I have made it my personal life long objective that I shall not unleash
her into the professional world when the time comes thinking that
conversations are conducted primarily by reducing each sentence into 140
characters of the mobile texting kind.
Mobile service providers are benefitting from increased number of text messages sent by Kenyans.
Kenyans
sent 13 billion text messages in the year to June as they took
advantage of flat-rate bundle offers from mobile operators and
aggressive promotions during the period.
Latest
statistics from the Communications Commission of Kenya (CCK) indicate
that Short Messaging Services (SMS) rose a “whopping” 208 per cent in
the 2012/2013 financial year.
“The significant growth
in the number of SMS sent could be attributable to flat rate bundle SMS
offers which have increased popularity in the market,” the CCK said. The
preference of text messages to calling by young people is also a key
driver of the new trend.
Some 12.4 billion of these text messages were on-net, a category that registered 300 per cent growth.
CCK
says this trend is further proof that the growth in SMS was driven by
company promotions. Many of the promotions are only applicable to
subscribers sending messages within their network.
Analysts
however say that the volume of SMSs sent will decline overtime when
internet use rises significantly as seen in developed markets.
Internet
subscriptions shot up 61 per cent to 12.9 million, also attributed to
promotions and offers run by the telecom operators.
CCK now estimates that 19.6 million people, or nearly half the Kenyan population, have access to the Internet.
These
trends in the non-voice revenue streams in the telecom sector are in
sharp contrast to the relatively sluggish growth experienced in the
voice category, which has been the traditional key source of revenue.
CCK
notes that voice traffic has been declining when analysed quarter on
quarter, since December 2012. Annually, though, voice traffic grew 6.8
per cent to about 28.9 billion minutes.
“The decline in
mobile traffic over [the quarter] could be due to availability of other
affordable communication alternatives such as SMS and other mobile
applications such as WhatsApp that have continued to gain popularity,”
writes CCK.
Realising that revenues from this segment
of the business are most likely about to plateau, telecom operators have
been eager to develop alternative sources of revenue, hence the
flooding of local media with SMS and data offers.
Net profit up
This
strategy already seems to be paying off. Safaricom, the only listed
mobile operator locally, on Tuesday reported a 45 per cent increase in
half-year net profits to Sh11.26 billion.
The company
attributed the profits to a strong performance in data and SMS, which
raked in Sh5.47 billion and Sh6.35 billion respectively.
In
Wednesday’s trading at the Nairobi Securities Exchange, the company
hit the Sh400 billion market capitalisation mark after its stock
rallied to Sh10.20 following demand by investors eyeing bigger
dividends.
According to CCK’s numbers, Safaricom is gradually gaining market share that had been eroded.
The
company has grown its market share by subscriptions to 65.9 per cent up
from 64 per cent in June 2012. Safaricom also controls over 93.6 per
cent of the SMS market.
Airtel and yuMobile also experienced growth in market share by subscriptions to 17.1 per cent and 10 per cent respectively.
However,
Telkom Kenya recorded significant losses in its place in the market as
it lost 31.7 per cent of its subscribers and saw market share eroded to 7
per cent from 10.5 per cent.
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