Content squared off against carriers at Monday's Mobile Entertainment Live!
event as Walt Disney Internet Group executive vice president of development and
operations Larry Shapiro debated Virgin Mobile USA general counsel and founder
Peter Lurie on the present state of the mobile content industry. According to
data supplied by Nielsen Mobile and cited by moderator Tom Wheeler, managing
director of Core Capital Partners, about 90 percent of wireless subscribers now
have devices capable of doing more than making phone calls, but only 33 percent
of subscribers pay for data plans and only 13 percent use them regularly. Per
Lurie, the problem is that mobile content is now between eras, with the first
generation of services like ringtones hitting a plateau while the next
evolution, like mobile video and over-the-air downloads, is still not ripe for
mass-market adoption. "The problem is that products are designed from the
content owner's perspective, and not with consumers in mind," Lurie said.
But Shapiro contended the problem lies in content access and pricing. "It's
still difficult to buy a ringtone because of the bizarre and complicated pricing
structure," he said, arguing unlimited data plans and other more creative
approaches to billing can remove consumer resistance to purchasing mobile
content. "Carriers have a significant role to play in billing solutions--there's
a huge value-add they can provide in that environment, but instead they spend
their time picking out home-run content." Lurie's reponse: "I haven't seen any
content owner willing to take a share of an unlimited data plan. There are too
many hands grasping at revenue." Shapiro nevertheless called for a greater
measure of pricing flexibility: "We're forced into a paradigm where games are
$6.99 or $7.99--instead, let's value-price it, bundle it, or do subscriptions,"
he said. "There's not much flexibility allowed at any carrier to play with
business models and consumer propositions."
Lurie said that many mobile content offerings fail to maximize the
possibilities of the wireless platform: "I find that content is delivered in the
way the content owner wants it delivered," he said. "The promise of mobile is
instant gratification, on-demand delivery and personalization. That's where we
can distinguish our content offerings. Customer experiences need to be
functional and value-oriented." But Shapiro argued some carriers don't even
fully comprehend the behaviors and tastes of their subscribers, citing the
example of an unnamed operator executive who rejected a suite of mobile content
offerings based on the hit ABC drama Lost because the exec did not watch
the series and therefore deemed it "not right" for customers.
Asked by Wheeler his opinion of open access efforts, Lurie replied that for a
pay-as-you-go carrier like Virgin Mobile USA, secure handsets are absolutely
imperative. "We don't require contracts, so if our handsets aren't secure, we
can't subsidize them," he said. "Prices would quadruple." Shapiro said he could
not fault Lurie's argument: "Subsidies are a uniquely American phenomenon, and
unless there's a radical shift in the business, it's going to stay that
way."
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