Africa is becoming a major focus for OTT players looking to exploit the growing mobile ecosystem. According to IDT Global’s Jonah Fink, the continent’s service providers have the capability to rise to the challenge OTT players provide.
“The goal for service providers is that they basically need to become OTT operators faster than the OTT providers can become carriers,” said Frink, “but they can do it and the fact is that consumers don’t like OTT operators very much – they would stay loyal to the African Telco brands if they could get the same services.”
“Ovum is already estimating that globally carrier OTT could be worth $20bn by 2018 . That $20bn will not just fall into laps of African operators – they’ll have to make sure they fight for it. They also predict that OTT operators could cost carriers $63bn per year if they don’t react fast enough and in the correct way.”
The growth of mobile penetration across Africa and the ever increasing speed of cellular roll outs have enabled huge market potential for OTT operators such as Skype, WhatsApp and Viber, posing a huge threat to African Operators revenues.
However, this threat may not be as bad as once feared. In a recent survey by YouGov 42 percent of consumers associate the phrase ‘Services I trust’ with a mobile operator, rather than an OTT player. The survey found that respondents felt mobile operators would be more proficient in the provision of OTT-style services than current OTT providers.