There's been an explosion in growth of Wi-Fi hotspots during the last several years. Best-guess estimates range from 33,000 WLAN hotspots worldwide to more than 250,000 at present. (That's mainly because service providers, themselves, are unsure how many hotspots they have in operation, says an industry analyst.)
Driving that demand, customers now expect wireless LAN connectivity inside everything from restaurants to airports, hotels and hospitals. (To read about the Wi-Fi strategies at Starbucks, McDonald's, Borders and Panera Bread, see "Should Retailers Offer Free Wi-Fi to Customers?")
But what also has become part of customers' expectations: Free Wi-Fi. According to recent In-Stat survey data, nearly 50 percent of respondents said they would only use a free hotspot. Cost is one factor, notes Daryl Schoolar, a senior analyst at In-Stat, in an e-mail. But what also factors into customers reluctance to pay for the service is their perception of a lack of value. "You pay $X dollars per session, and you can only use it at a few locations," he says.
In addition, the proliferation of free Wi-Fi hotspots, Schoolar notes, "makes it challenging to get people to pay."
It's not surprising, then, that In-Stat data showed that hotspot access revenues are not keeping pace with usage growth. "The explosion of free sites is really driving the market," Schoolar says. "Wi-Fi grows like a weed, it shows up in areas you never expect."
Getting People to Pay
Because of this pressure to make Wi-Fi free, hotspot operators are looking at other methods to generate revenue, notes Schoolar.
"Operators have started bundling hotspot access with other services, such as fixed and mobile broadband," he writes in the In-Stat report. "This way, consumers can access hotspots without paying a separate fee, and operators can generate some access revenue by bundling the cost of the service into a bigger service package that consumers are willing to purchase."
Collecting hotspot revenue is easier in some captive settings, like an airport or hotel, Schoolar notes. "Hotspot owners are still charging if they control a prime location like airports, where there is no alternative," he says.
Other WLAN operators are still charging for Wi-Fi access because that's their business model. "It is hard for them to just walk away from that revenue stream even if it will decline," Schoolar says.
That decline in access revenues will begin in 2010 in United States and in 2012 in the rest of the world, Schoolar predicts. "The US market is more competitive with free sites along with proliferation of cellular data and WiMax rollouts," he adds.
Latest on Access Points
- Proxim ships 802.11n access points, claims fastest speed
- The trouble with telecommuting
- Here comes the digital nomad dream vehicle
- Ericsson attaches blades for wind power to base station
- Google seeks patent to break mobile subscriber shackles
- Solar-powered Wi-Fi trailer connects remote sites
- Internode offers free iPhone services at hotspots
- IEEE standardizes fast Wi-Fi roaming
- Unified communications takes center field at ballpark
- Wi-Fi wants to be free, but not all businesses agree
Mobile Essentials
- Businesses see smartphone use rising, survey shows
- Femtocell FAQ: Time for a 'personal mobile phone tower'?
- Mobile tech under Obama
- T-Mobile G1: A tour of Google Android
- Analysts: OS focus could boost Moto's prospects
- New Nokia device highlights cheap smart phone trend
- Mobile industry split over UMA versus femtocells
- Qualcomm claims first-ever 20 megabits-per-second data call
- Industry heavyweights line-up behind Sony's TransferJet
- Mobiles, SMS play a role in Afghanistan security
TechWorld Jobs (beta)
Whitepapers
TechWorld Blogs
-

TalkingTech
The view from the top of IT with TechWorld Editor Rodney Gedda
-

Entrenched
Cooking up better code, IDG's developers reveal some of their secrets
-

Broadband Voice
Darren Pauli digs in from the front line of Australia's broadband battleground
Recent blog posts
- Telstra kicked out of NBN process
- Linux on the iPhone won’t change the world - yet
- A Novell approach to business
- An open storage stack? I like the sound of that
- The mobile clone wars: fighting for a better phone experience
- Stopping the "Clean Feed"
- Identifying web platforms
- Clean Feed ‘not technically possible’
- No Clean Feed - well duh!
- Conroy's content cops still on the cards
Recent comments
- video converter os x
10 hours 51 min ago - video converter os x
10 hours 56 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 3 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 4 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 4 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 5 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 10 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 12 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 13 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 15 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 16 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 18 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 20 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 22 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 24 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 25 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 27 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 28 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 28 min ago - video converter os x
11 hours 29 min ago







