Title: Internet Market Study
1Internet Market Study
Methodology Deliverables Victor Kyalo
2The Hierarchical View
- The traditional view of the Internet saw the
Internet described as a hierarchy of providers - Segmentation of Internet Providers into a number
of tiers - Each ISP purchases service from a single provider
at the next higher tier - Each ISP sells service to multiple customers at
the next lower tier
3The Hierarchical View
End User
End User
End User
End User
Littler ISP
Littler ISP
Littler ISP
Littler ISP
Littler ISP
Little ISP
Little ISP
Little ISP
Big ISP
Big ISP
4Non-Hierarchical Evolution
- May peer across tier levels
- May use paid peering as a form of limited
provider-based transit services - (the use of peering in the service name is
purely cosmetic the outcome is a provider
service without third party transit) - May use a settlement metric
- (again the term is normally cosmetic in most
cases it can be regarded as a conventional
service tariff)
5Non-Hierarchical EvolutionTodays Internet
6Internet Shape
- The network is becoming less stringy and more
densely interconnected - i.e. Transit depth is getting smaller
Distance
Distance
Span
Span
7Networked Access
- Key ICT readiness factor is access to network
infrastructure - The larger telecommunication sector is the scope
of study in this exercise
8- The Indicators used to assess the readiness level
of this category are - Information infrastructure
- Internet availability
- Internet affordability
- Network speed and quality
- Hardware and software
- Services and support
9Information Infrastructure
- Telephone penetration this is considered for
both the fixed and mobile networks.
- It is imperative to note the following
- this statistics are skewed in favor of Nairobi
Coast regions. ref regions teledensity chart - Based on the critical sectors for economic
development, i.e agriculture, there is still
quite some ground to be covered.
10Teledensity Per Region
R/Valley
Nyanza
Western
Coast
Teledensity
N/Eastern
Eastern
Central
Nairobi
0.0
5.0
10.0
11 of Lines
SMEs
Saccos
Professional
Personal
Payphones
Parastatals
NGOs
International
Health
GOK
Financial Institutions
Educational
Commercial
Bureaus
Agriculture
0.00
20.00
40.00
60.00
12- Development Stage
- For fixed lines the assessment is estimated to be
in stage 1. For Mobile lines it is estimated to
be in stage 3. - Overall this indicator is estimated to be in
stage 2.
13- Critical Issues strategies
14Internet availability
This indicator is concerned with the number and
reach of ISPs, their range of services and
transmission capacities. It also assesses the
public access to the Internet. This attributes
we measured and analyzed as follows
- ISPs
- Registered ISPs gt72
- 29.8m/16 1.86m per active ISP
- Offer email, full internet access, web hosting,
etc. - Distribution (mainly in the towns)
- Competition????
15- Access modes
- Dial-up is the main mode of access by many of the
users (interviewed) - Analog digital lines distribution (mainly for
businesses)
16Coverage
17
R/Valley
7
Nyanza
2
Western
10
Coast
Coverage
2
N/Eastern
3
Eastern
3
Central
57
Nairobi
0
20
40
60
- Public access is mainly through cyber cafes whose
rates are low compared to the telephone charges.
17- Internet Backbone
- Jambonet accounts for 100 outgoing international
bandwidth estimated at 20.512Mbps. - Jambonet accounts for approximately 80 of the
incoming international bandwidth approx.
56.521Mbps. The other 20 is made-up of downlink
by ISPs and other universities (UoN, USIU, KU,
etc)
18- Development stage
- Assessment for this indicator was stage 2. The
following factors were predominant. - limited number of ISPs i.e more the 1m people
per ISP - limited access to public access (most cyber
cafes concentrated mainly in urban areas) - dial-up links are difficulty to establish (gt70
failure rate on 1st attempt) - leased line provision is a monopoly
19- Critical Issues strategies
20Internet affordability
- The indicator looks at the price of access both
telephony and ISP charges. Affordability is
looked at in respect to earning power,
competition, and in comparison to other
communities. - Tariffs
- The local tariffs are fairly comparable with
those of other countries such as Uganda,
Krygyzstan, etc. However the international
tariffs are high. - Most dial-up users (though) pay for a local call
to access the Internet. In relation to the per
capita income, the total Internet access through
dial-up is very high. - Internet access through cyber cafes is cheap (Us
0.013 per minute). This is approx 50 cheaper
than the telephone call charge.
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22- Development stage
- Assessment for this indicator is estimated to be
stage 2 where. - local access solutions exist but rates are high
discouraging extensive usage. - Lack of competition in the provision of
commercial leased lines is reflected in
prohibitively or high leasing fees.
23- Critical Issues strategies
24Network speed quality This indicator looks at
the available b/width, the numbers of users and
types of online activities supported by the
network. The quality of the network is also
considered.
- Local completion rate is 71.4 (compare to approx
60 from the collected data) - More than 90 of the interviewed respondents
experience more than 5 telephone faults p.a. - Though the international b/width capacity is
high, the internal b/width within different nodes
was not established.
25- Development stage
- Assessment for this indicator is estimated to be
stage 2 where. - 50-70 of the local calls are successful
- dropped calls are frequent and extremely
disruptive - 50 to 100 faults are reported pa for each 100
lines - Telecommunications infrastructure in most areas
support dial-up modem transfers.
26- Critical Issues strategies
27Hardware software Focuses on the availability
of h/ware s/ware and its customization to local
needs.
- there is local availability of h/ware s/ware as
affirmed by the survey with 77 and 80
respectively reporting adequate availability. - this is also supported by the fact that all the
leading ICT h/ware software houses have a local
presence and/or strong representation. - locally developed software is estimated at 50
based on the survey. This is also the case with
customization of products locally. - nevertheless locally assembled PCs stand at a
dismal 9.5. (Maybe attributed to the higher
CKDs duty vis-à-vis duty on the complete unit). - cost of PCs is estimated in the range of US500
1,000 which though high, compares well with
international prices.
28- Development stage
- Assessment for this indicator is estimated to be
stage 3 where. - most products are sourced from abroad, but there
is a strong and strong localization industry
(especially for software products) - software appropriate to the local needs and
language is available. - a variety of h/ware s/ware solutions are
available and affordable to most SMEs as well as
individuals.
29- Critical Issues strategies
30Service support This indicator considers
customer service orientation, service provision
and faults repair waiting periods. It also
considers the availability of skilled technical
personnel.
- more than 60 of the users wait for 6months and
more for service provision. (subject to network
availability and capacity) - most of the providers are aware of the need for
customer care. Response stands at approx 50 for
lt 7 days attendance to internet lines related
faults. This is coupled by the availability of
online support availability of approx 60 from
most providers. - availability of good support staff stands at
approx 60 and for good web designers at 80 - international prices.
31- Development stage
- Assessment for this indicator is estimated to be
stage 2.5 where. - it takes at least 6mths to be connected.
- it takes over 1mth for a mainline problem to be
resolved. - A nascent s/ware industry is present and there is
a growing number of h/ware technicians, web
designers and network administrators.
32- Critical Issues strategies
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