| Fixed voice disappearing in many European markets |
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| Tuesday, 07 August 2007 | |
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Fixed–mobile substitution (FMS) continues its relentless progress and shows every sign of accelerating – particularly in those countries that have experienced the most traffic migration already – according to a new report, The Acceleration of Fixed–Mobile Substitution in
“In many markets it looks as if fixed voice is going to suffer not the slow and lingering decline many have predicted, but a rather rapid one,” says report co-author, Dr Alastair Brydon. “At the current rate of traffic migration, 90% of all voice minutes in Key findings from the new report include: In five Western European markets, more voice minutes originate on mobile networks than on traditional voice and broadband networks combined. VoIP appears to have little impact on the migration of voice traffic to mobile networks. Paradoxically, it appears to release consumer cash for additional spending on mobile services. Traffic substitution is also progressing rapidly in markets that have previously undergone little FMS. “The widespread introduction of home-zone tariffs in “What is particularly worrying for fixed-line operations is not that FMS is happening, but the pace at which it is happening,” adds Rupert Wood, principal analyst at Analysys Research. “Of course, fixed-network operators are looking to different sources of revenue for growth, but the accelerating decline in core voice revenue is damaging at a time when they are embarking on long and expensive next-generation network re-engineering programmes.” www.analysys.com |
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