Monday, March 7, 2011

Docomo Merges i-Mode And Smartphone Businesses

There is no reason for i-mode provider NTT Docomo to give up on its highly profitable mobile Internet service for feature phones as long as it makes money, but Japan’s biggest mobile carrier is starting to change things. According to Japanese business daily The Nikkei, Docomo is moving to combine its i-mode and smartphone businesses as early as next month.

The paper isn’t giving away too many details, but says that, for example,  Docomo plans to offer content (i.e. apps) available on i-mode only to smartphone users in the future.

Another example: In customer service, NTT Docomo had a workforce of 2,500 people handling calls from feature phone users so far. But apparently, the company wants to move up to 500 of these employees to the 250 people who have been handling inquiries from smartphone users so far.

Docomo merging its i-mode and smartphone businesses isn’t a surprise: the company expects to ship six million smartphones in the next fiscal year, more than double the amount it aims at selling this fiscal (2.5 million).

The carrier plans to release 40-50 models in the year starting April – about 50% of the new models will likely be smartphones.


Link to full article

The Cloud Computing Market in India–High Time We Bring Legal Regulations in Place?

The Cloud Computing market in India is growing at a phenomenal rate and is expected to touch a billion USD by 2015. While this is a great news for startups and SMBs, most of the CIOs are still stuck over the lack of legal framework regarding Cloud Computing in India.

Legal Frameworks [Cloud Services]

There are no legal frameworks that hold the Cloud vendor responsible

- If they lose your data

- If data is ‘accidentally’ leaked.

That is, if you host your data in Cloud, the cloud host cannot be held liable for the above mentioned ‘mistakes’. Moreover, government security agencies can access a company’s information, even without a court warrant, which is basically a threat on data privacy.

In essence, there is no Data Protection/Privacy Law in India and while these are not issues that SMBs really worry about, CXOs of mid-to-large organizations will always be wary of cloud services. Unless we have certain legal frameworks, large companies will be hesitant to adopt Cloud services and this will limit the market opportunity for startups operating in this space.

What’s your opinion? If you are a startup operating in Cloud space, do share your experience selling to Indian CXOs.


Link to full article