the current position is that LTE standards won't be finalised till end-2008.  This only leaves 15 months to shipping equipment in volumes.  During this time, vendors have a huge amount to achieve:

  • Vertical and horizontal stack integration
  • Load testing
  • Performance and field trials
  • Reliability levels for commercial deployment.

Accelerating the product development life-cycle can be achieved using techniques such as rapid development with "agile" frameworks, and project anti-patterns detection to achieve process optimisation. Vendors may also need to act as solution integrators to achieve fastest time-to-market, with strategic procurement and partnerships with IP vendors and using off-shore R&D effort for sub-systems.

Forget the hype – focus on capacity and the customer experience

The big vendors have been guilty of generating hype that hasn't been helpful in positioning LTE, either because the technology has been too immature to deliver on the promises made, or because the hype has failed to focus on the areas that actually impact the operators or end-customers.

Spectrum is an increasingly expensive resource for mobile operators and vendors would be much better to focus on increases in spectral efficiency offered by LTE that deliver greater network capacity from the same amount of spectrum. For example, market hype on 4G technologies typically focuses on peak speeds delivered. This is despite the fact that these speeds may only be achieved by a stationary user standing next to the base station antenna – in practice, these speeds will be rarely, if ever, achieved by customers in a real network deployment. 

End-customers (who ultimately pay all the bills) are interested in data rates, but their experience will not be shaped by peak speeds, but rather by average speeds and minimum (edge-of-cell) speeds. Also, latency (both at service set-up and in-service) can have as big an effect on customer experience of mobile broadband services as the data rate.

Operators, meanwhile, are far more concerned about capacity delivered across the network. Spectrum is an increasingly expensive resource for mobile operators and vendors would be much better to focus on increases in spectral efficiency offered by LTE that deliver greater network capacity from the same amount of spectrum.

In practice, vendors need to address and successfully explain how their solutions deliver:

  • The higher average data rates that customers want by supporting channel bandwidths greater than 5MH
  • High-capacity single-frequency networks through interference cancellation
  • Higher minimum edge-of-cell data rates that limit the customer experience through a combination of both of the above.

Share the risks

As networks become more data intensive, the revenue per bit is decreasing rapidly, forcing operators to look closely at ways of reducing the costs and sharing the risks of installing and running such networks.
From a technical perspective, this means reducing not just the cost of the boxes themselves, but the cost of installing and running the network as well. In particular:

  • Providing multi-standard, cost-optimised basestation equipment that is built around a common, software-upgradeable, modular platform.  This will reduce installation and maintenance costs through easy upgrades from existing technologies, such as GSM and 3G, to LTE as customer demand takes off.
  • As existing sites and towers become ever more congested, enabling site reuse for LTE will be crucial. Challenges to vendors include size constraints of the  equipment, multiband antenna solutions (to reduce the number of antennas per site) as well as power and cooling constraints.

From a commercial perspective vendors need to further expand their horizons beyond selling boxes and be willing to work in partnership with the operators. From a commercial perspective vendors need to further expand their horizons beyond selling boxes and be willing to work in partnership with the operators. They can do this by taking over the cost, detail and risk of designing, building and operating networks. At the same time, they must deliver a service to the operator that is based on a small number of critical key performance indicators that drive the network and service performance delivered to the end-customers. This will allow the operator to focus on being a service provider and managing the customer relationship.

In particular, relationships and contractual processes need to encourage the right behaviours at the right time. Operators want the best network and will pass the risk of how much infrastructure it requires to the vendor. If the vendor gets it right and commercial exploitation takes off, then they in turn will be rewarded.

The Way Ahead

Vendors must become ever more focused on what the operators want from them if they are to succeed in the LTE market. They can address many of the key challenges this entails by:

  • Reviewing their development approach to speed up delivery time scales
  • Proving their equipment delivers the features and performance that the operators' customers really want
  • Delivering all this in a package that makes commercial and operational sense to the operators.

 

Robert Westwick (above left) and Steve Griffin (right) are Consultants in Wireless Technology at PA Consulting Group. They can be contacted via tel: +44 (0)1763 267492, email : wireless@paconsulting.com, or visit  www.paconsuting.com/wireless

Enterprise-class voice over Wi-Fi carrier, DeFi Mobile, selects Quiconnect for global network roll out

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UK company, Quiconnect, has today announced that it has been selected by DeFi Mobile to establish pervasive wireless broadband interconnection agreements with international telecoms and network operators so that users of DeFi's new voice over Wi-Fi service, DeFi Global Access, can roam seamlessly and get connected at public hotspot infrastructure as they travel worldwide.

A global IP mobile carrier headquartered in California, DeFi Mobile has invested in creating a carrier grade IP platform able to scale to 20 million users to deliver next generation feature-rich voice, mobile applications and services.  DeFi is claimed to be offering an unique solution whereby consumers pay a flat fee of £25 per month to make and receive unlimited long distance calls, have unrestricted data and browser access, all using one mobile device on one robust network.

Jeff Rice, DeFi Mobile's chief executive officer, says, "Our ‘all you can eat' fixed priced package means that global travellers can now stay in touch easily with colleagues, family and friends without paying exorbitant international mobile roaming or web access charges.  As well, companies who use DeFi Global Access can slash their mobile phone and mobile data connections costs, freeing their executives and employees to use mobile communications whenever and wherever they need to."

Supporting the S60 platform, DeFi runs on smartphones which have both cellular and Wi-Fi capability, typically Nokia's E and N series handsets.  DeFi's ‘over the air' provisioning solution programs the network and provisions handsets in real time without any user involvement.

Following a simple login process on DeFi's web site, consumers download the application onto their phones, select local numbers for the countries they want and are ready to go, with the DeFi solution automatically connecting users to available access points whether they be at home, work or in public places. 

DeFi Mobile's Rice explains, "We are unique in offering phone numbers in 30 countries, with our customers able to choose up to three local country-specific DeFi numbers if they wish.  So, for example, if you're travelling to the UK, Spain and Brazil on a regular basis, you could select these countries, be assigned a local number, all of which would ring on your one handset."

This approach means that technology savvy customers who have tried to avoid paying costly roaming charges by having multiple SIM cards and handsets no longer need to do this, nor do people calling them incur high call costs either. 

Rice adds, "With simultaneous ringing and call forwarding features, if a call to a DeFi number is made and the user is not connected to Wi-Fi at that time, calls can still be received via cellular connectivity so the user doesn't miss a call."

Given its heritage offering RADIUS integration services and expertise working with the world's leading telecoms companies and hotspot network operators – some 45 companies since active interconnections started in 2005 – Quiconnect was chosen by DeFi Mobile to assist in getting them connected to quality networks quickly and securely. 

VEX, Latin America's number one Wi-Fi network operator with over 3000 hotspots, and Y5Zone, a leading Hong Kong-based operator with over 800 hotspots in the territory, have been chosen as the first integrations with additional operators coming online over time. 

In 2006, Quiconnect was chosen as the Wireless Broadband Alliance-approved WRIX partner – one of only three independent companies to have achieved this accreditation – which means it is authorised to provide WLAN systems integration services among the WBA membership, comprising 28 of the world's leading telcos, as well as non-WBA companies. 

Jeff Mabe, Quiconnect's vice president, sales and marketing, says, "By connecting directly to our platform, DeFi Mobile avoids going out to each and every telco or network operator and negotiating technical and commercial terms on an individual basis, as we've already done that on its behalf. This means its network can be expanded quickly, with services to DeFi users broadened easily as they work to become the premier mobile voice over wireless provider."

Nokia to acquire consumer email and instant messaging provider

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Nokia and OZ Communications have announced that Nokia is to acquire OZ, a privately held company with approximately 220 employees and headquartered in Montreal, Canada. OZ, a consumer mobile messaging solution provider, delivers access to popular instant messaging and email services on consumer mobile devices.

"With OZ, Nokia is renewing its mission of Connecting People by enabling consumers to easily connect and communicate using their favorite Internet communities," said Niklas Savander, Head of Nokia Services & Software. "OZ's team and technology will help Nokia to address the fast growing consumer messaging market."

By acquiring OZ, Nokia will enable easy-to-use, fast access to leading instant messaging and email services, including AOL, Gmail, ICQ, Windows Live Hotmail, Windows Live Messenger and Yahoo!. With more than 5.5 million monthly paid users, OZ's solutions have been deployed by leading mobile operators on a wide array of mobile device platforms.

"OZ has been working closely with Nokia since 2003 – joining forces at this point is a natural extension of our partnership," said Jim Knapik, President and CEO of OZ. "We are excited about taking OZ's solutions to consumers worldwide by leveraging Nokia's devices and distribution scale."
 
The expertise and technology Nokia acquires through OZ is complementary to Nokia's existing portfolio of messaging solutions and will provide a complete portfolio of mobile messaging solutions for Series 40 and S60 devices. Nokia will continue to work closely with OZ's existing original equipment manufacturer (OEM) and mobile operator customers.
 
The acquisition is subject to customary closing conditions and is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter 2008.  After the closing, OZ will become part of Nokia's Services & Software operative unit.

Shazam and Samsung partner on music store

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Shazam, a mobile music discovery provider, has announced a partnership with Samsung which will see the Shazam service embedded into Samsung mobiles, including the latest Beatb (model: M3510) and the Beats (model: M3200) mobiles.  The Shazam application on Samsung's new phones allows users to seamlessly discover music simply by holding their mobiles to the tune for just a few seconds and then go on to buy identified tracks through operators' dedicated music stores.

Shazam fully integrates with operators' music stores to allow users to download tracks directly to their handsets. T-Mobile is the first operator to offer this service from its own music store integrated onto Samsung's new music phones.

Luke Magnuson, International Music Category Manager, T-Mobile International comments: "Discovering new artists and tracks greatly enhances our customer's overall music experience and is a key element to T-Mobile's Mobile Jukebox service.   By seamlessly integrating Shazam's music discovery service on Samsung devices to our fully-fledged music store, we offer an exciting way for our customers to get music the moment they want it."

Samsung and Shazam are actively working together to integrate Shazam's music application into Samsung's variety of lineups – not only for music specialised mobiles but also those in the style categories.

Younghee Lee, VP Marketing at Samsung explains: "We see features like Shazam's music recognition as very important to enhance the consumer's experience for music on-the-go.  Music recognition and purchase will be a core feature of our music phones."

Andrew Fisher, Shazam's CEO adds: "By offering users the ability to immediately purchase music at the point of inspiration, Shazam can turn a specific music moment into a lifelong memory associating a song with the emotions and experiences the individual felt when they first heard it. Shazam is working with its partners to not only simplify purchasing but drive more value through increased music sales and a richer experience."

Mobile messaging markets gaining ground in Western Europe, claims research

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Mobile messaging including short message service (SMS), multimedia messaging service (MMS) and mobile instant messaging (IM) are making strong gains in Western Europe, according to new analysis from Frost & Sullivan.

According to F&S, SMS still represents the lion's share of mobile data services revenues in Western Europe in 2007. While MMS has failed to replicate SMS' success, many operators are looking on MMS as a medium for delivering user-created content, advertisements and news, which is likely to spur usage and adoption. Value-added features will be key to driving the uptake of mobile IM services.

The analysis 'From SMS, MMS to Mobile IM- Mobile Messaging Markets Gaining Ground in Western Europe', found that SMS revenues generated approximately E16.42 billion in Western Europe in 2007 and this is forecast to decline to E14.59 billion in 2011, with a negative CAGR of 2.9 per cent from 2007 to 2011.

In 2007, MMS and other data applications generated E7.40 billion and this is a forecast to grow to E24.28 billion in 2011, with a CAGR of 34.5 per cent from 2007 to 2011. Growth over the forecast period will depend on interconnectivity issues being resolved between European operators and the reduction in MMS charges.

Mobile IM is expected to co-exist with SMS and other data applications with some operators stating that their voice and SMS revenues have increased between 4 to 8 per cent after the launch of Mobile IM services.

"Operators that offer mobile IM services will have a headstart in marketing and interconnecting their mobile-centric communities with other cellular networks worldwide and also with the Internet IM communities," notes Frost & Sullivan Programme Manager Luke Thomas. "This is imperative if operators want mobile IM to be as successful as SMS on a global basis."

Integrating mobile IM and presence information to the address book will encourage the adoption of sharing contact lists across varied services and client devices, and this could become a requisite for integrated operators having both fixed and mobile assets.

Although mobile IM will cannibalise other types of messaging, particularly SMS, mobile operators can attain greater revenues from all types of messaging services if they skilfully position each messaging service along with careful pricing strategies.

Despite all these value-added features, some operators have not fully accepted mobile IM due to the maturity of market segments as well as concerns of SMS revenues being cannibalised. Nevertheless, mobile IM has the potential to be the next major growth opportunity for mobile operators.

"Mobile operators should encourage the adoption of mobile IM, enabled with presence information by building on their own mobile IM services," states Thomas. "They should also mobilise existing IM communities in parallel, thereby playing a pivotal role in the dynamic environment surrounding them in the world of convergence, by positioning mobile IM as a smooth evolutionary rather than revolutionary upgrade/user experience to SMS."

Once operators extend the existing SMS and voice bundles to include MMS and mobile IM, increased adoption driving individual usage of mobile IM and MMS will be experienced over the forecast period.

Juniper Research forecasts in excess of 100million mobile users to make international money transfers by 2013

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A new analysis by Juniper Research of the rapidly evolving market for money transfer and remittances via mobile phones forecasts that in excess of 100m users globally will use their mobile phones to make international money transfers by 2013. These cross border mobile money transfers are currently in their infancy, but are expected to gain traction over the next two to three years, especially on migration routes such as Philippines/Middle East and Mexico/USA.

The report found that there is a significant opportunity for mobile money transfer service providers and vendors, for both national services between mobile users in a single country and internationally. The study explores how mobile money transfer will transform the ability of the ‘underbanked' population and migrant workers to make remittances, using their mobile phones as mobile wallets.

Report author Howard Wilcox explained: "The vast increase in migrant workers globally has fuelled the number of remittances being sent home to friends and families regularly. The mobile phone will become a vital enabler in developing countries because often many more people have phones than have bank accounts. The GSM Association Mobile Money Transfer global initiative emphasises the importance that is attached to this across the mobile industry as a whole."

Highlights from the report include:

  • Mobile international transfers are forecast to grow in frequency as users become more accustomed to the process, exceeding one per month by 2013 on average globally.
  • The opportunity for companies providing national and international money transfer services is forecast to exceed $5bn by 2013.
  • The top 3 regions (W. Europe, N. America and Africa & Middle East) will represent over 75% of the global international mobile money transfer gross transaction value by 2013.

 

The report provides six year regional forecasts of mobile money transfers and remittances, providing data on subscriber take-up, transaction sizes and volumes for both national (domestic) and international transactions. Crucially, the report identifies the incremental ARPU opportunity for mobile network operators, arising from these new services. Case studies and interviews with companies pioneering in this market are also featured.

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