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Analyst Angle (CTIA 2012 Special Edition): Operators look to respond to challenging market dynamics with new sources of differentiation and aggressive posturing

Editor’s Note: Welcome to our weekly feature, Analyst Angle. We’ve collected a group of the industry’s leading analysts to give their outlook on the hot topics in the wireless industry.

Last week carriers, original equipment manufacturers and wireless ecosystem participants of all shapes and sizes descended on New Orleans for the annual CTIA show. And in a nice quirk of timing – aided by the show’s smart decision to move the show dates back a month and a half – CTIA coincided with the last of the big four carriers reporting first quarter earnings. After looking at both these earnings releases and Compete’s own metrics measuring online prospect volume (a measure of consumer shopping activity) and online postpaid gross adds and customer upgrades (measures of operator sales activity), one thing comes through: the wireless industry – which according to CTIA saw revenues triple between 2000 and 2010 – has hit a rough patch. Consider, compared to Q4 2011:

–Q1 2012 big four prospect traffic has declined 21%;
–Q1 2012 big four postpaid gross adds have declined 38%;
–Q1 2012 big four customer upgrades have declined 55%.

And that’s just the story in Q1. If we take a step back, the industry has been slowly declining (as measured by aggregate prospect traffic) since Thanksgiving 2010. If not for one, but two, significant iPhone launches in 2011 – the February iPhone 4 launch at Verizon Wireless (which predictably drove significant online and offline sales for Verizon Wireless, and less predictably also drove a surge of AT&T Mobility sales, by spurring aggressive counter-marketing tactics), and the October multi-carrier iPhone 4S launch – the industry’s slow decline since Q4 2010 would have been more dramatic, and its effects felt much earlier.

So how are operators responding? Last week a couple themes emerged. In the coming weeks and months Compete will be exploring in more detail:

A quest for differentiation: With every smartphone but the iPhone morphing into seemingly identical 4 inch panes of glass, it is clear that operators are looking for sources of non-device differentiation. Two of the bigger announcements this week (which is faint praise, as the show was noticeably short on big announcements) reflect this trend. Sprint Nextel made a big deal about its Guardian Service, which is designed to increase consumer trust, drive sales of family locator services and give the company something to talk about beyond network speed and price. Similarly, AT&T Mobility made a big deal about its Digital Home initiative, which will put AT&T Mobility at the center of a whole range of home management and security solutions. From a pure customer acquisition perspective, it’s doubtful that either of these will amount to much. But they are easier to implement than …

Improving carrier economics: Even as consumers migrate en mass from feature phones to smartphones and adopt secondary devices like tablets and e-readers, operators are feeling the heat from investors for deteriorating margins. High device subsidies (especially with the iPhone) are killing carrier economics, and for the first time carriers have begun speaking about this. Privately AT&T Mobility, Sprint Nextel and Verizon Wireless have talked about portfolio “imbalance;” publically T-Mobile USA is highlighting its lower per-phone subsidy levels and the huge opportunity for SIM-only subscriptions. The iPhone remains the most powerful customer acquisition tool in the industry – nearly two years after its launch the iPhone 4 remains one of the top phones added to online customer shopping carts – but the industry’s dependence on Apple is a dangerous trend and is leading to carriers …

Taking the gloves off: Sprint Nextel (with “Don’t Accept Their Limits”) and Nokia (with “Smartphone Beta Test”) have both recently made not-so-veiled jabs at AT&T Mobility and the iPhone, but the challenges highlighted above suggest that we can expect even more aggressive competitive tactics. T-Mobile USA has just made the most aggressive move yet, re-invigorated by its commitment as a challenger brand. While sharing the stage with AT&T’s Ralph de la Vega, T-Mobile USA CEO Phillip Humm unveiled the latest “No More Nice Girl” commercial, which compares the iPhone experience on AT&T Mobility to a sputtering and wheezing motorbike. De la Vega wasn’t pleased. The crowd loved it.

It’s fitting that an industry looking to regain its mojo after some setbacks chose New Orleans for its annual convention. After suffering through successive waves of human and natural disasters for much of the past decade, the New Orleans I saw this week was as vibrant and thriving as ever. For both wireless and the city, laissez les bon temps rouler.

Christopher Collins is a Director in Compete’s Technology and Entertainment Practice. Collins oversees the delivery of all of Compete’s custom and syndicated research in the wireless device and consumer electronics space. Prior to Compete, Collins was a senior member of the Consumer Wireless team at Yankee Group Research and a management consultant at Monitor Group and IBM Business Services. Through his research and consulting work with top telecommunications and technology clients, he has spent the past decade understanding how consumers buy and use connected devices to thrive in an increasingly digital world. He is a frequent speaker at industry events and has been widely quoted in national media outlets such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, CNET and National Public Radio’s Marketplace. Collins holds a B.A. degree in philosophy from Boston College and M.B.A. and M.S.I.S. degrees from Boston University.

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