About This Case

Closed

25 May 2007, 11:59PM PT

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  • Top 3 Qualifying Insights Earn $100 Bonus

Posted

15 May 2007, 12:00AM PT

Industries

  • Advertising / Marketing / Sales
  • Consumer Services / Retail Industry
  • Enterprise Software & Services
  • Hardware
  • IT / IT Security
  • Internet / Online Services / Consumer Software
  • Logistics / Supply Chain
  • Start-Ups / Small Businesses / Franchises
  • Telecom / Broadband / Wireless

Pick Your Favorite Wireless SaaS Tools

 

Closed: 25 May 2007, 11:59PM PT

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Two big topics these days are SaaS and wireless. Obviously the two are on a converging path. Already, Blackberry email is considered an essential wireless SaaS offering. What other opportunities do you see coming into this space. If you were investing in wireless Saas, where do you think the biggest opportunities are today?

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SaaS and wireless technologies are indeed the current buzzwords in the industry and, as pointed out in the question, are on a converging path. Access over wireless media is what can perhaps give SaaS the impetus it needs for mainstream adoption.

Opportunities for applying wireless SaaS:

I see tremendous opportunities for wireless SaaS in the following areas:

1. Customer Relationship Management (CRM) - Salesforce.com has already entered this arena with its acquisition of Sendia. CRM as a wireless SaaS offering should see explosive growth especially in emerging markets.

2. Remote Helpdesk - Solutions such as Helpdesk Pilot (a web based help desk software and support ticket solution) could enable the product for wireless access. Now that would be answering the prayers of people in the field.

3. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) - Allows the stakeholders to receive up-to-date information on enterprise operations as and when required through the use of modern communication devices like mobile phones and laptops.

4. Logistics and Supply Chain Management (SCM) - Allows stakeholders to achieve mobile real-time coordination.

5. Self-service Human Resource portals - Would allow corporate employees to manage data about themselves from any location.

Evidently, most of the opportunities are focused on enterprise-level applications and this is where wireless SaaS can really flourish. I am not very sure about the future of Office-like applications served as SaaS. It would indeed work if the mobile device in question is a laptop, but not otherwise.

Investment opportunities in wireless SaaS:

I see three players - each of who has a significant part to play - in the wireless SaaS equation. They are:

  1. The SaaS vendors
  2. The wireless service providers, and
  3. The end users of the SaaS

I believe that wireless SaaS solutions will be demand-pulled (by end users) rather than vendor-pushed. End users would have an endless choice of mobile devices (laptops, mobile phones, smart phones, etc.) over which they could access the service. Once the initial adoption hesitancy is overcome, end users would increasingly demand more features from SaaS vendors. For vendors, a key to overcoming the initial hesitancy would be the enabling of a seamless transition experience from a rich web application to a mobile application.

Wireless service providers, the enablers for wireless SaaS, represent a major obstacle. The chief concern of these providers would be, as can be readily guessed, bandwidth issues. Wireless service providers would be adamant about knowing whether the information traveling over the air is data, voice, or video - after all it is their investments and revenues in question. With all the debate raging over net neutrality, they could turn out to be the spoil-sports in this equation. At the moment, I wouldn’t bet my money on them.

The SaaS vendors have their work cut out. They would need to invest in developing a smart mobile interface that would ideally identify the type of device connecting to the service and serve a relevant user interface. The other areas of concern are data optimization and data security. It makes business sense for SaaS vendors to integrate mobility solutions from leading vendors rather than trying to build the same in house. For example: Salesforce.com bought Sendia, a developer of mobile technologies, for $15 million in order to build a mobile interface to their AppExchange platform.

I predict that companies who are into providing such mobility solutions stand to gain from wireless SaaS going mainstream. These are the companies I would bet my money on.

The twitter model of communication between web services and mobile devices is the next big thing. Granted, Twitter is probably a fad, but the model it has created is going to be adapted and adopted by the enterprise turning it into the next big thing in the wireless SaaS tools in the enterprise. Alternate uses of services like these will become for calendars what RSS has done for e-mail - that being a displacement technology.

Secondly a reverse twitter model will also be big. As updates are sent to the server from phones - notifications will be dispersed to groups of mobile phones. This will change how corporate communication will be done.

Third - companies like Salesforce.com will be going mobile within the next year bring CRM to the phone. These services will probably require higher end phones but as the cost of these devices decrease the adoption rate of mobile SaaS services like CRM will increase. 

Other models currently in affect are mobile marketing notifications. The coolest ones are geo-spatial based meaning that when I walk in front of a Starbucks in Des Moines, Ia I get a notification that coffee is on sale today and they have a special roast available.

And last - content delivery will always be at the forefront. If you can get content (audio, video, and text) to wherever the consumer wants it you have an advantage. On the horizon is mobile video. Within the year video will go mobile. Services like YouTube will be offering many more mobile services and there will be many copycats.

If I were to invest in a company I would look into the geo-spatial / location-based services. Many of the other areas will be pursued by existing companies and will likely be an area where startups will be unsuccessful. But if you are first to market in some of these markets you will be targeted for acquisition.

Digging deeper into the wireless services provider part of the wireless SaaS equation, I believe that the way forward for major telcos is to transform themselves from being pure hardware-based companies to being a hybrid of hardware- and software-based services companies. That seems to be the only way they can fight the increasing levels of telecom commoditization. Again, it makes business sense to buy software-services capabilities rather than developing them in house. British Telecom is one telco adopting this route with its next generation IP-network and through its acquisitions.

 

Statistics suggest that there are more than 1000 SaaS vendors in existence today with 90% of them churning out less than $15 million in revenue.

 

For a telco, a possible approach – just to test the feasibility of the concept without incurring a huge capex – could be the acquisition of a mid-tier SaaS vendor, followed by integration of the SaaS product with the telco's wireless network services, and finally offering the solution as a value-added service to its customer base (more likely to a corporate). This approach makes more sense rather than trying to buy outright and integrate a top-tier SaaS vendor such as Salesforce.com.

 

Also, for SaaS to work over wireless, the underlying network should have excellent QoS (Quality of Service) in terms of steady bandwidth, network latency, and packet loss. This QoS can be assured only by the telco.

 

If I were a mid-tier SaaS vendor eager to go wireless, I would probably try to strike such a deal with a major telco. I am quite sure that if both parties work towards common interests the outcome would be revolutionary. What would follow next is a mad scramble for SaaS vendors by the telcos.

 

As an investment opportunity, I would place my bets on mid-tier SaaS vendors in the short to medium term and on the top-tier SaaS vendors in the long term.

A big market for SaaS in the mobile space is SFA. The reason this is significant is that it is a service for which there is clear enterprise value, and therefore a willingness to pay. That is in contrast with consumer mobile SaaS apps like Google Maps, which while they are useful, will subsist on a minority of consumer phones and advertising revenues. Let's look at some enterprise SaaS ideas that could be mobilized:
Sales Force Automation, ERP, Inventory data, and other Intranet applications can empower a company's employees with real time data, and the ability to act on that data. For examples:
SFA - A sales person at the customer site can access real-time inventory levels to share availability with the customer, promise shipment dates, and then look up the current spot price to share with the customer. Any recently updated notes about the account (such as the fact that their last check just bounced) would be visible to the mobile salesperson. But then it gets interesting - the flow of information is two-way. The Salesperson could enter into the system that a new check had been received, and that an order for 100 units was made. Much if not most of Salesforce.com's functionality could be mobilized successfully. Plus, since they offer a platform and welcome partners, and distribute partner's apps, this could be an interesting place to start. Build mobile access for Salesforce.com, and let them be your channel.
OPS - In an ops case, while a company with mobile email could easily configure their servers to send an email when systems fail, a company with a mobile app could offer the engineering manager the ability to view details on the mobile device, drill down into system health, and then rectify (remotely cycle power) for the down components.
HR - Many HR functions make sense from a mobile perspective. Things like expense reports, timecards, policy documents, and many of your "Peoplesoft" type apps can be accessed from a mobile device, and updated. Not all of these will make sense, but many will. Like "mobile shopping" sometimes it just makes more sense for users to wait until they are at a PC to do the job, but sometimes mobile access to information and the ability to interact with systems has a positive ROI.
PIM apps are also a growth area for mobilization. PIM data for individual users has traditionally been stored on PCs, while corporate contact databases have been centrally stored. But now, there is a trend (with IM, LinkedIn, Exchange, etc) towards centralized storage of both corporate and individual contacts. These PIM (Personal Information Management) databases can be centrally hosted and maintained as a service. The user can access the contacts from any device, including mobile platforms, and update data or use the existing data. The user benefits from absolutely fresh contact data, fully up to date, with current calendaring and task lists as well. My company uses Intermedia.com as our SaaS Exchange hosts, and they allow me mobile access to my PIM data.
Collaboration apps, such as Google's word processor reduce the cycle times groups need to review and collaborate on documents. But if those apps also were accessible on mobile devices, the cycle time could be even shorter. For example, what if someone put a fully formatted document up on Google, and submitted it for committee edits and approval. Someone at a PC could edit some fonts, some words, and add bolding. While another person using a mobile device could look in from a handheld, read the document (perhaps even in a limited way, without formatting) and could edit a sentence or two of text and approve the doc without worrying about the formatting. His/her changes would be tracked as any other. Collaboration apps are ripe for mobile migration.
Communication apps like email, IM, VoIP, and community discussions are already being mobilized to the wireless platforms. Have a look at iSkoot, IM+, Helio and MySpace, or EQO. But in the cases where these apps are free, mobilizing them is a less attractive investment. Also, unlike the preceeding enterprise apps, communication apps will often get you in the cross-hairs of the powerful mobile telcos. You don't want to work against them, if you can avoid it.
__________________
Derek Kerton
The KERTON Group
Strategy - Partnerships - Marketing
for Wireless and Telecom
www.kertongroup.com 408-935-8702
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There are two ways to approach this question.  The first is looking at SaaS and wireless as a business problem.  The second is approaching this from a social standpoint.  Both markets are wide open right now.

from a business standpoint, connectivity and communication are the two key factors.  Break this down even further and you have established SaaS needs that have already been met such as email and scheduling.  Other needs exist though, which have not been met.  Inventory management and other database backed products make up a huge untapped market.

Dynamically changing real time inventory stats available through a graphical mobile interface would be a hugely useful tool for any corporation that currently employs more expensive methods, such as full blown tablet computers right down to pen and paper.  

These systems could tie in with site inventory, RFID enabled updates and tying in multiple locations for total inventory control over a mobile phone or other cellular enabled device.

This development could also be leveraged to impact social needs that are not yet being met by mobile devices.  Think of the same system dynamically updating not with inventory but with the location and current status of your contact list.  This could be controlled from the user's end to display to other users a wealth of information ranging from an unavailable status to pinpointing location through GPS enabled devices and an ever changing status.  Think twitter for mobile devices with the ability to updated anyone granted access immediately.

The same back end systems that would power a business application could be used to power a social application as well.  I believe there would be a great deal of cross over between the two as well, with as of yet unknown markets developing as offshoots when each service matures.

The use of wireless technology continues to be a growth business with more adoption in developing and maturing countries and many users in developed and mature countries now owning multiple handsets.

 

One of the other great success stories for mobile business has been the Blackberry email service. The push for people to be always available has now proven to be so successful that companies are asking employees to turn off, and in some cases surrender, their “Crackberries” to ensure active participation in meetings.

 

The success of Research In Motion’s (RIM) Blackberry service is one of the first instances of the convergence of mobile phone technology and Software as a Service (SaaS).

 

What then are the growth opportunities for this space of WiSaaS?

 

Environment Opportunities

 

With handset vendors such as Nokia recognizing the potential markets in Africa they are flexing their handset features to keep cost down and as such are preparing for a new boom in more feature rick handsets down the road. This coincides with solar and wind powererd base stations in Namibia and South Africa that bring the roll out and operations costs down. It has been long predcited that coutries like Kenya will jump directly to wireless usage opposed to and fixed communications services.

 

This will create opportunites for the mobile handset as a business platform and there are some players ready to seize that opportunity.

 

Platform Opportunities

 

I would break down the current WiSaaS vendors into four segments

 

  1. Mobile Email
  2. Presence and Instant Messaging
  3. Location Based Services (non-GPS)
  4. Mobile Wallet

 

For each segment I have selected my favourite vendor.

 

  1. Mobile Email

 

This is the space currently dominated by Blackberry but there are many push mail services available today. My choice is Flurry. I find the service one of the more flexible services as I can register multiple email services that can be pushed to the Java client on my handset. As a user of Gmail, Yahoo and company email which I use to separate my business, personal and online presence parts of my life I find it particularly useful to be able to aggregate those into one service when I am mobile.

 

The service is very easy to sign up for and supports every country that I am likely to travel to. As I use pre-paid SIM’s to cut down on roaming costs. This means that I could register each SIM and have the service available all the time in any country.

 

Email is the platform for business today. It will continue to be the platform for many years to come and to be able to have something scalable and flexible for the emerging markets will be a great opportunity. I think that Flurry is well placed although I did stumble across it rather than readily identify it as the service of choice.

 

  1. Presence and Instant Messaging

 

The IM ecosystem that represents the preferred communication channel for many Generation Me users will evolve into a more mature and useful platform over the coming years. The benefits that a user gets in using IM opposed to email is that presence means that I can limit the traffic I receive when mobile. Alec Saunders’ company Iotum has started to converge Blackberry with presence, with the application Talk-Now. This is the first step in turning presence into a platform.

 

Again there are several players in this segment that provide mobile access to your usual IM client (Yahoo, MSN, ICQ, AIM). I used to use MixIt, a South African based company, as they were one of the first companies to provide Jabber support and therefore access to GoogleTalk. EQO is another company that gets you mobile with IM although due to feedback from users they are now deprecating support for Skype so I will probably stop using them.

 

This leaves my current favourite as Agile. They now support more than the usual SIP based clients which means that do support GoogleTalk now. They have a wide range of phones that they support, a problem encountered by some as the various Symbian platforms change from phone to phone and vendor to vendor.

 

  1. Location Based Services

 

The GSM and CDMA technology is ideally placed to support location based services as the underlying system relies on location and tracking within and between cell sites. This means as cellular networks grow and coverage increases a virtual map is laid over the country. Each cell serves an area and within it you can record services available and where you are within that cell.

 

The promise of cell centric location based services has been tried before but the telecom companies tried to over-engineer it. There are some new applications that use a more simplified approach to location based services without relying on GPS.

 

One of the better ones is Mobio. From your cell phone handset you can get information on cheap gasoline, a panic kit (in case of emergency), shopping and cinemas near you.

 

Location based services will continue to grow and more uses will be found for them. They are not confined to cellular as WiFi enable laptops also use access points and this can also be used to determine your location.

 

A player in this space is Loki with their location based service for laptops and internet devices (such as Nokia’s 770 internet tablet). I have written about how this technology could evolve and believe that there are many innovative uses for such services. The opportunity to get these onto mobile handsets is boundless.

 

  1. Mobile Wallet

 

Finance transactions are starting to be performed on the mobile handset. The mobile phone as a wallet has been changing the lives of many in Kenya since going live earlier this year. The system, M-Pesa, allows for micro payments to be setup and received over a mobile phone, from bus journeys to bank transfers, the system is empowering many.

 

The ability to conduct money transfer using your cell phone will be the next leap in creating cashless societies. Hong Kong’s Octopus card and Singapore’s EZLink uses RFID cards and can be used for public transport. Soon there are plans for vending machines and a pre paid equivalent to EFTPOS. To be able to conduct these transactions on the one item most people typically always carry, their mobile phone, will move many countries to truly cashless economy.