Saturday, October 20, 2012

Revenue of Indian ISPs compared to MVAS Revenue of Cell Phone Services Operators



A Press Release (dated July 2012) from the ISP Association of India, quoting Telecom Regulatory Authority of India indicates the ISP segment revenue as Rs 7,500 Crores per year (approximately US$ 1.4 Bln). Visit
http://www.ispai.in/ispai-view/pressreleaseview.php?pressReleaseId=8
Compare this with the figure of Rs 2 to 3 per month spent by cell phone users on apps as well as games (Visit my blog post
http://obvioustruths.blogspot.in/2012/09/the-reality-of-mobile-value-added.html
This is the nearest estimate I get to Internet related expenditure of cell phone users in India in 2012. The number of cell phone users in India was reported by the Times of India as being 929.37 million in July 2012. Visit
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-07-05/telecom/32550630_1_base-touches-subscriber-base-wireline-segment 
Multiplying the number of users by Revenue per user we find that Indian cell phone users are not paying more than Rs 3600 Crores. This is probably an over-estimate, as the figure of Rs. 2 to 3 mentioned above cover apps as well as games. So, all of this amount may not count as expenditure on mobile Internet.

Srinivasan Ramani
October 20, 2012

Friday, October 12, 2012

Information & the Anti-Corruption Movement in India


If you had asked me two years ago if I expected to find a reduction in corruption in India during my lifetime, I would have said no. The situation had been so bad for so long, and was in fact getting worse. But now, suddenly, so much is happening so fast! 

It has been said that Internet based tools have speeded up political changes in many countries in the recent past. I don’t see much reason to believe that Internet based communication tools have made much difference on the Indian political scene. Of course there have been the famous (:=) remark about “cattle class” travel and the recent one about “mango men in a banana republic”. Most of us have read about them in newspapers or heard about them on TV. I do use Facebook, Twitter and Linked in, but I do not see many Indians using them for political activity.

All this calls for serious research – what is speeding up the anti-corruption ferment in India now? How has it become so rapid - so much so that now I worry about change being managed carefully so that the country does not become worse before it becomes better?

Let me hazard my guess. The major factors have been the arrival of independent TV channels on the scene, followed by a rapid increase in the number of such channels. Add to this Direct-To-Home telecasting and the Right to Information Act! You have enough to start a big change. The TV channels have even woken up our stodgy newspapers and made them significant players in the revolution.

How cozy would it have been for the political class to have stayed with the obedient Doordarshan as the only TV service provider? Did they foresee the current ferment? They have seen a few tsunamis now! But do they realize that the Indian climate change is going to be huge and irreversible? What do they plan to do about it? Will they play a role as agents of change or will they become the victims of change?

Srinivasan Ramani

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Aam Janata Party for the Mango People

Mr Robert Vadra might have given a great idea to India Against Corruption - a name that will stick. Let me elaborate on these ideas:

a) Name the party Aam Janata Party

b) Sell (not give away) yellow T-shorts with a green mango logo on the front and back

c) Ask the election commission to give them the mango as a symbol.

There is no better way for the party to identify itself as the party of the common people. I hope that Mr Arvind Kejriwal, Mr Prashant Bhushan, Mr Shanti Bhushan, Mr Manish Sisodia and all their colleagues would consider these suggestions seriously.

Srinivasan Ramani