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    Comment on Orange/Google partnership

    LONDON, UK: Pamela Clark-Dickson, senior analyst for messaging at Informa Telecoms & Media, comments on Orange's partnership with Google and the mutual benefits it brings to both parties.
    Comment on Orange/Google partnership

    "Orange's decision to partner with Google to provide Google's Gmail SMS Chat to the subscribers of its operating companies in the Middle East and Africa is an acknowledgement by both parties that those who live in emerging markets are just as interested in accessing Internet services as those who live in developed markets," says Clark-Dickson.

    "By enabling Gmail Chat via SMS, Orange and Google are also acknowledging that SMS is a key delivery channel for Internet services in emerging markets, where there is low penetration of Internet-enabled PCs and of Internet-enabled mobile devices," she adds.

    Informa Telecoms & Media states that there were 577.6 million mobile subscribers in Africa and another 226 million mobile subscribers in the Middle East at end-2Q11, equating to penetration rates of 54.7% and 93.5%, respectively. However, Informa also forecasts that the penetration of smartphones in Africa and the Middle East by end-2011 will be just 11.3% and 19.8%, respectively.

    Mutual benefits

    "The partnership delivers mutual benefit to Orange and Google: Orange will generate additional traffic and revenues from the SMSs sent by those of its subscribers who use the Gmail SMS Chat service and by those of its customers who reply to the chat messages, while Google will secure additional market reach," says Clark-Dickson.

    Providing an example, she says Gmail SMS Chat users will be able to add Orange mobile customers who are not Gmail SMS Chat users to their address books/buddy lists, which may in turn encourage non-users to sign up for the service themselves.

    "Orange has not disclosed whether it will share messaging revenues with Google, but it is unlikely to do so. Instead, Orange is offering Google the opportunity to provide other services to its subscribers, and Google may well be able to charge for these or to secure a share of the revenues generated by these services," she says.

    Clark-Dickson says Orange and Google have already had some success with Gmail SMS Chat: Orange stated that the service attracted 700 000 unique users in Senegal within the first six months of its launch in July 2010. Between them, these users sent four million Gmail SMS Chat messages.

    A similar level of success possible?

    Clark-Dickson says it is possible that Gmail SMS Chat can achieve a similar level of success in the other African countries in which Orange and Google propose to introduce the service, which is also already available in Kenya and Uganda.

    "The potential addressable market for Gmail SMS Chat is significant: Orange has operating companies in 19 countries in the Middle East and Africa, and has a total subscription base of 60 million across these markets. Initially the operator has only named five other markets in which it will launch or trial Gmail SMS Chat, though it expects to roll the service out across all 19 OpCos," she says.

    Orange is not charging its subscribers a subscription fee to access Gmail SMS Chat, nor will it place a premium on the SMS chat messages, which will help to make the service more attractive. "In fact," says Clark-Dickson, "to provide even more incentive, Gmail SMS Chat users receive a quota of free SMSs (Google states on its web site that Gmail SMS Chat users receive an initial quota of 50 messages), which is renewed with an additional five free SMS messages every time an Orange customer replies to a chat message.

    "However, Orange and Google are not alone in seeking to provide SMS-enabled Internet services to mobile subscribers in Africa; companies such as ForgetMeNot have been doing so for a couple of years. ForgetMeNot, for instance, enables SMS-based e-mail, instant messaging and social networking for operators in Kenya, the Republic of Congo, Zimbabwe, Lesotho and Nigeria. Although such companies do not have the scale of Orange and Google, they are agnostic in terms of the services that they do enable, which can be a potential differentiator for mobile operators.

    Clark-Dickson says that Google provides Gmail SMS Chat via another 29 mobile operators in Africa and the Middle East, so the availability of the service is not exclusive to Orange OpCos in these regions.

    Source: Informa Telecoms & Media

    Informa Telecoms & Media aims to deliver strategic insight founded on global market data and primary research. The company works in partnership with its clients, informing their decision-making with practical services supported by analysts.

    The company conducts primary and secondary research on the latest trends impacting the mobile communications, fixed communications and TV sectors, on a global basis. ITM's market intelligence services - World Cellular Information Service (WCIS), World Broadband Information Service (WBIS) and the Intelligence Centre - to give clients access to market forecasts and key performance indicators (KPIs), as well as detailed analysis and exploration of trends.

    Go to: http://www.informatm.com
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