| Not Just the New Kid on the Block Anymore |
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During your daily meanderings, you might have heard of the new buzz word: social networking, making its entrance into the market place. If you have, you’ve heard right. If you haven’t, chances are you’ve spent the last few years under a rock. For more and more people, social networking is becoming the communication method of choice. It’s addictive, media-rich, focuses on messaging and it has potential for content distribution, all of which make social networking ideal for the mobile space. What’s more is that carriers are jumping at the chance to get in on this massive trend in personal communication. The mere fact that carriers are interested is good news not only to consumers, but also to brands, advertisers, content providers and social networking service (SNS) providers alike. Social media is more than a massive trend. It’s a wildfire announcing a whole new, fresh season in the world of entertainment and communication. Everyone has been to YouTube and has seen all the weird and wonderful clips doing the rounds; we are even calling it entertainment. If it is or isn’t, is really irrelevant. What it does show, however is that the old media broadcast model is dying. The idea of a media-consuming public that sits passively in front of a TV set is fast being replaced by a vibrant, active community of shared upstream content providers. More than ever before, consumers understand that content is communication. They have wholeheartedly embraced the model that they are both producers and consumers of a media fabric that is as effective at keeping them in touch with close friends as it is in connecting them to potentially millions of other “friends” populating thousands of social networking sites. The new content distribution model represents a panoply of overlapping personal networks. Where does your friend list live? So we’ve established that social networking really is perfectly suited for, and stands to become the next big thing in mobile, but for whom? Simply enabling access to a social networking site is a win only for the social networking site. Here’s why: In the long run, carriers compete with social networking providers. It’s safe to say that wireless carriers want to be the personal communication service provider of choice for all. So do social networking sites. That’s a conflict. The question is whether this is a zero-sum competition to own the consumer or if coexistence is possible. The answer depends on the deployment. For now, tactically minded carriers, very reasonably, see a short-term opportunity. That’s fair enough, but this approach also has the drawback of only facilitating communication between users’ friends who exist on various social networking sites. How can mobile add value? The strategic-minded carrier recognizes that owning the customer relationship in the long run means facilitating communication and adding value to the personal communication equation. Where a carrier can add the most consumer value is by integrating social networking categories into the device and network services, starting with the phone’s address book, gallery and camera. The uploading and sharing of content are important cornerstones of social networking, and carriers are in a unique position to add this value on top of social networking sites while tying the consumer behavior to a carrier-provisioned service. A key strategic imperative in the mobile space is to recognize that social networking is not a fad - it is an evolution of communication that the entire mobile industry was hoping would happen in some form when it invested so heavily in broadband, namely that more people would transact more data. Well, here it is, and every carrier already has agreements with a myriad of service providers to offer high-value silos of value like mobile media, instant messaging, video, audio, etc - you have to think far beyond mobile web access. Layering these high-value mobile services on top of third-party social networking sites is not easy. It requires a back-end platform that can facilitate the seamless transactional integration, which benefits not only consumers - who essentially become storefronts for one another, (much like they do on the web, but in this case with mobile content - but also the carriers and SNS providers who together will generate and share in the additional revenue streams created by this integrated approach. The bottom line is that social networking can represent a positive strategic shift for the cellular telecommunications industry and how it recognizes the changing communication desires of consumers. We must embrace social networking properly by taking the extra steps necessary to deeply integrate it into the mobile customer experience. This approach preserves the importance of the mobile link on the value chain and creates a win-win scenario for carriers, consumers and SNS providers. Information for this article was sourced from RCR Wireless News’ e-mail service, Mobile Content and Culture. |




