Posts tagged: industry

Why Facebook still needs Mark Zuckerberg as leader

By , August 26, 2012 9:28 am

A comment on criticism by Carly Fiorina and Gordon Bethune.

The biggest challenge to Facebook right now is going mobile.

Effectively, Facebook is still in product development phase. It needs a war-time leader, a geek not a slick businessman.

The mobile app, mobile ecosystem industry is still growing without an emergence of a dominant giant. How many business CEO are there who are experienced to run a mobile company?

Mark would do well to take the advice of people who have done it before…

Carly Fiorina

HNX:ACB 21 August 2012

By , August 21, 2012 8:48 am

Technology Industry in Vietnam: NOW is the time

By , August 13, 2011 4:29 am


Toward industry structure of Social Media: erecting the trend of adoption of service

By , May 2, 2009 3:24 pm

I could not find the industry structure of social media, so I decide to graph it, piece by piece.

We’ve been talking about early adopters and near-future critical mass. What links them?

Here is what I propose:

Trend of adoption of service: General vs. Social Media

Characteristics Cause
General trend adoption is polynomial, social media’s is exponential
  • Adoption is done virally
  • Technological platforms for mass and viral WoM
  • A reflection of Chris Anderson’s The Long Tail (see below)
  • Adoption of products from the blue oceans
The number of innovators and early adopters is very small compared to the critical mass High cost of learning for majority
Absolute value of critical mass is high
  • Low cost of acquisition
  • One-to-many relationship between consumers and services of the same category
Abandon rate is high
  • Low cost of exit criteria for providers
  • Moderate cost of exit criteria for consumers, mostly from social graph pressure
Social media adoption is not symmetric Influencing factors are not symmetric
Till this point of this entry, late majority and laggards never existed Social media is very young

Chris Anderson The Long Tail

Any example?

See this measure of unique visitors, which services do you think it represents?

Compete Tracking

Click here to see the answer.

Reflection

  1. This is a personal attempt to model one aspect of an industry
  2. The decline is purely imaginary as few successful products have reached their decline.
  3. I’ll figure out to whom and how I will want to present this type of modeling.

The Vietnamese online industry, the 20-trillion prediction and its Environment

By , March 14, 2009 11:02 pm

Mr. Le Hong Minh’s prediction that the Vietnamese online industry has the potential to enjoy 20 trillion dong revenues has stirred up the discussion among somewhat weary players in the past weeks. The dominant reaction, from my observation, is disbelief in such a huge number.

This short note of mine contributes to the research side of the topic, by not directly concluding the feasibility of the prediction, but by raising awareness of the environment in which the statement was made.

The 3 elements of the prediction

Mr. Minh took the reported number of Internet users by VNNIC of 20 million as the base. Then he predicted that the number would grow by 15% per annum, which constitutes the rate.

A little calculation gives us 40 million: 20m * (1 + 15%) 5 ~ 40m

From there, he gave a rough estimation that if one person would spend VND 500,000 per year, the market would easily be 20 trillion.

From this result, I have these questions:

1. Is the base a precise estimate?

While being the officially published figure, the number twenty million is questioned by some that it might not correctly reflect the true amount.

Duplications might be counted. For example, a person goes online from his company’s workstation, then goes online on his laptop at an Internet cafe during an appointment, then goes online from his PC at home. If for some reasons the internet connection breaks down while he has important documents to send, he may go to an Internet service. At least 4 occurrences might have been recorded. The recorded number increases if he goes to multiple Internet cafes.

2. From where do we have 15% per annum?

The users that contribute to the growth can be roughly grouped into:

  1. Younger people growing up to be able to use the Internet
  2. Adults from big cities learning to use the Internet
  3. Users from farther provinces across Vietnam

Among these, each user from (2) has the greatest buying power compared to each user from other groups.

3. What will be the percentage of the monetizable?

To avoid complexity, we temporarily accept the 20 million figure.

Ratio of market penetration = number of monetizable users / total number of Internet users

Not all users can be monetized on. Not all new users in the following years can be monetized on.

If the total number of users can grow by 15% each year, how will the number of monetizable users grow?

The Environment

Of course, the companies operating in the industry are not separable from the environment they are in. Their possibilities of success also depend on:

The legal infrastructure

How complete will the laws for e-commerce be by 2014?

The technical infrastructure

How ready is the technical infrastructure of companies for e-commerce transactions and online games?

Internet bandwidth? Websites’ load and stress capabilities? Security?

Roles of participants

It is also important to pay attention to the role of participants in this topic.

Mr. Minh’s role is not that of an analyst, or a journalist, or a blogger. He was the Chairman of VinaGame, an entity that would benefit from any possitive information released and any buzz viralled.

Mr. Minh’s statement may have generated the following effects:

  • Created a buzz in the industry at the beginning of a hard year. More than that, it was a buzz that virals.
  • Motivated some of his staff, IT professionals, IT students and online enthusiasts.

Conclusion

This encapsulates some questions I raise in reaction to this prediction. I’m pretty confident I will be able to collect more data to answer some of them by near future. Meanwhile, some questions, nevertheless, needn’t answers.

How have you received this information? What role did you take?

What questions are you having? What arguments do you want to put forward?

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