09/09/2010

Vodafone plans the Ueber-App-Store

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Today Vodafone announced plans to “Redefine the Mobile Internet Experience”. The essence of the announcement is in the first three paragraphs:

Vodafone is to stimulate a new generation of mobile internet applications by providing internet service developers with a single point of access to Vodafone’s global customer base.

Developers will only need to create internet applications once in order to reach millions of Vodafone customers on any device and will be able to charge for it directly through Vodafone’s billing system. This will provide internet content partners, such as the media or game developers, with a cost-efficient and effective micro-payments system to reach all customers on mobile devices.

Vodafone will also provide partners and developers with customer controlled access to other network capabilities, such as location awareness, enabling them to create even more innovative mobile internet services and applications.

Wow, these are potentially big news for all developers of mobile services and applications.

Since Apple’s App Store has absorbed almost 100% of the press’ attention for mobile distribution platforms, it has clearly only been a question of time until others would follow. It’s only a few days to the Grand Opening of Nokia’s Ovi Store, RIM started the BlackBerry App World and Android folks got their Android Market.

None of these device vendor driven initiatives have yet established the global reach and seamlessness that Apple is so well known for, but that’s also only a matter of time, too.

The Vodafone announcement is remarkably different because for the first time a carrier announces to open up its holy grail to – literally – everyone: The Billing Engine.

betavine, Vodafone’s “open community for mobile application developers” has been around for quite a while but did not receive too much attention from either devs nor the press. And the fact that nobody has responded to a betavine team member’s post regarding today’s announcement as of this writing, might be an indicator for a not-so-hot community. In comparison, Apple’s App Store birth announcement yielded thousands of comments just seconds after its publication.

Given the potential disruptive nature of Vodafone’s initiative, lets briefly look into some key aspects of mobile service delivery and specifically what the announcement states with respect to each:

The Client Platform

Application developers are controversially discussing whether native applications (read “SDK”) or leveraging web technologies (read “HTML 5″, hopefully) or hybrids are the best way to build for mobiles. As of today there seems to be no clear answer and we might have to wait until HTML 5 transitions into a real standard and becomes widely supported across devices.

The announcement says: 

Vodafone is to stimulate a new generation of mobile internet applications by providing internet service developers with a single point of access to Vodafone’s global customer base. [emphases added]

So the platform targets internet service developers. A Google search on this term returns the Vodafone announcement so we might be fair to assume that “internet service developers” is either meant literally or deliberately non-specific. I assume the latter. It is pretty obvious that Vodafone is not going down the route to build a multi-devices SDK or anything else which would require strong device vendor co-operation.

Presumably services running on Vodafone’s “redefined mobile internet experience platform” will leverage standard web technologies. This is currently very likely the only path to go if supporting hundreds of different devices, including ones that you don’t even control, is part of your strategy.

It does, however, not solve the problem of device diversification entirely. One of the key drivers for Apple’s mass market success with respect to delivering mobile applications is the optimized, enhanced and device specific user experience iPhone applications deliver.

One of the paragraphs to the end

Vodafone is also exploring a range of other ways to expose its network enablers to the broadest possible audience.

is again deliberately unspecific which might mean, that they have not yet decided on a strategy for this (key) area.

If Vodafone’s new platform is going to promote a one-size-fits-all approach, I doubt whether it’ll break out of a geeky user base.

Discoverability

As with the Web 1.0 the ability for an application to be found by customers and users is a key aspect for service providers. In the mobile space discoverability is required on two ends: First, users need to find a service and be able to “get it onto their phones”. Second, once they’ve successfully downloaded or bookmarked a service, they need to be able to quickly access it. (I remember some older Nokia smart phones where I had to traverse down six levels of folders until I could start a downloaded JAVA app.)

Vodafone’s announcement does not state anything related to the problem of discoverability.

Developers will only need to create internet applications once in order to reach millions of Vodafone customers on any device [...]

“Only creating internet applications in order to reach millions of customers” sounds pretty euphemistic to me. The difficulty of application marketing is already the number one issue on the App Store and I seriously wonder how Vodafone is planning to support a developer ecosystem to reach their target audience.

Micropayment

For years making money with mobile applications has been a tough business. The absence of a seamless cross-device, cross-carrier, cross-country micro-transaction payment has limited the options for developers to charge their customers significantly.

Apple’s announcement of supporting in-application-purchases with the upcoming new iPhone operating system is a game changer – for developers targeting the iPhone platform. And it’s a quite natural move for Apple to open up the iTunes billing engine with roughly 50 million chargeable credit cards on stock.

As ultimately making money is the driver for mobile businesses, this aspect of the Vodafone statement is extremely important:

Vodafone will enable developers to use its direct billing capabilities to permit customers to pay for services wirelessly through their existing Vodafone pre- and post-paid accounts rather than having to input sensitive credit card data into multiple application stores.

This will make Vodafone to directly compete against PayPal and all the other start-ups that are currently incorporated on an almost daily basis and try to address mobile micropayment.

It’s also worth to mention that this is the first time a carrier announces to open its direct billing capabilities to the wild. Previously subsequently charging customers was tied to let them call premium rate numbers or send premium short messages (a business with a 90% profit margin).

Letting developers tie into Vodafone’s billing engines is huge and highest priority to investigate further on my watch list.

This will provide internet content partners, such as the media or game developers, with a cost-efficient and effective micro-payments system to reach all customers on mobile devices.

Well, at least all Vodafone customers on mobile devices that will support these new type of applications.

The real news is about “Building a Relationship”

As so often with press announcements, most of the details remain foggy.

I guess that the smart folks at Vodafone have primarily decided on the overall strategy and are now facing the difficult phase of executing it correctly. (One of the unique aspects of Apple’s success it to constantly define the right strategy AND master its execution.)

The biggest news for me is that one of the problems in dealing with carriers before was building a relationship. This has been extremely difficult and was not possible for many.

Hopefully this might have changed and we will see other carriers follow.

Ultimately: Who is going to work on a cross-carrier, cross-device, cross-user-identity, cross-platform solution?


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About Ralf
Ralf Rottmann is a serial entrepreneur from Germany, CTO at GrandCentrix and Editor for The Next Web. He successfully sold his last business to Alcatel-Lucent. Find him on Twitter @24z and Facebook.

Comments

  1. This is pretty big news. It has been brewing for a while and we had been given a heads up by our counterparts at Voda. Now we just want to see what the payouts are and how it will work in practice. Needless to say this is the way forward for the operators. Kudos for Voda for giving it a fair shot. Let’s hope execution will go right as well.

  2. froogloid says:

    Great article! Thanks for sharing! I may just have to blog about this as well….hmmmm

  3. Bryan Rieger says:

    As you mentioned, in the past building a commercial relationship with a carrier in multiple regions was really only something very few companies were capable of accomplishing. With this announcement we’re (hopefully) going to see things get much, much easier for smaller, independent developers (and agencies, media companies, etc) to create content and experiences on-top of Vodafone’s ‘platform’ (network, payment APIs, etc).

    From a micropayment POV, Vodafone (like most carriers) has a huge advantage over PayPal (and similar services) on mobile devices as they can direct-bill (very easy experience for user) without the user having to enter credit card details, etc (not pleasant for user) on a mobile device.

    Having a payment mechanism built-into the (mobile) web could seriously change the dynamic of the Internet, allowing for revenue sources other than advertising. This could prompt a shift of focus for many existing ‘big web’ companies from delivering primarily via desktop to mobile devices.

    If this works (execution is everything), then I suspect the ‘next-big-thing’ (3-5 years) will be to enable seamless interoperability between carriers, devices and platforms.

  4. Zelion says:

    Will Artilium deliver the software ?

    • Maybe, maybe not. Vodafone is not on their official reference list. And: The company exists since 1995. To me it looks at least a bit like a classical “opportunisticly productizing Professional Services engagements” strategy, which in my opinion never leads to a real capable platform.

      Anyway, thanks for the pointer!

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