Microsoft Invades Finland and Alcatel-Lucent Rises

“Half a loaf is better than none” is an old saw, but it sure seems to describe the newest mobile development—the Microsoft/Nokia pact.  The pact is being hailed and panned depending on perspectives, but maybe it deserves it because it’s not the whole solution for either party.  Both probably know that, and are gambling that taking this step will win them enough time to think of the right answer.  But that may be behind both companies now, and maybe forever.  Half a loaf may be no loaf at all.

For Nokia, the deal gives them a mobile platform that has a partner in the most critical smartphone market—the US.  It offers them developer cred, so to speak, and it acknowledges in a backhand way the fact that they need a marketing partnership to be cool (their homeland climate notwithstanding).  For Microsoft, it offers the promise of a much faster ramp on Phone 7 through a conduit with the largest provider, and a much-needed boost to 7’s credibility in an ever-more-competitive mobile OS space.  It sounds win-win, so why am I so down on it?

Well, to start off with, you have Nokia the marketing-deprived joining forces with Microsoft, whose own marketing (particularly in the phone space) has left a lot to be desired.  In its core businesses, Microsoft is losing market share and credibility against both the top mobile rivals.  They lost mobile share until Phone 7 came along, and it’s too early to say whether that will gain them anything.  Get every marketing type in Microsoft and Nokia in a room, and a couple Apple or Google guys would nail the doors shut in a minute.

Then we have the issue of “joint development”.  Where has either company had a major success with that?  In fact, neither Microsoft nor Nokia independently have been able to drive a product to market in a timely way, or address the evolving needs of the mobile space before somebody else tied them up.  Now we have the two trying to do it together, separated by miles of polar waste?  Sounds like an advert for Cisco’s telepresence.

But the big problem is the timing.  This is not an alliance of the agile, guys.  They are not going to hit the ground running.  Even spokespersons for the companies suggest that there’s a multi-year transition period to be faced.  At the end of that period, where will iOS, Android, and perhaps even WebOS be?  Will they suspend progress to give the Microsoft/Nokia alliance a fair shot?  Will people stop buying phones to see what the new collective comes up with?  Get real.  The fact that Nokia refuses to acknowledge any meaningful change of status for Symbian or MeeGo doesn’t help, nor does the broader commitment to Microsoft for Bing and ad brokering.  It makes Nokia a junior partner in their own deal, junior to a company that’s losing market share to mobile competitors too.

A final note; Alcatel-Lucent announced its earnings yesterday and the results were a sharp contrast with Cisco’s, sending Alcatel-Lucent’s stock up more than twice the percentage that Cisco’s fell.  The most impressive fact was that revenues increased in all geographies and product sectors.

If you couple this with Alcatel-Lucent’s lightRadio announcement, too late to impact the latest numbers, you wonder whether the company may not be finally getting it together.  Another implication is that if nobody is effectively linking service opportunities vertically through the network, then the guy with products in every part of the network has an edge.  For Cisco, that may be another reason to get serious about service-layer strategy.

Lessons from the Fall(s)

Cisco’s numbers were a big disappointment to investors, and they focused on two issues that are in fact the key ones for Cisco (and the market) at this point.  First, Cisco’s gross margins were off, and that’s likely due to discounting forced on Cisco by competition.  Second, Cisco suffered in the critical switching space, the place where most enterprise investments and the key data center investments would be likely made.  Even service providers today are more likely to buy switches or switch/router gateways than pure routers.  Thus, it seems likely that either the market is unexpectedly soft or that Cisco is losing share here.

I think it’s the latter.  The problem Cisco has is the classic incumbent market leader problem.  They can’t accept organic sector growth, they can’t hope to gain market share, and so they have to look for adjacent opportunities.  The problem is that these are proving harder to grow quickly than Cisco had hoped, and in the meantime the lack of focus on core business sectors has created a greater risk of market share loss.  There are plenty of drivers for that outcome, too.

Switching, meaning Ethernet and lower-layer technology, is highly price-sensitive because it’s the largest category of network investment enterprises make.  It’s also hard to differentiate because, well, bits are bits.  Thus, while enterprises are eager to modernize their data centers, it’s proven difficult to demonstrate that switching features are relevant to that task.  The goal, after all, is IT modernization and switching doesn’t link well or even directly to IT features.  For service providers, switching is mostly about aggregation, which is also a hard application to differentiate.  There’s no clear link between switching and the service layer where the money is, because vendors (including or even especially Cisco) haven’t worked hard enough to create one.  Thus, going cheaper is a powerful motivation, and everyone is under pricing pressure.

This is bad for Cisco, of course, but it’s not a good sign for the market overall either.  Gaining market share against Cisco based on price is a kind of hollow victory; you only set the stage for commoditization and loss to Huawei or ZTE.  I hate to keep beating the same drum, but the problem is that without new revenue hooks to pull through infrastructure, operators can’t keep investing and they certainly can’t value small feature advantages over larger price advantages.  Industry: beware!

Nokia’s falling status and confidence continues, with leaked documents from CEO Elop suggesting that perhaps the MeeGo alliance isn’t going to perform and renewed rumors that Nokia will adopt Microsoft’s Phone 7 or Google’s Android, or maybe both.  The fact that this debate is happening at all, and in public, is evocative of the gulf between what Nokia needs to be as a 21st-century marketing machine and what it is—an old-line conservative in a market that no longer values either attribute.

The question at this point is whether any choice it might make could possibly matter.  Probably not, I think, not because of the confusion and loss of confidence that the current debate creates, but because the issue has even come up.  With a lead in the phone space, and with a smartphone OS that could have been a contender (so to speak), Nokia has passived itself into irrelevance.

We live in a consumer age, a time when there are both players eager to offer whatever the current fad might require and frameworks to facilitate the offering.  That kind of situation doesn’t create many opportunities for the guy who thinks that he can wait for a market opportunity to develop and then to support it with superior engineering or a known brand.

The question isn’t what Nokia is going to do (same as always—not much) as much as what some of the other entities in a similar situation will do.  Ericsson comes to mind, and NSN obviously.  Alcatel-Lucent, I think, has demonstrated with lightRadio that it’s capable of doing something compelling, but even that significant step needs service-layer buttressing.  Their announcement in a socially linked call center is another good sign, but it would have been better had this app been linked to a service-layer strategy for enterprises and operators and not just an atomic announcement.  Innovation is the process of authoring services for the masses these days, not pushing bits.  It would have helped Cisco, or NSN, or Ericsson, or Alcatel-Lucent, or Juniper in the current quarter.  Sooner or later somebody will figure this out.

Then there’s HP.  The company finally made an announcement of WebOS-based products derived from the Palm DNA, but the announcement was hardly earth-shaking.  A small Pre-like cellphone/smartphone and a 9-inch tablet were announced, but no pricing or release dates or carrier deals were firm.  Thus, the whole thing looks like a place-holder, initiated about six months after the time for place-holding was past.  HP needs to make something of WebOS and the Palm deal, and they need (more than Microsoft) to be successful in the appliance business.  They didn’t offer anything that would be truly compelling.

The nine-inch tablet is their biggest gamble, and hope.  It takes on the iPad more directly than most of the other tablets, which focus on the 7-inch form factor, but corporations tell me they like the smaller tablet and HP has a much tighter relationship with the enterprise than with the hip consumer.  The website positioning is clearly targeting the consumer too, so HP is doubling down and chasing Apple in its core market with a comparable product.  There are some interesting features; wireless keyboard and wireless integration with the HP phones, but whether they’ll sustain the product in a market that will be really hot by the time HP even gets a product in the field is another matter.

Maybe Nokia needs to team up with HP.

Rebellion or Revolution?

We’re continuing to see parallels between the world overall and the world of technology; between global economic issues and tech issues.  It’s so logical (the parts conform, after all, to the Model of the Whole) that you have to wonder if it’s an accident!

Egypt is proving that online social network services can build a rebellion, but not necessarily create an alternative to what’s being rebelled against.  Governments, and even more so societies, are complex systems that arise either through the clever planning of a small group of very knowledgeable people or through a protracted period of trial and error that can generate disastrous missteps.

Telecommunications policy, and broadband policy in particular, are impacted by the same dichotomy.  We have successfully torn down the “old” model of public networking but we’ve not yet created something that can provably replace it.  The challenges of today are rooted back as far as the Modified Final Judgment in the early ‘80s that launched global privatization of telecom.  From that moment to this, we’ve taken each step largely based on public outcry over the effects of the last rather than studied assessment of the likely consequences.

The FCC now says that Universal Service is Universal Broadband, for example.  If broadband is shifting its application to delivery of online video, isn’t that the same as saying that everybody should get free cable or satellite, or have their services subsidized?  The FCC says that the Internet is an open conduit for information, where everyone should have an equal chance to deliver their products/services to consumers.  Is it then something like spectrum, whose use we regulate in the public good?  You get the picture here.  Taken in isolation, these decisions or steps are logical, but we’re creating new definitions by default, by rejecting old ones without replacing them.  What entitles a “service” to be judged “universal”?  What is a “neutral” or “open” Internet?

Congress is likely to get a shot at privacy with legislation due to be introduced that would set standards for tracking.  Congress already has a bill that says that under no conditions can content providers be asked to pay for handling of traffic.  Maybe Billy Joel had the right idea:

They will tell you, you can’t sleep alone in a strange place

Then they’ll tell you, you can’t sleep with somebody else

Ah, but sooner or later you sleep in your own space

Either way it’s okay to wake up with yourself.

We’re closing off economic doors everywhere, and yet economics are the foundation of all markets.  Everybody in a commercial framework has to make money, and so some set of people have to pay it.  Otherwise, the market wakes up eventually as an empty definition; a bazaar with neither sellers nor buyers because it has no currency of exchange.

The success of the iPhone, of Android, and the growing success of tablets is an indicator of revolution that’s as clear and as convulsive as could be represented by demonstrators in an Egyptian square.  But it’s also a revolution, a rebellion, and not a replacement.  Creating a new way to consume information doesn’t create a new information market, only new demand.  There has to be a New Supply too.  The question in telecom, as in Egypt, is whether the forces of change act faster than the forces of reconstruction.  Anarchy is the default form of government, and also the default state of a market.  It’s not typically the desired state for either one.

Are we seeing the failure of the “social” or “crowdsource” model here on a geopolitical and market scale?  I wonder.  Ask a million people a question and you’ll likely get a consensus, but not necessarily the right answer.  Is a true popular democracy, or a true consumeristic market, doomed to fail because it is incapable of creating a functional system for its own operation?  I wonder that too.

Alcatel-Lucent Hits Half a Home Run

Cost matters, and nowhere is that more true than in telecom, and in mobile broadband in particular.  Operators are trying to manage what’s clearly a decisive shift of their own revenue/profit potential from wireline to mobile, and to manage the cost of creating and sustaining customers and ARPU.  One of the key elements in this shift is the feedback loop created by ubiquitous mobile broadband, a rich inventory of new appliances like smartphones and tablets, and human behavior.  With different tools, we do things differently, and planners are discovering that in mobile broadband one difference is the way cell planning has to take place.  Alcatel-Lucent announced a revolution in cell technology with lightRadio, a completely new way of looking at mobile radio networks that’s tuned to the real-world changes in broadband consumption that tablets now drive.

The basic notion of lightRadio is to make cellular antennas more “populist”; something you can stick on a wall or a light post or a traffic signal or even a billboard.  The ability to deploy the antennas to ad hoc sites is created in no small part by their superior economics, but also by their significantly smaller size.  The combination means that it’s possible to stick a dozen cells in a small downtown area where it might have been difficult to get five in the past.  That means more than double the potential RAN bandwidth available to customers, and at significantly less than double the cost.

The question in my mind now is how much further Alcatel-Lucent might take their mobile revolution theme.  Managing the RAN cost-effectiveness is critical for the mobile broadband space, but all cost management strategies eventually fail and all vendors who rely on them become commodities, or worse.  For Alcatel-Lucent the question is whether they can link the disparate elements of their Application Enablement story to the lightRadio picture, and thus capture the mobility/behavior symbiosis for their customers.  If they’re going to do that, they’ll need to move quickly; monetization strategies at the service layer will be reaching a critical point of transition from planning to execute in the second half of this year, and there’s little time to wire the RFIs and RFPs in your favor.

Paths to a New Content Paradigm?

There are some new indications that the momentum of the web is shifting more decisively toward content, but not in the simplistic “content is king” sense.  What’s happening is a combination of fairly complicated and interrelated shifts, and these are gradually changing the way the online business model works.  How that will impact the online market players is yet to be seen.

One obvious shift is the increased interest of portal players in having their own content, something that we can fairly say is extended into the TV space by the recently approved Comcast/NBCU deal.  Ads have to live in something that consumers want in order to be pulled into view, and so all ad sponsorship (and pretty much all of the online world) has to have that magnetic content.  It used to be that you could act as a portal by simply aggregating everyone else’s material, a move that played to early desire by practically every business and content producer to get a web presence.  AOL’s decision to buy the Huffington Post (a growing liberal media site) reflects the reality that most of the content sites are now looking at monetization on their own.  That means that portal/aggregator sites have less to work with—unless they start becoming producers.

What’s interesting about both the Comcast and AOL decision is that the choice is one of buying professional content and not going with the “crowdsource” trend that’s obviously cheaper.  Google’s challenge in monetizing YouTube is likely the reason, and the fact that crowdsourced portals would start to look a lot like social networks.  Ben there, done that.

Yahoo is the poster child for the other shift—we’re seeing the “semantic web” not as an Internet trend but as an aggregator trend.  Think “semantic portal”.  The notion is to combine search and context with portals and targeting to produce relevant content for consumers.  The relevance factor makes the portal more attractive, and presumably would therefore help Yahoo monetize its higher overall scores at serving content to consumers (they beat Google slightly in unique visitors, for example, in comScore results).  That might let Yahoo pay more for content and dodge the pay-wall trend.

What all this means, of course, is that the bloom is off the rose.  We’re past the growing-up phase of the online world and into the hard business middle-age.  I’ve noted the issues of maturity as they apply to the ISPs in the last couple of posts, and the new trends show that maturity is upon even the OTT players.  The question is how much of the online revolution is a fad.  Here in the US, where alternative channels of information dissemination are the richest in the world, we have the lowest online penetration and the least interest in getting online among those not there already.  Does that mean that we’re already seeing an opt-out effect?  It doesn’t seem so, but it does appear that we’re seeing the lack of universal opting in.  That could be a result of a lack of “fad sensitivity” among a segment of the population.  If so, the effect could spread as having your own personal website or being on Facebook or Twitter, or even playing with a smartphone at a party, ceases to be cool.  Not only do we have to worry about re-inventing the Internet as a network, we have to re-invent the coolness model every year or so, because the requirements to achieve the cool state shift rapidly.  Good thing I gave up years ago!

The Field of Dreams Becomes a City of Patio Gardens

One of the issues that now face the networking market is the fate of Nokia, the once-giant smartphone and networking company that has seemed to stumble in every market race for the last couple of years.  There have been all manner of analyses of why this has happened, but they’ve all (in my opinion at least) missed the most critical point because they’ve focused on symptoms of the decline and not causes.  The cause of Nokia’s problem is its culture.

Tech companies in general, and companies that tend to sell to large conservative buyers in particular, become accustomed to serving a market that’s supply-driven.  The buyer sets the goals based on formal (and protracted) planning processes and the seller fills orders.  There’s a nice horizon out there, clearly visible, and everyone can see the path to it.  The Bell System rules; build it and they will come.

Not any more.  What the Internet did in networking was to produce universal data connectivity; IP dialtone.  That opened the way for people to work to deliver stuff without the protracted planning and capitalization issues that would face somebody who had to create the connectivity in the first place.  Forget fields of dreams, plant a garden.  It made data networking consumeristic, and you can see that today in every aspect of networking from appliances to the deep core—or at least the smart players can see it.  Nokia, and again IMHO, other Euro-equipment giants, had the most invested culturally in the supply-side mindset.  Thus, they’re the least adaptable to the new demand-side world.  Nokia may be among the most challenged, but they’re far from the only ones in that mode.  With the exception of Cisco, every single network equipment vendor on the planet is stuck in supply-side quicksand.

Cisco’s not the darling of many financial analysts these days, so it may seem odd to hold them up as a model of facing the future.  But often facing the future means accepting short-term lumps to achieve longer-term rewards.  Cisco is trying to be the networking company of the Age of Network Consumerism.  They’re not always doing it right, of course, but they’re picking their way on their own into a new world, and you can never reach the destination without braving the journey.

In the next two years, every player in the market will be forced to make that same journey.  Some, like Nokia, are clearly falling short in their early efforts and creating challenges for themselves that it’s increasingly unlikely they’ll overcome.  The longer you delay the first step, the further the canoe has slipped from the bank and the harder it will be to step off.  Bigger players are also institutionally less able to support change; there are too many layers of high-inertia humans to be driven into new behavioral models.  Other smaller companies will figure out what to do and will command some of the key transitional issues between the supply and demand visions of the network.  These early positions will then lead them to the future.  There are perhaps a half-dozen such positions in all of the networking market, and right now virtually all of them are unoccupied.  What Nokia needs to do is to identify them, occupy them, and rebuild itself.  But that’s also what every other networking player has to do, or the industry five years from now won’t contain many familiar faces.

In 2000 nobody believed me when I said at a conference that the IXCs were doomed, and yet within five years they had been bought by local exchange carriers their management first considered as the weak sisters of the markets.  Names like MCI that had rung through the markets disappeared.  Don’t think it can’t happen in the equipment space.  Those who refuse to read history are doomed to repeat it.

Verizon and Time Warner have both bought assets in the cloud computing space.  Sure, those assets will be used to create cloud services to enterprises and SMBs, and also to host SaaS services to SMBs and consumers.  But from day one, operators told me that they wanted cloud architectures for their service layer to service both customers and their own feature-hosting needs.  PaaS is not only a service to enterprises, it’s the foundation of the intelligent network of the future.  The question is only whose PaaS it will be, and it’s clear from the cloud deals just done and the AT&T Foundry that the operators are ready to go it alone, without standards or equipment partners.  If they do, then a lot of those key transitional issues will be commoditized at the equipment level, and the future will contain more examples of failure in the equipment space than it will of success.

Slices of Online Future

News Corp has finally launched it’s iPad-paper, The Daily, but it’s obviously way too soon to know whether the experiment in a newspaper that’s neither printed nor online, but instead is appliance-targeted, will work.  The price is lower than that of print news to be sure, but at $40 a year it’s still more than the largely free online news.  Our model says that this might work on a small scale for the iPad market where it could offer a novelty value to a population segment that arguably values novelty more than most, but that it’s not going to work as a broader model.

The notion of online-targeted content seems likely to be a hostage to the battle over neutrality and over usage pricing of bandwidth.  Verizon indicated this week that it would start constraining the usage of the top 5% of its mobile customers to insure that customers overall were serviced adequately, and this comes on the heels of Canadian changes to usage caps and a PR campaign by some EU telcos on making OTT video providers pay.  How this will all end is hard to say, largely because the topic gets no truly valid coverage.  Everything written seems to be a polished advocacy of someone’s commercial perspective, or just a diatribe against paying anything for anything.

Carriers are interested in profits from network-related but not transport/connection-related applications and services, and NSN recently published a commissioned study showing that operators would be natural partners in security and privacy services.  That’s true; in fact, operators are natural partners in most applications of technology and facility management and marketing.  The challenge for operators is less whether there are markets to be had than whether those markets can be addressed profitably.  For decades, perhaps a century or more, they’ve focused on how to create symbiotic infrastructures from diverse equipment types to preserve capital equipment and so to reduce costs and improve profits.  Those techniques have not spread to the IT equipment that’s increasingly the key element in new services, and so they’ve been looking for the IT equivalent of the old “Advanced Intelligent Network” architecture of the PSTN.  Most now believe that cloud technology, virtualization, and SOA are all integral to that NGN architecture for IT but most also believe that vendors either aren’t presenting a cohesive strategy or aren’t presenting a complete one.  For three years, that’s been their complaint, and it’s now possible that they’ll take on the problem themselves by looking at cloud services and extrapolating their own feature infrastructure based on how cloud computing in general and platform-as-a-service in particular solve IT problems for enterprises.

We had our official end of IPv4 this week as well as an IPv6-promoting event, but neither of these facts really changes much.  The exhaustion of IPv4 space is hardly a surprise, and the real problem in coping with it has been known for ages—the consumer.  There are literally hundreds of millions of devices out there that won’t work with IPv6 addresses, won’t assign them, or both.  As long as that base exists, the best you can hope for is dual-stack IPv6, and if you can’t eliminate the use of IPv4 addresses anywhere then you aren’t coping with exhaustion by adding IPv6 to the mix, not to be euphonic.  What should have been done is that all wireless hubs and routers and STBs and everything else that either performed NAT or DHCP should have been mandated to support dual-stack long ago.  Websites and users could then have gradually migrated from dual-stack to IPv6.  Now we have a consumer support issue to deal with at every level.

The telcos have an opportunity here, if you believe in the support-as-a-service concept I just noted.  There’s nobody as able to address the migration, there’s no time better than now to take the lead in supporting it.  Step up, guys, and you might make a name for yourself, not to mention a profit.

Google, Ads, and Kill Switches

There’s a mixed bag of news for Google to confront their new CEO, and it’s mixed in multiple dimensions.  Android and the basic business of search are showing a combination of positive and negative signs, and confusion is never a good thing.

On the Android side, there’s excitement over the new Honeycomb version for tablets, and also an indication that Android is gaining at least numerical shipment ascendency.  It’s passed Symbian as the most popular phone OS, and there are projections that Android tablets will pass iPads soon too.  So it seems all good for Android, except that Google hasn’t been able to monetize Android like Apple has monetized its smartphone and tablet platform iOS.  A big part of that is the ruthless discipline Apple has enforced on apps.  Apple kicked some Sony apps off because they let you buy ebooks around iTunes, and that suggests that Amazon and Barnes & Noble may also be in for problems.  Android has a more fragmented store framework to begin with, and Google has less control and gets less direct money.  Thus, success in a market sense doesn’t necessarily translate to something Google can bank.

In the search area, the problem is the competition from Facebook and Twitter.  Advertisers have run the numbers a bunch of ways, and what they’re finding is a mixed bag.  On the one hand, it’s clear that search ads get more conversions, meaning that people click on them and act on the results more often.  That’s likely because people search for products they want to buy, creating a direct link.  But social-network ads get more “impressions” meaning that they’re presented to a lot more people.  That means that even with very low conversion rates, they might still outperform search.  At the very minimum, this kind of mixed news could mean that some ad dollars will flee search for social networking, and if the return is indeed better then it might never come back.

The tide of operators looking at monetizing Internet traffic is a more unambiguous negative for Google.  All week, EU operators have been saying that it’s not tolerable for them to invest in additional capacity to support the business goals of OTT players when they don’t get any of the money.  In Europe, the focus seems to be on creating an OTT-pays-for-peering model that would provide the access ISPs some revenue.  Here in the US, that option seems foreclosed by the FCC’s neutrality order, but just in case there’s proposed legislation that would absolutely close that choice of payment off.  If that happens here, it’s likely we’d see what’s already happening in Canada, which is a sharp reduction in the per-month bandwidth allotment and a corresponding increase in what at least some users would then pay for Internet access.

For years, I’ve pointed out that the Internet usage model and business model had a fatal parasitic flaw.  OTT giants could develop because they exploited bandwidth that was incrementally free, and thus present the market with a kind of no-cost (or lower-cost) business model while network operators faced a no-revenue model.  If that sort of thing is carried far enough, it’s a fatal disease.  I think Google under Schmidt realized that they needed a constructive accommodation with the access ISPs, and that’s what prompted the Verizon/Google discussions on “neutrality”.  Whether Page sees the same need isn’t known.

The situation in Egypt is another policy thorn.  Can the government cut off Internet service?  In the US, as a practical matter, the answer is that it could providing that the big access ISPs honored a government request.  There’d be no legal compulsion at the moment for them to do that, but I think that if a good case was made they’d likely comply.  But the Administration is looking for enhanced cybersecurity, and some of the measures that could be taken might codify an obligation to shut down the Internet or a part of it on request.  The Internet community, of course, is inalterably opposed to this sort of thing, but I suspect that at least a slight majority of the population would accept or even welcome the idea.  Where we’ll strike the balance here remains to be seen.