The carrier model – changing
to sharing
The
market opportunity in Africa is massive. We’ve seen mobile
operators in particular, making huge investments in Africa.
France Telecom launched
in Kenya in 2008 – its first foray into Anglophone Africa
- and has acquired HITS Telecom in Uganda. Vodafone acquired Ghana
Telecom in late 2008, while Zain launched its first 3.5G network
on the continent outside of South Africa in Ghana.
Put together all of the
costs in launching a new cellular network – from marketing
and customer acquisition, to sales and engineering services, to
retail outlets, offices etc. And that’s without the actual
network build-out. But carriers can provide the same services, with
the same speed and delivery quality, on a shared network.
We’re seeing carriers
work together here, much as in the Middle East, where Zain announced
a network sharing agreement with Etihad Etisalat (Mobily) in November
2007. MTN and South Africa’s Neotel in January signed a partnership
agreement to co-operatively build a national long-distance fibre-optic
network. This will be the first time network operators in South
Africa will work together to lay fibre.
We are the carriers’
carrier and can provide operators with the infrastructure they need
using existing networks – rather than build out their own
from scratch at huge expense.
Innovation will need
to come from carriers to develop a competitive advantage. And working
together will be one way of making that happen. Government regulation
and policy plays a part, and will have an impact, but I believe
the biggest shift will come from the carriers themselves, responding
to market demand.
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