|
Back to Index
Our
information technology predictions for 2012
Technology Zimbabwe
January 13, 2012
View this article on the Technology Zimbabwe website
Another exciting
year in information technologies lies ahead with a lot of promise
for the continued growth of the sector. Below, we provide our thoughts
on what we think 2012 holds. It would be great to know what you
the reader think in the comments.
Mobile
money
2011 was the
year of the launch of mobile money services in Zimbabwe. The uptake
is not clear yet but as the year progresses it will become clear
which service will dominate. Econet clearly has the mobile telephony
monopoly edge. Despite its Ecocash service being the most expensive
to use (even after a price reduction) it has 5.686 million active
SIM cards in a market of about 9 million subscriptions. ZimSwitch,
the closest contender has an army of banks and the country's
second largest mobile network behind them, all wanting in on the
mobile money rush. NetOne, the smallest mobile operator in the country
also has is running with a service called OneWallet, whose main
hold-down has been the need for subscribers to swap in old SIM cards.
2012 is interesting
in that mobile banking will increasingly become a necessity for
the everyday man. It will happen faster in Zimbabwe than it has
in the rest of Africa precisely because people here have recent
memories of (and associate banks with) the mess that became financial
services in Zimbabwe during the hyperinflationary period. Many people
lost their savings when the central bank revoked bank licenses and,
at the height of the hyperinflation in 2009, money in Zim dollar
accounts was frozen and hasn't been released to this day.
This aversion to dealing with traditional banks disfavours ZimSwitch
Mobile, which, in partnership with the banks, still requires an
individual to walk into a bank and sign up for an account.
An effort will
be made in 2012 to make mobile money as mobile network neutral as
possible especially by ZimSwitch Mobile, which so far requires a
new subscriber customer to get a Telecel SIM card. They'll
likely face problems getting Econet, the largest mobile operator,
on board fast enough. Econet has 63% of the mobile telephony market
and doesn't 'need to be nice' to ZimSwitch Mobile
immediately.
eCommerce
and mCommerce
The natural
result of mobile money is mobile commerce. While most of the mobile
money transactions will remain airtime and more local remittances,
the convenience for subscribers and retailers to receive payment
via mobile money services will become more apparent. Mobile money
will also present the means to transact on the web. More thoughts
on that in an article we posted a few days ago here.
Basic
phones will still rule
Africa is still
the land of the basic phone and Zimbabwe is no exception. Even though
we would all like to wish this away, the fact is the bulk of the
older population still find their basic mobile phones a complete
package. This is of course an unpopular reality among techies as
most prefer learning and developing cool iPhone and Android apps.
The fact remains that basic phones cost just US $15 while the cheapest
usable Android smartphone is around $150. This, is what ForgetMeNot
Africa gets very well.
It is not to
say that feature phones won't get smarter or that smartphones
won't come down in price. The Huawei Ideos U8150 which we
reviewed here last year is priced at under $100 in Kenya for example.
This trend will spread to much of Africa, including Zimbabwe. Econet
and other companies selling mobile phones will reduce the prices
during this year. It's the only logical way this will go.
Otherwise, cross border traders might as well import the phones
from Kenya. The low cost Asian imitations in the meanwhile, will
be harder to sell and will hopefully start to disappear or just
be priced significantly lower.
Cheaper
last mile broadband connectivity
Last year saw
more and more Internet Service Providers and Access Providers like
Aptics, Africom, Brodacom and Aquiva begin to offer Mobile WiMax
connectivity as a last mile option for consumers. Forget for a minute
the annoying 4G claims, this actually has resulted in an increase
in options and massive reduction in price both for the equipment
and the service. Now, $50 a month can buy you a connected-all-month
multi-user broadband package. It's no perfect connection,
and the price is still far from ordinary-family-friendly but more
people that didn't before can now afford a home connection.
The trend is
likely to grow in the coming year as providers look for ways to
increase their customer base and competition for the new urban middle
class increases.
More
information technology start-up activity
2011 saw the
launch of new mobile and web properties like Dhiri, Tengesa, Sha,
Ribe, iZimbabwe, Zimazon, ZimCarSales, and the continued expansion
of the user base of existing ones like Classifieds.co.zw, Dipleague.
The mild successes some of these will register will increasingly
show geeks, developers, tech entrepreneurs, content creators and
(hopefully) some investors, the opportunities that a 72% mobile
penetration and the growing opening up of the internet to more people
present both locally and even continentally.
The lack of
tech skills locally especially software engineering and UI design
will become clearer as the year progresses and the techies that
see this early and equip themselves will stand out and be rewarded.
While the template-installation-experts who gank Joomla templates
on the internet and claim they developed the apps will still find
space in this expanding ecosystem, it will be easier for the tech
community to tell who the real skilled developers and designers
are.
From
access to applications
Information
and communications technology issues locally have been focused on
infrastructure and access, hence the coverage, even here, predominantly
what the mobile operators and internet service providers are offering.
In 2012 it's going to be more than just the access. Infrastructure
will still be topical and key to developments in the industry, but
the applications running on these platforms will start to take on
more recognition as a means for new entrepreneurs to utilize the
infrastructure in ways already proven to work in other markets.
Facebook
continues to grow
Facebook has
been the amazing and simple tool that has brought ordinary people
to the internet, especially the urban population. Unlike search
and email, no one needs to understand Facebook to use it. You create
an account, find your friends and family, and you start sharing.
This is the power Facebook has and it will continue pulling more
and more people to the internet in 2012, despite its blocking of
Zim businesses from advertising on the platform. As access grows
so will Zimbabwe's Facebook population.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|