Jumpstarting the Mobile Internet
Is social networking the key?
Mobile social networking stands a good chance of jumpstarting mobile Internet
adoption because mobile social networking is based more on communication than
content. Time and again, communication services have led the way for content and
advertising to follow. In the case of the Internet, it was e-mail and discussion
boards—not Web pages—that triggered the explosion from early adoption to
mainstream consumer use. SMS services drove mobile data use and they still
account for the majority of mobile data revenues by carriers.
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It is not surprising, therefore, that mobile carriers and mobile content providers have warmed to mobile social networking as a new opportunity to ramp mobile Internet use. In truth, they have little choice. Their attempts to convince the mass market to sign up for mobile Internet have proved moderately successful, at best.
According to February 2008 research by Informa, the global market for all current forms of paid mobile entertainment should reach $31.7 billion by 2012. Back in 2006, the same forecast optimistically predicted $42 billion by 2011.
Juniper Research published a far more bullish outlook for mobile entertainment in January 2008, projecting $64.8 billion worldwide by 2012. Earlier research by Juniper also tried to quantify the revenues associated with mobile user-generated content such as chat room services or mobile dating, predicting $5.7 billion for 2012.
Even with the most upbeat projections, paid mobile content is a tiny market in comparison to revenues from communication-based mobile services. In the US alone, mobile data service revenues (predominantly message-based) reached $23 billion in 2007, according to industry trade group CTIA—The Wireless Association. Mobile messaging for SMS/MMS/IM/e-mail worldwide is expected to be between $100 billion and $200 billion by 2011. When voice traffic is included, the global mobile industry is on track for almost $1 trillion in total revenues by 2012.

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