November 09 Round up
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Chairman's BriefDear Members, As we approach the end of 2009, your Trade Association is busier than ever and ends the year in good heart. I hope that as many members as possible will be attending the General Meeting on December 8th and afterwards for a few drinks. This month has seen plenty of activity. We are working across various initiatives including the Central Industry Database and various meetings have been held with PPP to discuss how this can be best implemented in an integrated and cost effective way, more on this at the GM. The SMS voting group, a sub-committee formed from the Interactive Broadcast Forum met with the Mobile Operators to discuss a plan for bringing back SMS voting to prime time formats. A meeting was held at the Radio centre and it was agreed to hold a joint workshop with their members to look at a plan for bringing back premium listener services. In addition, AIME’s 3-year plan should be ready for presentation to Members shortly, as part of this there have been a number of meetings held with other Stakeholders including MDA, MMA and IAB. At the GM on 8th December, we will be presenting updates to members on various fronts. The Vice chair will be reporting at the GM feedback from the latest ILP which was held on November 17th. We will also be updating on consultations including PRS Bad Debt and PTV3. There will be a summary of issues discussed at the PPP Forum held on November 5th. We are joined by guest speaker, Alex Kozloff of Orange, at the GM. AIME membership has held up well in a tough economic climate and whilst our cash reserves are slightly lower than this time last year, our new members and membership retention has been encouraging. AIME is looking to increasingly focus on the issues that will make the biggest difference whether it be reacting to issues as they arise or planning for the future. Finally, I would like to thank my board colleagues for all of their input to AIME this year: Jeremy Flynn, David Sheridan, Rory Maguire, Adam Maxted, Bindi Norwell, Rudd Apsey, Tony Couch, Paul Lynch and Sally Weatherall, together with the Executive team consisting of Toby, Roy, Zoe and Bianca. Edward Boddington | |
ShowcaseQualcomm shows off its IQNew AIME member Qualcomm held an interesting event last month, called Innovation Qualcomm ( IQ ), to demonstrate and showcase the US company’s latest technologies and strategy roadmap for the foreseeable future. Some people are still asking the question: “Why is Qualcomm interested in Europe?” when its traditional markets remain in the US and Far Eastern regions. Qualcomm EVP and President, Andrew Gilbert, didn’t waste any time before tackling this issue. “Europe is an incredibly important part of the market,” said Gilbert. “With nearly half of all European mobile users predicted to be on 3G connections by the end of 2010.” And if Western Europe is considered a major market for 3G then just take a look at growth prospects for Eastern Europe, where current 3G penetration resides at a lowly 7 percent but is forecast to grow to 11 percent next year, according to Gilbert. The question which Qualcomm is asking, as well as the collective minds of the mobile industry is, what will people actually do with all this 3G capacity? “It’s always about the new,” said Gilbert. “And the new can come about in some strange ways.” In terms of mobile applications, Qualcomm’s BREW platform has delivered more than two billion paid-for apps, said Gilbert and is still the largest premium mobile applications store on the market. But what about the iPhone?! I hear you shout. Well, the iPhone iTunes store might have seen more downloads in numbers, but a lot of those apps are free. With Brew, they are all paid for. In addition, Qualcomm has achieved these figures on a feature phone platform, not a smartphone platform, said Gilbert. “Not just a single OS with four or five different device types. We’ve got some previous in this market, some ability to execute in this space.” Despite the relative demise of the Brew platform over the past couple years, app stores continue to remain central to Qualcomm’s content strategy and reflecting this is the rise of Plaza. “We’re going beyond the notion of a single app store,” said Gilbert. “You’re going to see that market segment, mature and fragment.” It won’t just be operators and handset manufacturers owning app stores, but also web portals and big name brands too. The Qualcomm pitch will be to run app stores for companies as an outsourced service. This is something AIME’s K&N Seminars will be taking a look at next year, see here...
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