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Researcher: The internet of things won't make operators any money

Verizon

Andrew Entwistle of New Street Research said the internet of things and its relationship to 5G, doesn’t present ‘any business case for a telecoms operator’

Going against the mainstream industry thinking that “5G” as an enabler of the “internet of things” will create new vertical revenue streams for operators, New Street Research partner Andrew Entwistle, in a presentation yesterday in Australia, said the business case just isn’t there.
As quoted by ZDNet, Entwistle said: “I’m perfectly prepared to accept that the internet of things is extraordinarily interesting to equipment makers and vendors, to systems integrators, to policymakers, and to people concerned with the social role of communications services in our lives, but there is an awful lot of noise about the internet of things that doesn’t actually translate into, to put it strongly, a whole hill of beans for the telecoms operator who’s looking to sell services to achieve revenue per customer or revenue per device.”
He fleshed that out in an accompanying presentation available for download:

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Entwistle gave the example, according to ZDNet, of a high-tech hospital that has deployed 5G and health care-related IoT devices and sensors.
“The telecoms operator will not see a single penny from any one of those devices. They sell a 5 [gigabits per second] fiber into the data room of the hospital today, and in 10 years’ time they’ll probably still be selling a 5 Gbps connection, or 10 Gbps fiber at half the price of today’s 5 Gbps fiber. I can’t see any business case for a telecoms operator. An operator said: ‘We will have 1,000 times as many devices and we only need 1,000th of the [average revenue per user] in order to build a business as big as our existing business.’ That’s not a business plan, that’s just multiplying two numbers together and making a brave assumption.”
Entwistle’s comments came during a 5G seminar jointly hosted by the Australian Communications and Media Authority and the International Institute of Communications.

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