fortune.com
Actually,
it probably costs you more.
By the end
of this year globally we will have about 16 billion devices connected to the
Internet and Americans will spend an average of $3,800 on them according to
data out this week from Chetan Sharma Consulting. However, of that $3,800 only
$800 of it is on the devices and the rest is on recurring access charges.
Sharma is
an independent analyst covering the telecommunications industry who has a long
history of predicting the future for the telcos, and figuring out how their
business models need to shift (sometimes before they do). His mini study on
connected devices focused on their proliferation in the home and how we pay for
them. The biggest winners heading into the Internet of things isn’t a surprise
on the connectivity side, it’s cellular broadband and wired broadband, but
consumers might be piqued to know that while their spending on cable television
and mobile voice has dropped, their overall spending on communications on the
go and at home has remained the same and even increased slightly.
Image
courtesy of Chetan Sharma
Sharma even
estimates in an interview with Fortune, that the spending on broadband might
surpass the spending on cable in the 2018 or 2019 time frame, which means that
the fears of cord cutting will no longer worry pay TV providers as the total
revenue they get from subscribers each month will remain the same.
And yet, these charges don’t reflect the money that
consumers shell out for Internet-related services such as Dropbox for storage
or Netflix for TV. So as Sharma notes, the overall $3,000 per year on average
that people are paying for access stays relatively flat and the mix may change,
but the consumer is paying more companies more dollars for services and devices
related to their connected lifestyle. It’s just that those dollars so far
aren’t going to the broadband and telecommunications companies yet.
Instead, the revenue is going to the aforementioned services
companies such as Netflix, Dropbox, Skype, etc. and the device makers. Sharma
anticipates that $800 average in device spending will increase as people snap
up connected home devices, cars, robots, drones and wearables. However, he
doesn’t believe we’ll see the rise of a single winner-take-all device like the
smartphone or the PC again. “The next wave of revenue will come from hundreds
of tiny revenue streams,” Sharma said. “You’ll get smaller islands of
categories that in and of themselves may not be huge, and maybe 10 years from
now they could be sizable when taken together.”
That’s a very different business model, innovation model and
even talent-spotting model for investors and corporate M&A departments.
It’s easy to say that the Internet of things is the the next big thing, but
when you realize that there will be hundreds of different device success
stories instead of one it clarifies why everyone is fighting to be the OS layer
and why no one wants to play nicely on standards yet.
Meanwhile,
consumers, should get ready to keep paying more for devices and services and
about the same for connectivity.
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