Sharechat Logo

Telecom sets up incubator unit for new services in UFB world

Monday 8th April 2013

Text too small?

Telecom Corp, the country's biggest telecommunications company, has set up a new incubator-style unit to come up with new services and products that can leverage the shift to an ultra-fast broadband world.

The Auckland-based company has launched a digital ventures team to seek out high potential growth opportunities to deliver new revenue streams and generate bigger returns, it said in a statement. The unit will set up partnerships in new markets to build new businesses and products, which may be rolled into the larger Telecom group or hived off into businesses in their own right.

Initiatives already underway include financial services such as Telecom's existing smartphone near field communications and mobile wallets, big data and advertising, over-the-top services like entertainment and home management, and e-verticals such as e-learning and e-health applications.

"Telecom is making a strategic shift to a future oriented, competitive provider of communications, entertainment and IT services over our networks and the cloud," chief executive Simon Moutter said. "It won't be enough for us to become just cost competitive, we also need to identify future revenue generating opportunities that are arising in a rapidly changing world."

The phone company is in the process of laying off up to 1,200 staff in a bid to strip out as much as $110 million in its annual wage bill, as it moves its focus to offering services and away from building networks to become a data-driven and mobile-focused telecommunications operator.

Last month, Telecom said it was looking at entertainment services as part of its future make-up at a time when broadcasting and telecommunications face growing convergence. Streaming and on-demand video are seen as the appeal for consumers to buy ultra-fast broadband services, and Telecom launched its retail fibre offering last week.

The new digital ventures unit will be headed by Rod Snodgrass, who has been chief product officer for the past two years.

"Data and mobility mega trends are only going to continue as a digital life becomes a reality," Snodgrass said. "While these trends carry challenges, they also point towards potential and emerging business growth opportunities."

Shares in Telecom fell 1.2 percent to $2.38 in trading today, and have gained 5.9 percent this year.

BusinessDesk.co.nz



  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

Telecom Corporation of New Zealand (TEL)
Telecom in drive to latch on to growing data usage with 4G mobile launch next month
Telecom lines up to buy 700MHz spectrum to extend reach of 4G network
Telecom backs setting copper prices until 2020, warns against getting too far away from input cost
Telecom puts $60M price tag on new Auckland data centre, Hawkins, AECOM win build
Telecom ends jobs purge, looks for ‘more sophisticated’ ways to save money
Telecom FY earnings fall to bottom of guidance range, sees unchanged dividend in 2014
Telecom takes spat with Vodafone to regulator after dropping court action
Telecom unbundling key to regulator's copper conundrum
Telecom lures customers to faster services in EPL deal