Study: European WLAN market to boom, then bust

Study: European WLAN market to boom, then bust

The Wild West spirit that has accompanied the rapid spread of wireless Internet services across Europe is slowly coming to an end.

The European market for public wireless LAN (WLAN) services, after a significant boom phase, will encounter a bust phase for lack of viable business models, leading to industry consolidation. Eventually, the sector will be dominated by a handful of large mobile operators vying for high-end business users, according to a new study published Monday by Giga Research, a subsidiary of Forrester Research Inc.

Although the European hotspot market lags Asia and the U.S. by between 12 and 18 months, Giga projects it to grow from around 1,000 hotspots in 2002 to 32,500 in 2007. By then, however, new third-generation (3G) mobile broadband networks will begin to seriously rival WLAN service, according to the study.

For public WLAN services to become viable in Europe, service providers will need to correct cumbersome log-on and payment procedures as well as security and quality of service (QoS) issues, Giga analyst Bernt Ostergaard said in the report. And they will need to offer attractive pricing schemes.

European business users, in particular, are looking for public WLAN services that mirror offerings already widely available in Global Service for Mobile Communications (GSM) networks, such as roaming, integrated billing on their mobile phone bill and mediation agreements between operators and clearing houses.

In a nutshell, they seek simplicity and a way to avoid dealing with a series of different billing arrangements, according to Ostergaard.

Giga offers recommendations for enterprises planning to use WLAN services over the next few years.

With significant turmoil expected in the emerging European hotspot market, for instance, enterprises should avoid signing contracts longer than six months and choose pay-as-you-go services. They should wait for roaming services that offer sufficient regional coverage and integrated billing with existing mobile access services before making any long-term commitments.

Long term, enterprise will need to look closely at mobile operators. Unlike WLAN-only service providers, these operators will be in the best position to provide integrated WLAN and mobile data services, such as General Packet Radio Service (GPRS), according to the report. Beginning in 2004, enterprises will want to check operators that can provide WLAN-GPRS integration and in late 2006, they will need to look at those capable of providing WLAN-3G integration.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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