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Cloud Confusion on The Motley Fool

Cloud Confusion on The Motley Fool

As I've written in the past, financial analysts may provide good advice for investors in the tech sector. But their analysis is not very useful to buyers of technology products and services. It's not that they don't have insights, but they are writing for a different audience: investors, not customers and prospects.

Some parts of the financial press are another story. Some financial media reporters so poorly understand the tech industry that neither investors nor prospective buyers should listen to them.  

I saw an example of this today on The Motley Fool, in a story entitled, Is Oracle's Cloud Really Fake? In it the contributor, Richard Saintvilus, takes issue with an Infoworld article by David Linthicum that criticizes Oracle's most recent "cloud" announcement as "faux IaaS."

The Motley Fool is a website aimed at the individual small investor. It provides both free content as well as paid subscriber material. It also makes money from advertising. Therefore, generating page views is a key objective, with much of its content generated by freelancers, as appears to be the case here. So, the quality of its content varies.

Apologies to in advance to Saintvilus, who reached out to me on Twitter after I sniped at his story. He asked for specifics, so here you go.

Oracle Late to the Cloud

Staintvilus immediately starts with a misconception, that Oracle was an early proponent of cloud computing. Here is his lead:

Wall Street loves a hot trend and had essentially decided four years ago that the cloud was next. With corporations needing all of the cost savings/productivity benefits the cloud offered, the timing was perfect. Oracle was one of the first blue chip enterprise companies to realize this opportunity. [emphasis here, and throughout, is mine.]

Sorry Richard. Even as late as 2009, Oracle's CEO Larry Ellison famously mocked the term cloud computing, calling it no more than a fashion statement. Furthermore, he not only mocked the term, he mocked the concept. To this day, Ellison criticizes multitenant applications, which are the cornerstone of most large scale SaaS providers. Only recently, as Oracle realized it was losing the war did Oracle embrace cloud computing, albeit with its own twist (either hosted single tenant applications, or multi-tenant applications with single tenant databases.) Industry analysts can argue all day about the relative merits of each approach. But none would claim that Oracle was anywhere to be found at the beginning of the trend to cloud computing.

Oracle Market Share in Cloud Services

He continues with a comment on Oracle's rising revenues:

The company [Oracle] is providing a service, of which there has been very few complaints -- at least not according to the rising revenues, which suggest it's stealing share from rivals such as salesforce.com. And Oracle is not the cheapest on the market, either. So, there's a reason why customers are willing to pay the premium. And it's not because these corporate CIOs are dumb.

Yes, Oracle's revenues are rising. But those of Salesforce.com are rising also, up 37% in 2012. Furthermore, while all of the revenues of SFDC are derived from cloud computing, only a small percentage of Oracle's are. So to impute on the basis of revenues that Oracle is taking market share from Salesforce.com is ludicrous. Certainly, in my own firm's work advising buyers in software selection, I do not see Oracle taking market share from Salesforce.com. In fact, in CRM, I see deals in which buyers want to look at Salesforce but do not even consider Oracle, especially in the midmarket.

As far as software pricing is concerned, neither do I see Oracle as commanding a premium price over Salesforce.com, or over other application vendors for that matter. In fact, Oracle is notorious for competing on price when it really wants a competitive deal, as it knows it can make it up on maintenance revenue in the future.

But the author wouldn't know that, because he does not advise technology buyers, nor is he in a position to see actual deals going down.

Oracle's Engineered Systems Are Not "Cloud"

He then confuses Oracle's new Exa-boxes with cloud services.

However, David Linthicum of InfoWorld thinks [CIOs are] idiots (I'm paraphrasing that a bit), which doesn't make sense. CIOs are spending billions annually with Oracle. But in Linthicum's recent article, he insists they don't know what they're buying: "Oracle is continuing its faux cloud strategy, adding to its private-cloud infrastructure offering the ability to rent for a monthly fee preconfigured application servers to be deployed in customer data centers. The available application servers -- what Oracle calls 'engineered systems'"

The author can be forgiven for this misunderstanding, as Oracle itself confuses this issue, which is the whole point of Linthicum's criticism. The basic point is that cloud computing is a "service," whereas Oracle's computer hardware (whether old school Sun commodity servers, or Oracle's new "engineered systems") is a physical product. Renting Oracle hardware does not magically turn the hardware into a cloud service.

Oracle's Engineered Systems Are an Old Concept

He continues with the impression that Oracle's Exa-boxes are somehow a new concept. 

Linthicum clearly has an ax to grind. While he's going all-out on Oracle's product portfolio, rival companies have been working hard to duplicate Oracle's offerings. For instance, IBM has a rival offering called PureSystems -- launched three years after Oracle's Engineered Systems, or ES. And, after Oracle has already deployed ES to more than 1,000 customers in 43 countries, IBM followed. Big Blue has gained traction, but not to the extent of Oracle. And I doubt that IBM would have followed a model it didn't think had sustaining potential.

The author appears unaware that Oracle is attempting to return to the IBM era of the 1960s. In fact, Larry Ellison has said so himself. The IBM mainframe at the time was a single integrated platform of hardware, operating system, database, and applications engineered from the ground up to work together. IBM's AS/400 series of machines (now called Series i) took this concept even further. What broke up IBM's dominance in the mainframe era was the fact that these boxes were all based on proprietary standards, and eventually low cost commodity hardware (whether IBM personal computers, or later, Unix boxes from providers such as Sun) could do the job much more cost effectively. The downside was that the new approach led to challenges in system integration, in making all the layers of the technology stack work together.

Oracle's strategy with its Exa-boxes is to return to this single technology stack from hardware through applications, engineered from the ground up to work together. Will Oracle be successful? Only time will tell. And, certainly the 1,000 customer number that the author mentions is not yet enough of a measure of success.

Regardless, what does any of this have to do with cloud computing? Absolutely nothing. Oracle is launching a public cloud offering, with its Exa-boxes as part of the infrastructure. Other providers can do the same using commodity hardware, as Google, Amazon, Microsoft and others have already done.

But the Oracle offering that Linthicum is criticizing and that the author is defending is not Oracle's public cloud service. Rather it is an arrangement whereby Oracle customers can, for a monthly fee,  rent preconfigured Oracle application servers and run them in their own data centers. Linthicum is absolutely right: this has nothing to do with cloud computing.

According to the NIST definition of cloud computing, there are five essential characteristics of cloud computing, and Oracle's hardware rental offering does not satisfy four of them. (See the link in this paragraph for a more complete definition.)

  • On-demand self-service. Oracle's rental agreement does not allow the customer to unilaterally provision computing capabilities, such as server time and network storage, as needed automatically without requiring human interaction with each service provider.
  • Resource pooling. Oracle's rental agreement does not pool computing resources for multiple customers in a multi-tenant model, with different physical and virtual resources dynamically assigned and reassigned according to consumer demand.
  • Rapid elasticity. Oracle's offering does not allow computing capabilities to be elastically provisioned and released, in some cases automatically, to scale rapidly outward and inward commensurate with demand. As Linthicum points out, the customer has to pay extra for spikes in demand and there is no provision to ramp down demand, and cost.
  • Measured service. Oracle's offering does not automatically control and optimize resource use by leveraging a metering capability. Customers do not pay as they go.  

Clearly then, Oracle's offering may use the terminology of cloud computing but it does not display the essential characteristics of cloud computing. You can call me a fish, but that doesn't make me one.

The List Goes On

I have neither the time nor the patience to go much further. Let me just list a few (and by no means all) of the remaining errors.

  • "Linthicum is pretending to be an expert on something that is still in its infancy." Cloud computing may not be a full grown adult, but it is certainly not an infant. Providers such as Salesforce.com have been delivering cloud services for well over a decade, ancient history in the technology industry.  
  • "Oracle innovates at the technology layer, thereby giving customers more leverage and independence from consulting fees." What exactly is the "technology layer?" Everything from bare metal hardware to business applications are "technology." Furthermore, talk to Oracle customers: I doubt anyone will tell you they have less need for consultants. 
  • "Had Cisco contracted out its cloud services to Oracle, it could have remained focus on growing its business." The types of cloud services that Cisco offers, such as cloud network management, are not services that Oracle provides. Therefore, it would not be possible for Cisco to contract with Oracle to provide those services on behalf of Cisco. 
  • "Even if Linthicum's pricing claims were correct, then it means Microsoft's Azure, which has a pay-as-you-go model, is also fake. But Microsoft has been reducing its prices because it can't compete." If Microsoft is lowering its Azure pricing, it's not because it can't compete, but because it can deliver cloud services at lower and lower costs over time, as it scales and the costs of technology drop (see "Moore's Law"). Similarly, Amazon lowers its AWS prices multiple times per year and no one in his right mind claims it because Amazon can't compete.

Parts of The Motley Fool article are nearly indecipherable, especially toward the end. But I think this is enough to illustrate: parts of the financial press are poor sources of information on enterprise IT. By that, I do not mean to imply that all financial reporters are suspect. One would not expect to see a story such as this one to appear, say, on the pages of The Wall Street Journal or Financial Times.

Furthermore, none of my criticism should be taken to mean that Oracle is not a good company from either the investor perspective or customer perspective. As the author tweeted me, "Oracle is one of the best tech names on the market and it deserves fairness."

Yes it is, and yes it does. And because of that, it also deserves accurate reporting.  

Related posts

Enterprise IT Buyers: Don’t Listen to Financial Analysts
Oracle's Behavior Undercuts Its Own Cloud Accomplishments
Cutting Through the Fog of Cloud Computing Definitions

Photo Credit: NS Newsflash

Tech Optimization

Scale Your Digital Marketing with Marketing Automation

Scale Your Digital Marketing with Marketing Automation

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In these challenging times, we are all asked to do more with less. For marketers, this means coping with an explosion of channels, transformation in the expectations of our customers and an abundance of data that can, in equal parts,  obscure or facilitate insight.

So where can you turn to scale your marketing efforts?

The first generation of marketing automation software provided a great way to deal with an increasing volume of broadcast style communications. But in this digital – multi-directional world, marketers must be more responsive, engaging and yes, social.

My just released report, Scaling Up with Marketing Automation, provides a birds eye view of the marketing automation landscape, presents the key strengths and features of a range of vendors and examines how these solutions can help marketers do more with less. You can download a snapshot of the report here.

Marketing Transformation Chief Marketing Officer

To Boldly Train and Certify - Announcing Constellation Academy Workshops

To Boldly Train and Certify - Announcing Constellation Academy Workshops

I'm excited to announce the launch of our new Constellation Academy Workshops.

Image:To Boldly Train and Certify - Announcing Constellation Academy Workshops

In these two hour, half-day or full day courses our analysts work with your organization to train and certify your employees on a variety of topics such as:

- Advanced Mobility Management for the Enterprise
- Big Data Analytics
- Building an Effective Customer Engagement Strategy
- Creating A Collaborative Workforce
- Designing A Gamification Strategy For The Enterprise
- Getting Work Done Via Social Task Management
- How To Successfully Use Enterprise Social Networking
- Onboarding Transformed: From HR Event to Business Strategy
- Preventing Social Software Fatigue Via Purposeful Collaboration

and many more.  Read all about Constellation Academy here and contact us with any questions.
 

Data to Decisions Future of Work Marketing Transformation Matrix Commerce New C-Suite Next-Generation Customer Experience Tech Optimization Chief Customer Officer Chief Executive Officer Chief Financial Officer Chief Information Officer Chief Marketing Officer Chief People Officer Chief Procurement Officer Chief Supply Chain Officer

Genesys Acquires Angel to Expand its Voice Portal Presence

Genesys Acquires Angel to Expand its Voice Portal Presence

Genesys, @genesyslab, has announced it is acquiring Angel, @angelcorporate, to improve its ability to deliver voice self-service applications more quickly and cost effectively. Genesys currently offers a market-leading voice platform, GVP, and has a strong presence in the large enterprise market. Angel, a SaaS voice portal provider, has earned a solid reputation in mid-size vertical markets. Angel’s experience in delivering high reliable cloud solutions will support Genesys’ ability to offer rapid deployment speech applications to a broader customer base on its Cloud Connect platform. This acquisition signals the second significant purchase by Genesys in the last month. Genesys also acquired UTOPY-a speech analytic firm- to add to its product portfolio. Both purchases highlight the importance of natural language speech applications, as a key enabler for delivering successful self-service solutions.

Angel’s acquisition will help Genesys increase its flexibility to deploy speech applications to the mid-market segment. Many mid-market companies have delayed upgrading their Interactive Voice Response (IVR) applications from DTMF to voice due to the expense of developing custom speech applications.  Angel has been successful in creating rapid deployment speech applications with its Customer Experience (CX) builder interface. Its CX builder creates applications on reusable components, which reduces development time. This capability should enable Genesys to provide its voice portal customers with lower cost entry for building their speech applications.

Speech applications also play an important role in mobile application development. As more customers use their smartphone applications to contact companies and transact business, firms that deploy mobile apps need to ensure their apps provide easy access for customer support directly from within the mobile app. Based on the rapid growth of smartphones mobile app customer support will grow more quickly than the standard voice portal for customer support operations. This acquisition appears to be a good move for Genesys, as it broadens its reach to a larger customer base and becomes more agile in serving the self-service needs for its customers.

Next-Generation Customer Experience Chief Customer Officer

Tuesday's Tip: Focus On The Business Outcomes, Not Technology With Big Data

Tuesday's Tip: Focus On The Business Outcomes, Not Technology With Big Data

The Why Behind Big Data Starts By Asking What’s The Business Outcome

So organizations have lots of data.  New techniques have emerged to correlate big data.  Enamored by the potential of big data, leaders are now reinvesting in technologies to find hidden nuggets of insights with the business goals of:

  • Mitigating regulatory risks
  • Identifying operational efficiencies
  • Improving revenue growth
  • Creating market differentiation
  • Expanding the brand presence

These big data use cases often follow the business hierarchy of needs, which are based on concepts pioneered by Maslow (see Figure 1).  More importantly, a key question in big data has been to ask the right question.

Figure 1. The Business Hierarchy of Needs Drives Many Big Data Use Cases

An Information Flow Approach Moves The Discussion From Data To Decisions

Unfortunately, the problem is most organizations start by talking about outcomes and then get mired in the technologies to achieve these outcomes.  Big data technologies include advanced business analytics, application of existing technologies such as data warehousing and business intelligence.  In many cases, application of decision automation, semantic technology and collaborative tools are also needed. Yet, from Data to Decisions requires the integration of quite a few disciplines.

Data to decisions is about taking data sources, transforming them into useful information, gathering key insights, and then making the right decisions (see Figure 2).  Data sources, information, and orchestration belong in the realm of IT and hopefully will be delivered via the cloud.  Insight, decisions, and actions are line of business driven areas which deliver the most value add:

  • Data sources. Expect a mix of structured, semi-structured, and lots of unstructured.
  • Information and orchestration. The mix of information types include physical, virtual, machine, and contextual.
  • Insight. Information translated to insight considers performance, deduction, inference, and prediction.
  • Decisions and actions. The outcomes are driven from next best action, prevention, suggestion, and even no action.

Figure 2. The Flow From Data To Decisions

 

 

The Bottom Line: Expect A Focus On Outcomes Not Technology As Big Data Awareness Matures

Early adopters and fast followers will shift quickly to business outcomes focused with their big data projects. Why? Budgets for big data are coming from the business side who expect an outcomes based approach.  Organizations will adopt a use case approach to tackle the big questions and along the way unearth new questions to answer.  Meanwhile, expect the IT side of the big data equation to emerge as a service or platform that makes the technology aspects consumable. Will you and your organization be ready to act on this insight?

Your POV

What business problem will require you to start with Big Data?  What are the key outcomes?  Where do you expect to move the needle?   Add your comments to the blog or send us a comment at R (at) SoftwareInsider (dot) org or R (at) ConstellationRG (dot) com

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Disclosure

Although we work closely with many mega software vendors, we want you to trust us. For the full disclosure policy, stay tuned for the full client list on the Constellation Research website.

* Not responsible for any factual errors or omissions.  However, happy to correct any errors upon email receipt.

Copyright © 2001 -2013 R Wang and Insider Associates, LLC All rights reserved.
Contact the Sales team to purchase this report on a a la carte basis or join the Constellation Customer Experience!

 

Data to Decisions Innovation & Product-led Growth Leadership Chief Customer Officer Chief Executive Officer Chief Information Officer Chief Marketing Officer Chief Procurement Officer Chief Experience Officer

Content Marketing in Australia Needs a Wakeup Call

Content Marketing in Australia Needs a Wakeup Call

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The Content Marketing Institute’s new report on Content Marketing in Australia is timed nicely for the upcoming Content Marketing Conference (4-6 March 2013). The report contrasts the content marketing approaches taken by marketers in Australia vs the USA and reinforces much that we already know:

  • Over 60% of marketers expect to increase or significantly increase their expenditure on content marketing in 2013
  • Australian B2B marketers prefer LinkedIn as a social channel while B2C prefer Facebook
  • B2B marketers allocate higher proportions of their budget to content marketing activities than their B2C counterparts
  • A large proportion of marketers outsource content creation (B2C 74% // B2B 54%)

These findings, however, should raise alarm bells for CMOs across Australia.

  • Poor digital capabilities inhibit success. While 96% of Australian marketers use content marketing, the tactical choices favour traditional marketing channels with much lower levels of investment in experimentation and digital engagement. Marketers should set aside greater levels of budget to experiment and innovate around digital and social media. Training and workshop/conference attendance  should be provided to help more traditional marketers to transition their skills.
  • Weak digital strategy delivers weak outcomes. Weakness in digital strategy is seeing a misalignment between content marketing objectives/focus and measures of success. Marketers should draw upon skilled digital practitioners beyond their organisation (and even their industry), to begin to correctly align their business and marketing strategies.
  • Conservative channel choice cripples engagement. Marketers the world over are challenged to create engaging content, yet continue to focus on non-digital channels which produce high-levels of engagement. Again, experimentation is vital. Also, look to pure-play agencies to bolster internal skills for particular marketing programs – for example, work with a social media agency on a social media project, bring in a digital experience expert to reinvigorate the online customer experience.
  • Lack of effectiveness is undermining confidence. Content marketing effectiveness levels remain abysmally low, undermining confidence in marketers and the work produced by their agencies and suppliers. After correctly aligning strategy (as noted above), marketers should build metrics and analytics dashboards to report on effectiveness. Investigate options from companies like Anametrix.
  • Executive buy-in to content marketing needs to be revitalised: Connecting results with effort will give marketers the tools to gain buy-in from their Boards and from senior executives. Investments in analytics and reporting software that aggregates multi-channel data should be prioritised.

The detailed report appears below.  Remember to check out the Content Marketing Conference, using the code CMI200 will save you $200 when registering.

Next-Generation Customer Experience Chief Marketing Officer

You Thought Siri Was Cool Until You Got Google Glass

You Thought Siri Was Cool Until You Got Google Glass

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I can remember my first bulky personal digital assistant (PDA). It was cumbersome, hard to use and ugly. Very ugly. But I loved it. It felt like a ripple in the fabric of the future.

While at university, I took notes on this PDA, scrambling to jot bullet points into the slim LED screen and save them before we moved onto the next subject. Sometimes it worked, and sometimes I lost whole lectures when the AA batteries failed. But even then I realised that there was serious value in being able to search through lecture notes on-the-fly.

And then along came the Palm Pilot. I thought the handwriting recognition was a breakthrough. As I skimmed my stylus across the plastic screen I really felt that I was experiencing another of those ripples in the fabric of the future. It was the right device at the right time – a bridge between my analog and digital worlds. But it wasn’t just a PDA, it was a phone too. And it was changing the world.

With each new innovation, the barriers between me and my device would evaporate. They became easier to use, smarter, friendlier – and dare I say it – more human. Each iteration would be less about the device and more about the experience. My experience. It was like the technology was disappearing before my eyes.

Recently, when Siri came along, we celebrated as if the world had turned on its side. Apple had somehow, again, not only innovated on top of its already innovative iPhone platform – they trumped themselves and changed our relationship with the technology. Now you didn’t even need to swipe and type, you could speak. You could ask questions.



And we all loved Siri. But, for me, Siri was a constant reminder that I was using a device. A particular device. It called out my own reliance on that device and its manufacturer – for always in the background, there was that awareness that the experience was being delivered only by Apple. In many ways, Siri wasn’t just a ripple in the fabric of the future, it was the rock that caused the splash.

But Google’s Glass project fascinates me – partly because it is literally transparent.

As you can see from this video, it’s freshly intuitive – and that’s saying something considering Google’s usually clunky interfaces. But the thing that excites me most is the way that experience – human experience – is front and centre. For decades, technology has drawn us away from the body and focused our minds on the screen. But here, we are celebrating, not the technology, but the body in action. It’s technology taking a back seat. It’s the always on Kodak moment.

And its the closest we’ve yet seen to the future.

At least until the next ripple.

Marketing Transformation Chief Marketing Officer

A Pre-MWC analysis: mobile carriers must introduce user-selectable pricing to overcome customer frustration, data bandwidth constraints and lack of profits

A Pre-MWC analysis: mobile carriers must introduce user-selectable pricing to overcome customer frustration, data bandwidth constraints and lack of profits

During one day of this week, the week before Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2013, a triple coincidence occurred:  Telefonica signed with NICE to introduce Mobile Reach (to address customer issues), the ‘TSAV 8 to Barcelona’ event was held in Tel Aviv  and I (by coincidence) had arranged to vist NICE in order to understand Mobile Reach.  In thinking through the implications of all three events, I perceive correlations with significant relevance to all customers, whether enterprise or individual.

‘TSAV 8 to Barcelona’ is an annual event embracing hi-tech diplomacy hosted in Tel Aviv, primarily for Israeli companies expecting to be at MWC.  One presentation stood out, from Gil Sharon, CEO of local mobile carrier Pelephone.  He commented that almost all mobile data carriers are struggling with mobile data usage because they are constrained by limited (government assigned)  bandwidth.  In his presentation he asked the assembled technorati for help in 3 areas:

  • squeezing more from the existing bandwidth
  • improving the customer experience
  • dealing with the explosion of video over mobile data networks.

In considering his appeal, prima facie a reasonable one, the though occurs (and re-occurs) that many mobile carriers that offer mobile data and complain about being constrained still do not understand what their businesses should be offering.

This is a big assertion.  But the similarity to the perilous situation British Airways (BA) found itself in by the mid/end of the 1980s seems all relevant.

By the late 1980s BA was an airline with a dreadful reputation, racked by poor service, poor quality —  and it was basically unprofitable (yes, the similarity to many mobile carriers is entirely deliberate).  Customers hated BA.  So bad was this that the then Mrs. (now Lady) Thatcher brought in a new Chairman (Lord King) and Managing Director (Colin, later Lord, Marshall) to sort out the business — which they did with great success.

Arguably they had one master insight.  This was that BA was:

  • not in the business of flying planes (which had been the conventional wisdom of most state-owned airlines, including the previous BA management)
  • instead in the business of transporting people to where they wished to go.

BA’s turnaround is now a matter of history. Its focus on seeking to satisfy different types of customer with what those customers sought (one simple example being its introduction at its Heathrow home base of shower facilities for selected — premium — customers on arrival after long haul flights) has meant that BA has continued to innovate (although not always with complete financial success) ever since.

After the main sessions at ‘TSAV 8 to Barcelona’ I spoke with Mr. Sharon, suggesting that most mobile carriers:

  • still behave as if they were ‘running networks‘ rather than trying to understand that they are (or should be) in the business of ‘selling customers the ability to communicate in the ways the customers want to choose (and pay for)
  • if they took a page out of BA’s experience, they would have a good chance of significantly addressing his first (bandwidth) constraint and in so doing also do much to address his second — and profitably.

Naturally he said that Pelephone was not one of the dinosaur network-centric companies (though he offered no evidence to support this assertion), which, if true, begs the question as to why Pelephone is asking for assistance.

What then is the connection to NICE’s Mobile Reach and Telefonica?

Mobile Reach provides a way to embed multi-channel support  within existing apps running on mobile devices (smartphones and tablets).  Telefonica, the owner in Spain of the Movistar mobile network, has a richly deserved reputation for appalling customer service.  Trying to do something as simple as move a mobile phone from a Movistar contract to a Movistar prepaid one can take more than 20 human to human interactions (the cost of so many failed transactions must be huge to Telefonica, as well as demanding extraordinary customer commitment).  19 of those 20 interactions failed (and some might even have been classed as deliberately misleading).

With a reputation so dismal is no wonder that Telefonica/Movistar has decided to invest to try to address the second of Mr. Sharon’s issues.  It seems that, with NICE’s Mobile Reach, Telefonica believes it will introduce a tool to delivering better service to its customers, thereby reducing its support costs as well as improving customer retention and the overall customer experience.

Movistar customers will be ecstatic if this occurs. Mobile Reach has multi-channel capabilities (embracing all of voice, data, messaging, video, photos, images, etc.) which can be  incorporated within existing  (or new) apps on smart devices and has the potential to change the nature of customer/contact agent interactions:

  • customers can use the capabilities of their smart device camera to (for example) take a photo of an invoice or a screen and send this within the multi-channel communication when talking to the contact agent (or the latter can send written instructions while talking as to what the customer may need to do)
  • the customer/provider context is retained on the smart device running the app as well as on the carrier’s host server; if a customer has been trying to do something via ‘self service’ on the carrier’s web site and reaches that point where no further progress can be made except to call the carrier, the agent when connected to the customer is able to see all the previous web interaction detail: in other words the customer does not have to start from scratch for each interaction (as happens for all 20 of the interactions referred to above)
  • furthermore, if that customer is interacting with (say) Movistar and discussing his or her problem (or other service issue) and the connection goes down, when the connection is re-established that customer and the same contact agent can be reconnected and can still see all that they have been discussing before (and this can even be done 2 or more days later if, sya the customer has to find out some detail).

The potential improvement in customer service is huge.  There is even the potential to promote sales.  One can well understand Telefonica’s decision to introduce Mobile Reach.

All this said, improving the customer experience of dealing with a carrier is only one part of the whole mobile data carrier challenge.  Back to the BA example…

Most mobile carriers think that they know what their customers want.  I argue, and will continue to argue, as one of those customers (both as an individual and as one representing business clients), that this is a self-serving delusion.

What most mobile carriers want to deliver is what it suits them to deliver, not what customers want.  This is at the root of the explosion in data usage.  Poorly designed service offerings, which are ‘simpler’ for the mobile carrier to introduce, indice weird usage patterns.

Mobile data carriers:

  • think primarily in terms of bandwidth and network management issues (just as BA did about its fleet of planes)
  • avoid consudering what customers want, or about price flexibility and substitution and how this may affect the carrier business for the better.

Theresult is that they (the carriers) offer bizarre service combinations that are opaque and suit the operational inflexibility of those mobile carriers, because they are still thinking in network terms and not in customer terms.  These bizarre offerings, however, are what often produces the  very lack of customer loyalty that carrier complain about as well as the unpredicted bandwidth usage.  Fundamentally mobile carriers are the source of their own problems; it is not their customers nor governments that are to blame.

Part of the answer is doing what BA did — and changing.  What are needed are flexible service and price combinations from which customers can choose as the customers need and are willing to pay.

This is akin to road pricing.  If you want to drive at peak commute times you pay more.  If you use road capacity when there is little traffic, then you pay little.  In the airline context passengers weigh up choices from a myriad of options — depending on urgency, convenience, comfort, leg-room,  refundability, reduced pricing for Saturday night stays, number of connections,  on-time performance, etc, etc.

This is what mobile data customers (enterprise and individual) want from mobile data carriers.  They want to know what they are paying for and when; they want to make their own choices and if offered this they will pay, becaus ethey can choose what to pay.  For example a 1GB upload to go to a client maybe hyper-urgent ; in this case (just as with buying a business class airline seat) the customer will accept paying a substantial premium to do it now (in peak usage hours) — or may decide to do the transfer at a 1/10th of the peak usage price if done in the early hours when network usage is low.  (There is a precedent here.  In one African country, super-low connection costs were introduced after midnight, when network usage was at its lowest.  Rapidly, price-sensitive customers started to use the network when they could talk for longer for less.  This not only used the network more efficiently but removed usage from previously congested hours.)

Just as road pricing is the logical (if often politically unacceptable) way to charge to drive around, because the customer chooses and, if the economics, are correct then all benefit, so mobile network usage pricing that customers can understand and  decide upon is what makes logical sense.  It would:

  • release network capacity
  • improve the customer experience
  • reduce back-end costs (all those servicing of calls to contact centers are a burden on carriers)
  • open up income opportunities.

Customers — enterprise and individual — would not object because, as with an airline, they would be in the driving seat when deciding what they wish to pay for and when.

The key point here is an old one — understanding how and what your customers will pay for.  Mobile data is hugely important (allegedly 4G will add GBP20B to the UK economy alone over 10 years, at least according to Ofcom).  Mobile data carriers are accustomed to their established network-centric view of the world, that was adopted for voice.  This is now irrelevant.

Today, opportunities exist for smart players to make a killing at the traditional mobile carriers’ expense.   Yet, the irony remains:  if mobile data carriers satisfy customer desires with user-selectable usage pricing, many of the network challenges raised by Mr . Sharon will likely subside (though never go away entirely) because usage pricing encourages appropriate economic allocation of resources.

Will MWC 2013 address any of this.  The indicators are not good.  This is a traditional trade show where maintaining (in this case) the mobile carrier status quo seems more important than the end consumer (whether the individual or the enterprise).  That said I hope I am proven utterly wrong.

Tech Optimization Chief Information Officer

New Chip Offers Protection from Cellphone Radiation

New Chip Offers Protection from Cellphone Radiation

A new chip called Bodywell was recently announced to reduce the potential risk of mobile device radiation by lowering its absorption rate in the body. Currently, there are minimal industry precautions on the potential risks from mobile device radiation.  Mobile devices emit a non-ionizing electronic radio frequency, which can be absorbed by tissues closest to where the phone is held.  Short-term studies have not shown a “consistent link” between the specific absorption rate (SAR) and cancers of the brain and other tissues in the neck and head. However, many of these studies were financed by the mobile device manufacturer. Other credible scientific studies have identified a range of health problems associated with mobile device long term use. This list includes the World Health Organization International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) that issued a warning admitting cellphones might indeed cause cancer and the UK Mobilewise Study, www.mobilewise.org that identified a range of health risks including brain cancer after a decade or more use and a possible link to salivary gland tumors. Unfortunately, these risks are significantly greater in children, as their nervous systems are still developing, which makes them more vulnerable.

It will most likely take decades for definitive studies to be done to determine if there is positive proof of risks associated with mobile device use. In the meantime, there is good news for many who want to mitigate their risk factor and are not willing to wait for manufacturers or government agencies to address this issue more fully. A new chip called Bodywell, www.bodywellchip.com, counters the absorption of radiation in the body. It is a tiny flat chip, about the size of your thumb nail that you stick anywhere on your mobile device and there is no observable loss of signal strength on the mobile device. Unlike other less proven methods that attempted to block or shield radiation, this chip counters radiation emitted from mobile devices. It has been scientifically proven to reduce cellphone radiation my more than 50% in studies done with iPhone, iPad and Samsung Galaxy.

Although I have seen minor warning from manufacturers, they were not compelling enough for me to abandon my smartphone. However, as more studies from a substantial group of world class scientists appear, I think it is time to consider how to best reduce long term risks. The Bodywell chip is amazingly simple to use and I have attached the chip on the outside of my iPhone. I find it is a very inexpensive form of insurance against potential risks from mobile device radiation. Just as children wear bike helmets to protect them against potential falls, this chip should be provided to every child with a mobile device. The chip can be ordered from Bodywell’s web site and costs just under $30. The Bodywell chip is made by EZ Technologies, a Swiss owned technology firm.  Hopefully, manufacturers who currently provide mobile devices will consider adding this chip as an option for their customers.

Next-Generation Customer Experience Chief Customer Officer Chief Marketing Officer

Group Buying Code of Practice Tightens

Group Buying Code of Practice Tightens

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Group buying has proven popular in Australia. In 2012, the market generated $504 million, and according to a December 2012 study by Telsyte, the top five sites showed year-on-year growth of over 9%.

However, it is not all roses. Competition is fierce and the size of the market is not expected to grow as strongly this year. That means we can expect consolidation at some point.

But the industry has also suffered from a range of issues and has been the subject of complaints from consumers and merchants alike.

To combat this, ADMA, the principal industry body for data-driven marketing and advertising, became involved in writing the Group Buying Code of Practice last year.  The aim was to set a best practice benchmark for group buying in Australia.

The code which is voluntary, boasts foundation members Cudo, Groupon, LivingSocial, OurDeal, Deals.com.au, Ouffer and Scoopon – but Spreets has changed its business model and will no longer be a signatory to the Code.

A recent review recommended changes to the code, which the ADMA Code Authority will be enforcing. The changes to the Group Buying Code of Practice include:

  • New Code Authority powers to spot check group buying company compliance
  • Requirements for more detailed terms and conditions (no more surprises for consumers)
  • Tighter controls over how many vouchers are sold – helping ensure merchants understand and can meet their obligations
  • Clear and unambiguous refund policies which must be readily accessible with each offer
  • Improved complaints handling with defined response times for queries and complaints (1 business day) to reduce consumer frustration
  • Defined complaint resolution timeframes set at 10 working days — unless there is a reasonable expectation the process will take longer — but no more than 30 days.

The ADMA Code Authority will proactively conduct checks on the websites and offers made to the public. Signatories can be identified by the Group Buying Code Member logo which will be on their websites and offers.

Matrix Commerce Next-Generation Customer Experience Chief Customer Officer Chief Executive Officer Chief Marketing Officer