For years Wi-Fi was looked upon
as the off-load network. MNOs were glad to off load massive amounts of data
traffic onto these low-end, best effort, “free” networks, providing, of course,
that their LTE networks were at or near capacity. Priority one, keep the
billing meter running and only off load once the meter is maxed out. How could
these $100 access points running off consumer-grade best-effort broadband
become a threat? After all, MNOs have spent 10s of billions on a carrier-class
LTE infrastructure.
The cable operators realized that
they have a near ubiquitous high-capacity network and adding Wi-Fi access
points was an opportunity. As we have seen numerous times in the past, when cable
companies see they have an opportunity they quickly take advantage of it. Today,
Comcast claims to have more than four million access points, which will grow to
eight million by the end of the year. Yes, about half of these are in
subscribers’ homes where (unbeknownst to them) they are a public access point
for their neighbors.
Now, along comes voice over Wi-Fi
(VoWi-Fi). This solves one of the age-old industry dilemmas: Great mobile voice
outside OR great mobile data inside. Small cells and DAS are solving the indoor
voice problem today; however, they are starting from an installed base near
zero, and deployments are nontrivial and customized per venue. Outdoor small
cells also face the added challenges of power and backhaul.
Wi-Fi is as close to a ubiquitous
technology you will find. Enterprises, small business and residential consumers
all have become accustomed to having access to Wi-Fi everywhere. There are
clearly technical challenges to deploying quality carrier-class VoWi-Fi, but
these are all solvable. After all they have been solved in the LTE market. Examples
include MIMO antennas, seamless roaming and improved Doppler tolerances.
Thus, one can assume that VoWi-Fi
will work and will “off-load” a significant percentage of indoor voice calls
from the LTE network. Should MNOs be concerned? Let’s do some simple math to
try to answer this question. It’s widely reported that approximately 80% of
mobile traffic originates indoors. In five years what percentage of indoor
voice traffic will be on the Vo-Wi-Fi network and not on the LTE network? Let’s
assume 50%. This is reasonable because iPhone and Samsung smart phones support
VoWi-Fi calling, and mobile subscribers are very aware of the cost of exceeding
their mobile data caps. Therefore, the MNO will see a 40% reduction in voice
traffic over the RAN and EPC. The BIG question is what the impact on revenue
will be. If we assume that the revenue impact is only 5%, a $20 billion/year MNO
would see a $1 billion reduction in cash flow. If the cable companies only see
25% of that amount, that’s $250 million in cash to them. The difference is
assumed to be lost to price reductions.
MNOs, MSOs and service providers looking at offering VoWi-Fi services will need help to address this threat and opportunity and develop winning deployment and go-to-market strategies. Likewise, vendors in this ecosystem need to be cognizant of the multidimensional dynamics of the VoWi-Fi opportunity. ACG Research can help develop your business and marketing strategies. We can provide a range of services from complete strategy development to creating high-impact differentiated messaging to product launch support.
How big a threat is VoWi-Fi to the LTE operator? Today, the answer is not much. Tomorrow, the answer is simply when is tomorrow.
Contact ACG for more information as to what we can do to help you at successfully offering VoWi-Fi services.
Greg Whelan
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