Apple, Google Rivalry Boosting Mobile Web 2.0 Growth: Report
The mobile Web 2.0 landscape is one of great opportunity, Juniper Research
concluded in a March report highlighting the trends and growth within the
space.
The firm expects to see annual spending of $6 billion in mobile advertising by
2014, writing that "media owners are looking to deliver ads and content via new
technology, across wider markets and within redefined commercial strategies,
resulting in increasing levels of market activity."
While in 2009 the online media and technology sector saw a 21 percent decline
in its numbers of mergers and acquisitions, versus 2008 figures, the number of
transactions in the mobile media and technology space doubled during that time
frame, Juniper reports, with the total transaction value rising by more than
400 percent.
There were 35 announced deals in the mobile space, valued at $1.4 billion and
led by Google's
$750 million acquisition of AdMob in November 2009.
Growing the space, along with acquisitions, are a number of rivalries,
including the
increasing bad blood-or newly overlapping interests-between Apple and
Google, which was made entirely clear when Google CEO
Eric Schmidt resigned from Apple's board in August 2009.
"As Google enters more of Apple's core businesses, with Android and now Chrome
OS, Eric's effectiveness as an Apple Board member will be significantly
diminished," Apple CEO Steve Jobs said in a
press statement at the time.
Juniper reports that Apple is thought to be developing a search engine of its
own, and reportedly is also "discussing ways to replace Google with Microsoft's
-Bing' as the default search engine on the iPhone."
The ultimate concern between these rivals, writes Juniper, citing data from
AdMob, is said to be search advertising, as "the iPhone accounts for more than
half of all ads on smartphones, and that many of those are currently served via
Google's search engine."
Also contributing to this new phase of the mobile Web is a "mashing up" of
application features, such as geo-tagging, social networking, instant messaging
and VOIP (voice over IP). In addition to setting the mobile Web 2.0 apart,
writes Juniper, the combining functionalities additionally offers a fresh take
on services, such as presence, which were hyped but previously more service enablers
than direct revenue streams.
Juniper estimates the current value of presence-based mobile Web 2.0 services-which
are being driven by mobile IM, mobile VOIP and mobile presence-based ad
spending-to be at $2.3 billion, while predicting a rise to $10.9 billion by
2014.
And still another contributor to the space's growth has been the worldwide
increase in smartphone penetration and mobile broadband deployments.
"While VOIP traffic has been constrained by the need for 3G/HSPA to provide the
necessary [quality of service] and many operators have historically sought to
block VOIP services," writes Juniper, "the widespread deployment of mobile
broadband services will facilitate the growth in mobile VOIP usage."
Highlighting the perseverance with which smartphone use is growing, a
March 18 report from research firm iSuppli stated that while worldwide per
capita income fell by 2 percent in 2009-for the first time in the post-World
War II era-global smartphone shipments rose by 13.1 percent.
A partial version of the Juniper report is available at the firm's Website.
