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    Wireless Web: What';s the Impact on Your E-Business&#

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    All phones are created equal, but some are more equal than others. From Canada and California to
    Japan and Korea, Internet-enabled mobile phones are rapidly ushering in the next generation of online
    commerce: "m-commerce" or Mobile-commerce.

    "The wireless world is a parallel universe almost as large as the Net -- and the two are beginning a
    fascinating convergence,. are according to Swapnil Shah, Director of international operations at Inktomi.
    Three sets of devices are Emerging as wireless Internet platforms: cell phones, PDAs (personal digital
    assistants like Palm Pilot) other dedicated devices (such as digital cameras and Walkman radios).

    Mobile e-commerce services -- "me-services" -- have slightly different attributes than the Internet services
    we think of today, says Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina. They must enable customers to conduct
    "burst transactions" -- that is, short-session, information-driven transactions that can be completed very
    quickly, while people are on the go
    and in motion.

    Market Forecasts

    According to market forecasts from Jupiter, Forrester and IDC, between 50 to 70 per cent of Internet
    users worldwide will be accessing the Net via mobile devices in the year 2003; the number of Internet-
    enabled devices then would range from 150 to 350 million units. Ads in the form of text links, micro
    banners and audio jingles on WMI (wireless mobile Internet) networks are expected to cross the $1 billion
    mark within two years.

    Reports from Ericsson suggest that the sale of mobile phones worldwide will in a few years exceed the
    PC market by four times. 50 per cent of Europeans are expected to have mobiles by year 2003. And by
    2002, third-generation networks known as UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) will
    offer richer online experiences.

    Companies have been toying around the idea of a wireless Internet for quite some time, but the wireless
    revolution, as we know it today started to really pick up steam in 1997. Disparate standards movements
    and "microbrowser" Companies like Phone.com collectively mobilized implementations, who, along with
    Nokia, Motorola and Ericsson, formed the WAP (Wireless Access Protocol, sometimes jokingly referred to
    as "Why Another Protocol'")
    Forum to develop an independent standard for the wireless Internet, based on WML (Wireless Markup
    Language).

    Around the same time, NTT DoComo in Japan released a similar technology based on compact HTML
    called i-Mode. The last several years has seen a rapid proliferation of wireless content, mostly throughout
    Europe and Asia, but also in the U.S. and Latin America. The numbers for WAP, however, are not as
    thrilling, mainly due to the fact that application developers need to redesign their content using WML.

    In the pre-WAP era, SMS (Simple Messaging Service) clearly was the most popular trend by enabling
    two-way messaging and mobile e-mail. SMS text messages now represent about 8 percent of total mobile
    revenues in Europe (Approximately $10 billion) and that figure is growing exponentially.

    But it is 2000 and 2001, which will belong to the mobile Internet, according to infotech services company
    Infosys, whose offerings now include wireless content solutions. Europe with its focus on standards has
    achieved 100% ubiquity with the adoption of GSM, whereas North America has traded innovation and
    diversity for ubiquity with a slew of cellular technologies like AMPS, TDMA, CDMA, GSM, IDEN, thus
    making it slower for mobile Internet services to take off.

    In most markets, much WMI usage is among trendy teenagers, but it will become more and more
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    "professional" and mainstream, predicted Bertrand Bidaud, telecom research analyst at global research
    firm Gartner Group, in an interview for this publication.





    "M-Commerce will eventually overtake traditional PC-based B2C commerce," predicts Infosys wireless
    consultant Shashi Vempathi. The cellular phone will fast transform from a voice device to be the key enabler
    of secure mobile commerce in the 21st century, and by its mobile nature it will become the instrument for
    conducting every day sundry transactions -- something that is difficult for PC-based B2C e-commerce to
    achieve, he says.

    Market Potential and User Behaviour

    Applications well suited for the WMI domain include B2B services (mobile Intranet access, roaming email
    services), travel information (for buses and Airlines), finance (time-critical banking and stock trades), e-
    commerce (betting, auctions), and community (chat, e-postcards, cartoons), according to Johan Montelius,
    wireless Internet specialist at New York-based research firm Jupiter Communications.

    A recent study that Hewlett-Packard conducted on mobile markets found that the first generation of "me-
    services" falls into six categories:

    Transactions (banking and travel reservations) information (sports Scores, real-time news),

    Database search (yellow pages and translation services),

    Entertainment (customer ringers, games),

    Personal services (calendars, address books),

    Communications (Group SMS, mail).

    M-commerce is great for time-sensitive and location-sensitive sales.

    M-commerce can easily spur impulse buying for items like music -- consumers can buy an album almost as
    soon as they hear it on radio or see the video on MTV. News and information services have been among the
    first to jump in to exploit the possibilities of WMI, and dozens of news feeds are now accessible via mobiles.
    Phone.com has already rolled out book and music ordering via
    WAP for Amazon in the U.S. and U.K.

    In the corporate environment, banking and airline sectors are early adopters. But for a long time to come, the
    "killer app" of WMI will still be Old-fashioned messaging and related services, says Gartner's Bidaud. "B2B
    will come later. It appears at a more mature stage, as in the wired world.
    First will be B2C and then corporate application (Intranet)," he observes.

    WMI in Action

    In Japan, one of the most profitable WMI sites is Bandai, which "uploads" new cartoons everyday
    on the phone. Tone rings download is also very popular. A large proportion of stock trading in
    South Korea has shifted to the Net and mobile phones.
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    U.S.-based Inktomi is offering "shopping dial tone" solutions via WAP directory and catalog
    services for cell phone users, so that online commerce is accessible irrespective of the platform
    used. Inktomi is working with hundreds of merchants to offer sales of millions of products via
    WAP; merchants use a branded interface, while Inktomi will handle billing, data center, and
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    shopping basket operations.

    Yahoo's sites in many countries offer instant access to mail, finance, news, WAP directories, and
    other information for mobile users in many languages. Yahoo has tied up with four mobile phone
    firms in Taiwan to carry its Chinese-language WAP portal, which includes news, email and
    weather forecasts.

    In Australia, early results have shown that on Telstra's WAP service, financial news, horoscopes
    and sports results were some of the most popular services, followed by movie listings, flight
    information, and Yellow pages reference data.

    Hewlett-Packard has launched a Mobile Services Bazaar, targeted at service providers and
    developers for mobile-related initiatives.


    Companies like ConsumerDesk.com, a comparison-shopping site, already have WAP-enabled product
    spreadsheets for consumers. "Soon, real-time discounting information will be made available for cell phone
    users. And since cellphones are always on, this can become a real killer-app for m-commerce," says Rene
    Jepma, CEO and founder of ConsumerDesk.

    Pan-European auctioneer QXL.com has announced a deal with mobile Internet portal iobox that will enable
    users to track auctions and receive bid alerts from their mobile phones. iobox, launched in 1998 in Finland, has
    half a million users in Finland, Sweden, Germany and the U.K.

    A star performer in WMI-space is Japanese Telco NTT's cellular arm DoCoMo, whose one-year-old iMode
    service for mobile Net access has already surpassed the six million-subscriber marks. More than 800,000 new
    subscribers are now signing up for this service each month. Over 12,000 i-mode sites are available in Japan for
    mobile Internet access, offering banking, travel ticketing, news and email services via a "portal tone."

    Next year NTT plans to roll out 3G W-CDMA services with 2 Mbps bandwidth and broadband content, as the
    number of users accessing the Net via mobiles exceeds those accessing it via PCs. The pervasive, "always on"
    nature of mobile Net access will undoubtedly continue to spin off entirely new innovations in online services.

    Very interesting concepts are emerging in Europe, such as Amadeus, which provides a WAP based travel
    service, Webraska, which provides a WAP, based navigation service, Paybox, which provides a bill payment
    service, and NECS, which provides an e-mail aggregation service.

    Companies provide internet-to-paging gateways like Silicon Valley based Unimobile.com, which also allow
    consumers to control the receipt and delivery of messages, alarms and Internet content directly on their devices.
    The service also lets users customize the look-and-feel of the desktop product to match their offline wireless
    devices. Another offers online contact information and diary management solutions via mobile Internet Silicon
    Valley called company eCode.com.

    Roadmaps and Guidelines

    Before embarking on their own WMI services, it is key that commerce companies recognise m-commerce as a
    completely unique service. "Cellphone users are more impatient than Internet users. The paradigm here is not
    surfing; all services for the mass market have to be pitched at users in such a seamless way that they need not
    even be aware that they are accessing the Net," according to Cindy Dahm, international director for Phone.com.

    "Businesses first need to understand their customers to identify where they can provide the greatest value in a
    mobile environment. This could range from pushing promotional rewards to facilitating impulsive shopping over
    mobile phones. Having figured out the mobile commerce strategy, businesses would have to m-enable their e-
    commerce and CRM systems," according to Infosys' wireless consultant Vempathi.

    The cost of m-enabling primarily would be that of re-writing the existing applications to make them MI-
    compatible. There could be additional costs, which the businesses would have to bear if they want to leverage
    cellular networks for providing value, added services based on location information, says Vempathi.

    For B2B (corporate application, Intranet), the main cost will be education. "It is about a new way to interact with
    employees, and that requires dedicated effort," says Gartner's Bidaud.

    The most versatile language to choose by designers and application developers would be XML (extensible
    Markup Language). Sites should be designed using XML for organizing the content and adapting it appropriately
    to HTML, CHMTL or WML based on the channel of delivery - Web or WMI.

    "But it is also important in design to bear in mind that a user would access a service over wireless for performing
    highly prioritized operations which are time and location sensitive -- unlike a user accessing the service over the
    Internet who usually has time and flexibility on his side," cautions
    Vempathi.

    So the wireless version of the service should be designed to enable high priority "Here and Now" operations
    while keeping the wired version loaded with all possible options.

    "Wireless interaction requires short dialog today since content is not as rich as on the Web. Design should really
    focus on key applications, and make them easily reachable to mobile users. Simplicity is key. Local content is
    also more important than in the wired world," says Gartner's Bidaud.


    Many companies embarking on m-commerce tend to stumble on some key misconceptions, such as assuming that
    the mobile Internet is merely WWW on the cellular phone, or that it is just a matter of code conversion, or that all
    phones have the same and look and feel for WMI content.

    Privacy and security are also a matter of concern, given the unprecedented precision that mobile operators have for
    gathering user and location data.

    The Road Ahead

    To sum it up, we can compare the early excitement generated over WMI to the release of the Mosaic Web browser
    in the early 1990s. "Just as Mosaic slowly matured into Netscape Navigator, WMI will also be capable of handling
    text
    and multimedia over both low and high bandwidth networks," says Shishir
    Gundavaram, CTO of lifeguru.com, a wireless portal.

    "A me-service has to eventually become second nature -- it must naturally weave itself into the fabric of our daily
    lives -- like buying train tickets or checking flight schedules," according to HP CEO Carly Fiorina.

    In conclusion, consensus seems to be emerging that the performance of m-commerce will improve since airtime
    fees are expected to drop further, more WMI gateways will become available, and content and commerce services
    from independent players will proliferate.

    Torbjorn Nilsson, senior vice-president of business development at Ericsson, predicts that despite a slow start, the
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    potential of m-commerce is huge. "It will be like pouring out of a ketchup bottle. Nothing ...nothing... nothing ... and
    then all at once," he says.

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Dr. Madanmohan Rao is an Internet consultant and writer based in Bangalore, India. He is the co-author of the handbook "The Internet Economy of India, 2001" and the forthcoming "Asia Pacific Internet Handbook" (McGraw Hill). Madan was formerly the communications director at the United Nations Inter Press Service bureau in New York, and vice president at IndiaWorld Communications in Bombay.