Sunday, November 23, 2008
Google  
Web voicendata.com
Archive    
"Ad: Nortel data network solutions are 40% more energy efficient" "Ad:Discover Green Intelligence, make your business strong"
 Home > Contents > Interview: 'We aim to bring value to all the micro segments'
  CONTENTS
Interview: 'We aim to bring value to all the micro segments'
Arvind Rao, CEO, OnMobile
Wednesday, October 04, 2006

In which regions do you plan to expand your services other than Singapore and Australia?
Outside India, we have already launched our services in Indonesia. It will be followed by the launch in Pakistan. We are also in discussion with four other countries including those in the Middle East, Europe and the US, which will be initiated when deals would be signed for the same. But our focus is to grow internationally. Secondly, in India we have signed up with every operator except Aircel.

What services do you plan to provide?
We had started voice services that involve voice portal and ring back tones as our main product line. We would now be expanding into WAP. Then we have a long line of products including m-advertising, direct marketing. We will also launch voice chat. Voice SMS has been launched recently in India, so we are expanding our bouquet of services.

Having received funding of $30 mn, what are your plans now?
We would continue with the expansion. Importantly, we invest in research and development, more than any other company in our space. So we invest very heavily because we are not looking at it as a one year thing, but we look at it as growth in the next three to four years.

Onmobile is a value added services company that spun out of Infosys Technologies in 2000. OnMobile offers MMP2500 multimodal platform that provides an integrated mobile applications environment integrating SMS, WAP and voice interactivity. In an interview with VOICE&DATA, Arvind Rao, CEO and co-founder of the company, talks about his expansion plans and the services on offer

You have ventured in the field of m-commerce. How do you see this service fairing in the regions you operate in, including India?
I feel that m-commerce in the coming five years will be a big market but not now. It is one of those services, which you need to plant and develop into a market, just the same way we launched voice portal in 2000-01, and till 2004-05 it was a negligible component. Whereas today, most of the large operators are making around Rs 15-20 crore a month from it. We need to educate the market about m-commerce, as it has huge potential. For this we will go in a phased manner. Initially, we have launched some basic services like ticketing or gifts on the phone. Later, we can launch complicated transactions and use mobile as a direct marketing channel. To provide the best price to our consumers, we will introduce sophisticated payment models based on reverse auction, demand aggregation.

Why do you focus more on voice, rather than other methods such as SMS?
Couple of reasons! One, the Indian market will touch a figure of 250-300 mn subscribers in the next two-three years. We are looking for mass-market services. We are not interested in high-end services that cater to 5-10 mn people. We want service, which go right down to an auto rickshaw driver or a farmer. So for these people, talking into the phone is the easiest. Secondly, around 200 companies in India are playing in the SMS space. It is a pure commodity. Compared to SMS, voice requires sophisticated technology and a large amount of capex.

You have a number of multi-modal services. How will multi-modality cater to the 3G environment?
Multi-modal services will always be a superset of our voice services. We will open up our services and give the user a choice of medium, be it voice, SMS or WAP. All our new services are being launched in multi-modal format. 3G is just going to upgrade these services.

How is mobile content shaping up in India? Do you see it as a channel for dissemination of information and revenue generation?
Mobile content is a very large segment, the biggest one being music. Music alone forms 75-80% of the mobile content market. The rest of it is like news, jokes, horoscope, but these are not very big. In the content space, we are launching services based on user, generated content etc. Revenues are generally higher in this area.

What is OnMobile's vision for the future?
We have a vision for India and the rest of the world. As far as India goes, we want to provide value to as many people as possible through mobile. Our aim is to bring value to all the micro segments in the country and be a leading company. We are not here to be number two or number three; we aim to be the number one VAS company in India.

Sonia Sharma
sonias@cybermedia.co.in

Page(s)   1  

Interview: 'We aim to bring value to all the micro segments'
Go Play!
Making Smart Phones Agile
 





 

Current Issue


Does your business have Green Intelligence


What is SDSIASWODB?


No.1 Linux platform for SAP Applications


I Want To Protect My Data





Your Opinion Matters

CIO agenda on Cloud Computing

How good is Obama for India?


   CIOL Services
IT News | IT Jobs | IT Outsourcing | IT Shopping
 



  For Voice&Data Print Subscription
  [ Magazine Subscription ]  [ Contact Info ]  [ Advertise : Online | Magazine | Advertising Print ]

 
Other CyberMedia web sites
[Dataquest]  [PCQuest]  [CIOL]  [Living Digital]  [IDC India]
[DQ Channels]  [The DQweek]  [CyberMedia careers]
[CyberMedia Events]   [CyberMedia Digital]  [Cyber Astro]  [CyberMedia India]
[Global Services]  [BioSpectrum]  [BioSpectrum Asia]
[Computer Shopper]   [College Buying Guide]   [Voice&DataConnect

CyberMedia India Ltd

 
  Copyright © CMIL. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.
Usage of this web site is subject to terms and conditions.
Broken links? Problems with site? Send email to
webmaster@ciol.com