By Thomas Howe
Name a Web 2.0 business model that doesn't depend on advertising. Anyone?
Beuler? We may all be forgiven when we fail to name a second business
model, as the success of Google, Facebook and MySpace drive both investors and customers into such a frenzy that countless
startups are funded with no other value proposition than to be able to
aggregate large amounts of subscribers such that one day ... we could advertise to them.
For those who struggle with naming a second model, I would
like to introduce Telco 2.0. In the first of a two part series, I want to put
forward the unique business proposition Telco 2.0 offers and how it differs
from everything that went before it.
From a business perspective, three points are important to understanding why
Telco 2.0 is such an interesting place to invest money, time and attention.
Telco 2.0 refers to telecom software and services that sit "over the top" of other services such as the Internet,
the PSTN and mobile networks. These applications interface with the
networks below them to provide services, and use the Intranet as the way subscribers are attracted and acquired, and as the way subscribers
manage their services.
As a direct result of this approach, Telco 2.0 has three identifiable business advantages over the last generation of telecom application deployments:
As I meet and speak to those outside the telecom world, I often see the eyes
glaze and the disdain rise when I mention "operators" and "carriers."
Just like good business models, respect for traditional carriers is sometimes hard to find. My only response is simple: Name any other
industry that has convinced every adult on the planet to give them $30 a month
for a completely renewable resource. (In fact, isn't that the real problem? It's too renewable?) I believe that there's
more than one way Telco 2.0 will flatten the traditional telecom market,
and that's really going to be impressive.
Now, other than the advertising industry, name an industry so poised to take
advantage of what Web 2.0 has to offer, and if you do, I'll ready my resume
tonight.
My bet is that I'm going to bed early.
Thomas Howe is a long-time telecom consultant, writer, and speaker who is the CEO of the Thomas Howe Company, providing expertise in improving the business process with real-time communications. His website is at http://www.thomashowe.com [1]
Links:
[1] http://www.thomashowe.com/