Title: Telematics and
1Telematics and Connected Vehicles
- Mike Peterson (LFM 94)
- Strategy Planning Manager
- OnStar
- michael.l.peterson_at_onstar.com
2Telematics and Connected Vehicles
- Definition of Telematics
- Drivers
- Infrastructure
- Current Future Offerings
- Challenges Opportunities
3Definition of Telematics and Connected Vehicle
- A two-way connection to and from a vehicle for
data and information transfer - Telematics is typically not
- Onboard autonomous navigation systems
- AM/FM radio
- A telematics system consists of
- Vehicle (cell phone, GPS, vehicle data)
- Wireless interface
- Back-office systems
4Potential Components of a Telematics System
Point to Multi-Point CELLULAR
WIRELESS CONNECTIVITY
WIRELESS INTERFACE
Satellite / Microwave
Fiber / Cable
ENABLED VEHICLE
CELL TOWERS
Call Center
Application Management
BACK-OFFICE SYSTEMS
Content Providers
Source Erik Bue
5Markets for Telematics
- Vehicle types
- Personal vehicles cars, trucks
- Boats, motorcycles
- Work vehicles mail trucks, semis, Border
Patrol, Coast Guard, ambulances - Vehicle owners
- Personal
- Fleets
- Military
6Value Propositions for Telematics
- To consumers
- Safety security
- Time savings (navigation)
- Increased productivity (in vehicle)
- To fleet provider
- Optimization of assets (asset tracking,
performance monitoring) - To business
- Additional data from vehicles (warranty, usage)
- Increased vehicle sales (or price of survival)
- To government
- Improved infrastructure management (traffic,
tolls)
7There is a significant market opportunity for
telematics, if done right.
- Wireless use is growing
- US wireless industry is 80B (WSJ 7/28/03)
- 30 M US households will employ data networks by
end of 2007 (Park Associates) - Intels Otellini predicts that 1.5 B PCs will
have wired or wireless broadband connections by
2010 - Cable broadband services posting operating
profits of 60 (CIBC) - Consumers want to be more productive
- Consumers pay 15-100/mth for cell phones
internet service providers - Average US citizen spends 541 hrs/yr driving in
vehicles (1.5 hrs/day) (NTPS) - 97 M people in the US spend at least 37 minutes
commuting in their car every day. - Automotive industry is highly competitive
features and services which provide a lead are
crucial to success
Source Erik Bue
8Predictions Telematics-Enabled Auto Sales
12
10
8
USA
6
W. Europe
Japan
4
2
0
2002
2004
2007
2010
9Prediction Telematics-Enabled Autos In-Use
45
40
35
30
25
USA
W. Europe
20
Japan
15
10
5
0
2002
2004
2007
2010
10Current Telematics Services - Consumers
- Safety
- Air Bag Deployment Notification
- Seat Belt Tension Notification
- Emergency Assistance
- Roadside Assistance
- Security
- Automatic Theft Notification
- Theft Tracking
- GeoFencing
- Vehicle Status
- Remote Diagnostics
- Remote Vehicle Operation
- Remote Unlock
- Remote Horn/Lights
- Information Services
- Navigation Assistance
- Points-of-Interest
- Vehicle User Info
- Convenience Services
- Internet Based Services
11Additional Telematics Services - Fleets
- Fleet Performance
- Maintenance Management
- Fleet Tracking
- Asset Management
- Vehicle Information
- Usage Monitoring
- Vehicle Tracking
- Fleet Utilization
- Customer Processing
- Paperless Manifest
- User log book
- Instant Messaging
- Job Dispatching
12Examples OEM telematics offerings
- Mercedes (Tele Aid) 240/yr airtime to call
center - 75/yr route support/traffic package
- 1300 optional integrated phone
- 400 voice recognition option for phone
-
- Jaguar (JaguarNet) 2250 airtime
- Includes portable phone and voice-activated
controls -
- BMW (Assist) 120/yr
- 1290 phone reqd for telematics
- 1800 navigation system reqd for telematics
-
- Volvo (On Call Plus) 240/yr
- Does not offer route support or remote
diagnostics - OnStar 200/yr for safety security services
(airtime included) - 400/yr to include information navigation
services -
13OEM Telematics Players Offerings over Time
(North America)
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
2003
CY
14Many opportunities exist in the future to enhance
current services and create new ones.
- Data services
- Software downloads
- Content downloads
- Enhanced vehicle diagnosis repair
- Expansion into other dimensions of vehicle
lifecycle (manufacturing, vehicle development,
design) - Key enablers for future services/growth
- Communications bandwidth
- Coverage (wireless)
- Vehicle penetration
- Vehicle integration (messaging)
- Reduced costs (hardware, service)
- Standards (Bluetooth, vehicle messaging)
15There are many pieces of the puzzle which
create value in telematics.
- Marketing of services (education of consumers)
- Integration of services (menu structures)
- Integration of equipment into vehicle
(human/machine interface) - Connection of vehicles to content (wireless)
- Conversion of data into services (back office)
- Content providers (vehicle data, entertainment)
16Competition among service providers is seldom
one-to-one each player has a slightly different
offering.
- OEM-owned telematics service providers (OnStar)
- Aftermarket devices (LoJack, NetworkCar, Mobile
Guardian) - Independent telematics providers retail (ATX,
Cross Country) - Independent telematics providers fleet
(Qualcomm OmniTRACS, _at_Road) - Voice portals (TellMe, BeVocal, Internet Speech,
AOL By Phone) - Cell phone voice services (Verizon, Sprint)
- Auto club services (AAA)
17In addition, each piece of the telematics value
chain has its own set of players.
- Content
- TeleAtlas, NavTech, MetroNetworks
- CNN, Disney, ESPN
- Operating systems (Microsoft, Java, Linux)
- Vehicle hardware (Delphi, Nokia, Samsung)
- Voice recognition (Nuance, Speechworks, IBM)
- Call centers (EDS, GE, Cross Country)
- Business Operations (Digitas, Acxiom, Sigma)
- Issues in partner selection
- Volume capability
- Support capability (established firm?)
- Exclusivity
- Flexibility
18Finally, there are a variety of wireless
technologies that can be applied to telematics.
- Cell (Analog, CDMA, GSM voice, data/SMS)
- Short-range communications (Bluetooth)
- Medium-range communications (802.11)
- Satellite communications (Boeing Thuraya, XM
Radio, Sirius) - Issues in technology selection
- Level of ubiquity
- Reliability of technology
- Upgradability
- Level of control over provider (multiple
sourcing)
19 Challenges Hardware/Technology
- Clockspeed mismatch
- Telematics services (1-6 months)
- Consumer electronics (6-18 months)
- Vehicle development process (3-5 years)
- Vehicle ownership lifecycle (6-15 years)
- Shifts in technology (analog ? digital)
- Technology application (client vs. server)
- Challenges Societal
- Government regulation (FCC E911)
- Interface with emergency service providers
20Challenges Strategic/Financial
- High cost of infrastructure
- Investment control
- Involvement of multiple partners
- Packaging of services
- Wide variety of customer needs/wants
- Consumer confusion
- Selection of business model
- Upfront equipment sales
- Service subscription
- Grow critical market mass
- Operating efficiencies
- Licensing/royalties
21Examples of Business Models In Play
- i-Mode DoCoMo Define platform for 3rd party
software development monthly revenue from basic
service, data traffic and fee from 3rd party
service providers - Microsoft Create the OS for vehicles that
becomes the standard that all future consumer
telematics applications must be built off of - OnStar Seed network through factory-installation
onboard vehicles purchases - Cell Cos Compete based on lowest price to
service quality ratio - TiVo Charge monthly service fee upfront at a
discount - Palm/PDA Define market hardware OS nurture
application developers. Make alliances with Cell
Cos. - Dell Least expensive, custom-assembled modular
systems based on commodity components - Leverage COTS Components eg Apple iPod Over 1M
people have been willing to pay 300-500 for the
5-40GB drives.
Source Erik Bue
22Parting Thoughts
- Telematics represents a significant but
complicated opportunity. - There are many ways to create value in
telematics, many of which have yet to be fully
exploited. - The telematics industry is a network of
partners across a variety of disciplines. - The winners in telematics, as well as the
ultimate potential of the industry, is yet to be
determined.
23Open Questions (for discussion)
- How does/could your business participate in this
space? - What needs to happen to unlock the full potential
of telematics? - What service domains will be most important in
the future? - What business model(s) do you think will be most
successful?
24Appendix OnStar Overview
25OnStars Beginnings
1996 2002-3 Employees 18 436 Subscribers 1 2M Ha
rdware Phone 5th Generation Services 8 15 Database
600K 7M Advisor Seats 6 1,000 Distribution 1,500
Dealers Factory Brand Recognition 1 90
26Portfolio of Core OnStar Services
- Directions
- Connections
- All Safe Sound services plus
- Route Support/Directions
- Information/ Convenience Services
- RideAssist
- Safe Sound
- Automatic Notification of Air Bag Deployment
- Emergency Services
- Roadside Assistance
- Stolen Vehicle Location
- AccidentAssist
- Remote Door Unlock
- Remote Diagnostics
- Online Concierge
- Luxury Leisure
- All Directions Connections services plus
- Personal Concierge
- OnStar MED-NET
27OnStar Personal Calling
- Embedded in vehicle
- Hands-free, voice-activated interface
- Pre-paid minutes
- No roaming, no long distance charges
- Nationwide wireless network coverage
28OnStar Virtual Advisor
Personalized web-based information delivered to
the vehicle using hands-free, voice-activated
interface
- E-mail
- Sports Scores/News
- The Sporting News Radio
- ESPN.com
- Weather
- Weather.com
- Traffic
- Metro Networks/Tele Atlas
- Stock Quotes
- Fidelity Investments
- News
- Wall Street Journal
- ABCNEWS.com
- CNNRadio
- Entertainment
- Disney.com
29(No Transcript)
30XM Satellite Radio
XM Satellites
- Two Geo-stationary satellites
- 1,700 terrestrial repeaters
- In-vehicle equipment
- Receiver
- Antenna
- Radio head unit
Rock
Roll
Terrestrial Repeaters