A Value-Add To Your
Career
Working in the Mobile Value Added
Services (MVAS) industry is not just promising, but
exciting as well
Plunging indices. Huge quarterly
losses. Massive job cuts. Since October last year,
there�s been barely any good news in the business
dailies. One exception stands out: telecom companies in
India have steadily kept on adding mobile subscribers.
In February 2009, India added another 13.44 million
mobile subscribers to its existing 362.30 million,
making the telecom growth story continue despite the
overall economic slowdown.
The case for
Mobile VAS
However, even as the number of
subscribers has gone up, with increased competition and
expansion in non-urban areas, call rates have declined.
Hence the average revenue per user (ARPU) has gone down,
squeezing the margins of telecom companies. Operators
are thus looking to increase revenues by offering mobile
value-added services (MVAS) to existing customers. Says
Girish Trivedi, deputy director, information,
communication and technology practice, Frost &
Sullivan, South Asia and Middle East, "Service providers
are going to focus on an application-led ecosystem to
get a bigger wallet share of the customer. Creating,
selling and bundling applications based on usability and
user experience will be the key growth area."
Definition. MVAS is any service
provided by your mobile phone operator, over and above
core voice calls and is charged for separately. �The
MVAS In India�, a report by the Internet and Mobile
Association of India (IAMAI) and the eTechnology Group
at IMRB, a market research firm, identifies three
distinct areas in MVAS. The first is entertainmentVAS,
which includes jokes, games and movie clips. The second
major component is infoVAS, which covers news and
weather updates, while the third category is
mCommerceVAS (mobile banking and payment).
The scope. Increased
competition and saturation in urban areas mean that
operators have to focus on MVAS for differentiation of
their services. Subho Roy, president, IAMAI, adds that
the decision by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of
India (Trai) to allow MVAS players to start operating
without a licence will spur growth. Technologies like 3G
will also give rise to a new set of MVAS applications
based on rich multimedia services. On the �pull side�,
customers are expecting more from their handheld devices
than basic telephony. According to Deloitte India, a
management services firm, MVAS, which currently accounts
for 10 per cent of the operator�s revenue in India, will
reach 18 per cent by 2010.
The industry is thus
poised to grow fast. Future of MVAS in India, a report
by BDA Research, an advisory firm, forecasts a
compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 44 per cent from
2007 to 2010.
Recession
dynamics
However, the current economic
environment could impact the telecom sector and growth
of MVAS. Says Jagdish Mitra, CEO, Canvas M (an MVAS
company which is a joint-venture between Motorola Inc.
and Tech Mahindra): "There could be a delay in the
roll-out of greenfield operators, as foreign investment
could be at stake and venture capitalists could be
conservative in their approach towards investments in
MVAS firms. Also, deployment of 3G would be delayed,
affecting the growth prospects of the MVAS industry."
Philip Jose, manager, KPMG, an advisory firm,
agrees: "I see a lower growth of around 30 per cent, as
the MVAS industry might not be able to maintain its
present rate of growth over the next few years."
Job creation. That said,
operators will have more and more MVAS requirements and
one can expect to see a huge requirement of
professionals in this space.
Currently, there
are over 100 MVAS companies in India and the number is
growing steadily. Says Vijay K. Bhalla, guide and
mentor, Telecom India Daily, an online telecom industry
newsletter: "While Indian MVAS companies can position
themselves in the global market, the global companies
can also make India a support hub for their operations
and add to jobs generated in India."
Nitish Mittersain, CEO, Nazara
Technologies, a mobile entertainment company, expects
the industry to grow to at least 10 times (from the
current 15,000-20,000 MVAS professionals) in the next
3-5 years. Even if we take a conservative growth of five
times, we find a requirement of about 75,000 to 100,000
professionals in the next few years.