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Report: 43% of consumers will buy a smartphone next
CHICAGO--During the opening session at 4G World, an event sponsored by Yankee Group/Trendsmedia, Yankee Group senior research fellow Phil Marshall implored the industry to not underestimate the power of the mobile Internet and not to assume that the same business models and distribution channels that have worked in the past will continue to be profitable.
Specifically, Marshall said that operators will probably not have the same control over the distribution of smartphones that they have had with feature phones. And smartphones are growing in popularity--a trend made clear by Yankee Group survey results that found 43 percent of respondents said they were likely or very likely to purchase a smartphone as their next device.
In fact, Marshall advised operators to invest in the network edge by providing more intelligence in the delivery of services and applications, because that is where they likely will be able to differentiate their services from the competition. To back up his statement, Marshall pointed to a Yankee Group study that found 50 percent of consumers said they would pay for SMS and text applications, while 34 percent said they would pay for mobile Internet access and 31 percent said they would pay for email access. Marshall said these statistics show a shift among consumers toward embracing the mobile Internet.
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Comments
Surprise! Surprise!
Voice telephony (wireless and wired) is no longer the only real-time contact game in town, and for information access, it's always been awkward and limited. Mobile UC or what I like to also describe as "contextual communications," coupled with "smart-phones" are what users/subscribers really want, so just don't get in the way of progress!
The last time I asked my teenage daughter how she likes "contextual communications," she gave me a blank stare. She did tell me, she sends over 200 text messages a day, ocasionally monitors Facebook social networking site via her smartphone while at school (because the school's Internet access blocks social networking sites).
But her rich social media communications and universal search and download activity happen on her computer (6 hours a day or more). She likes the bigger screen and, faster Internet access of her laptop. What would you call that behavior? Socializing with friends?



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