Index

Jason Whalley (Newcastle Business School, Northumbria University, Newcastle, UK)
Pierre Vialle (LITEM, Univ Evry, IMT-BS, Université Paris Saclay, Evry, France)

Disruptive Activity in a Regulated Industry

ISBN: 978-1-78973-474-4, eISBN: 978-1-78973-473-7

Publication date: 11 July 2019

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

Curwen, P., Whalley, J. and Vialle, P. (2019), "Index", Disruptive Activity in a Regulated Industry, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 225-229. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78973-473-720191011

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019 by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Adjusted gross revenues (AGRs)
, 181

Aircel
, 169, 173, 176, 177, 180

AT&T/Time Warner
, 128–129

Austrian Federal Competition Authority (BWB)
, 12

Austrian telecoms regulator (RTR)
, 12

Average revenue per user (ARPU)
, 125

Bharti Airtel
, 163, 165, 169–170, 172, 179

Body of European Regulators for Electronic Communications (BEREC)
, 14

Bouygues Telecom
, 65, 145–147

BSNL
, 163, 165, 177, 180

BT/EE
, 124–125

Business model innovation
, 4–5

Buyer switching costs
, 48

Cablevision
, 127

Carrier Aggregation
, 66

21st Century Fox
, 132–133

Chief executive officer (CEO)
, 122

Christiansen interpretation
, 1–3

critiques of
, 3–5

telecommunications-based critique
, 5–6

CK Hutchison
, 27, 40

financial performance
, 200–205

3G
, 189

geographical footprint
, 195–199

initial public offering (IPO)
, 197

mobile subscribers
, 200

in telecommunications industry
, 190–195

Code-division multiple access (CDMA)
, 59

Competition and Markets Authority (CMA)
, 124

Concentration ratios
, 92

‘Connect’ test
, 13

Council for Economic Defense (CADE)
, 128

Customer acquisition
, 10

Department of Justice (DOJ)
, 129

Department of Telecommunications (DoT)
, 165

Deutsche Telkom
, 131

Dhan Dhana Dhan plans
, 170

Difference-in-differences (DiD) methodology
, 12

Dish Network
, 134

Disruption

case studies of
, 21–45

caused by new entry
, 47–89

clarifications
, 2–3

contrasted cases of
, 215–217

internal and external factors
, 213–215

‘low-end’
, 1

multifaceted nature of
, 213–215

‘new-market’
, 1

Ofcom analysis of
, 7–10, 21–22

patterns of
, 7, 220

in practice
, 218

theory of
, 1

and trend towards multi-play
, 121–139

Disruptive activity by

Aircel
, 169

BASE
, 25

Bharti Airtel
, 163, 217

BSNL
, 163

CK Hutchison
, 27

Digicel
, 109

Fastweb
, 109

Free Mobile
, 216

Hutchison and VimpelCom
, 108–109

Idea Cellular
, 163, 174, 177, 178, 180, 216

Iliad
, 109, 216, 217

KPN
, 25

LTE network
, 16

mobile network operator (MNO)
, 10

mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs)
, 6

Mobistar
, 25

MTNL
, 164

NJJ Capital
, 34–35

Proximus
, 25

Quadrant Televentures
, 164

radio access network (RAN)
, 11

RCom
, 163

Reliance Jio
, 35, 216

Sistema Shyam
, 164

Tata DoCoMo
, 164

Tele2
, 22

Telecoms Disputes Settlement & Appelate Tribunal (TDSAT)
, 169

Telenor
, 11, 164

Telia One
, 26

TeliaSonera
, 11

T-Mobile/Orange merger
, 12

T-Mobile/tele.ring merger
, 12

T-Mobile US
, 38–39

United Internet/Drillisch
, 27

Vodafone
, 25, 216–217

Disruptive activity in

Australia
, 35–36

Austria
, 12, 25, 98–99

Belgium
, 25

Canada
, 36

China
, 15

Czech Republic
, 25

Denmark
, 11, 26, 104–105

European Union (EU)
, 91–119

Finland
, 13, 26–27

France
, 27, 102–104

Germany
, 11, 27–28, 100–102, 121

Greece
, 28

Hong Kong
, 36

India
, 163–187

Indonesia
, 36–37

Ireland
, 11, 28–29, 100

Italy
, 29–30, 108–110

Japan
, 37

Malaysia
, 37

Netherlands
, 12, 30–31, 110–111

New Zealand
, 37–38

Norway
, 13, 31, 99

Poland
, 31–32

Portugal
, 32

Scandinavian countries
, 13

South Africa
, 38

Spain
, 33

Sweden
, 33–34

Switzerland
, 34–35

UK
, 34, 105–108, 124–125

USA
, 38–40

‘Disruptive Growth Fund,’ 4

Disruptive innovation
, 5

Disruptive firms
, 8, 10, 21

Disruptors
, 112–113

Earnings/loss before interest and taxation (EBIT/LBIT)
, 200

EBITDA
, 203

European Commission (EC)
, 10, 31, 63, 91

European Economic Free Trade Area
, 50

European mobile

in 2017
, 93–97

concentration ratios
, 92

Denmark
, 104–105

disruptors
, 112–113

France
, 102–104

Germany
, 100–102

International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
, 92

Ireland
, 100

Italy
, 108–110

Long-Term Evolution (LTE) licences
, 93

mergers
, 97–98

mobile market
, 93–96

mobile virtual network operator (MVNO)
, 98

NetCom GSM
, 99

Netherlands
, 110–111

new entry
, 111–112

Norway
, 99

one-off exception
, 97

quad-play
, 113–114

sample
, 91

takeovers
, 97–98

Telia Norway
, 99

T-Mobile
, 103

UK
, 105–108

Ziggo
, 110

European mobile communication markets
, 47

European Union (EU)
, 10, 50, 91, 114

Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
, 38

Freebox
, 147

Free Mobile
, 65

Altice
, 154–155

Bouygues Telecom
, 155–157

Freebox
, 147, 148

2G
, 143

3G and 4G (LTE) licences
, 144–147

3G services
, 149–150

GSM standard
, 143

Iliad
, 147–149, 152

Internet protocol TV (IPTV)
, 147

Orange
, 154

outcomes
, 150–152

pink Minitel services
, 147

SFR
, 154–155

stable three operator market
, 143–144

Time-Division Long Term Evolution (TD-LTE) licences
, 146

Timeline of Events
, 1989–2018, 142

Video-on-Demand (VoD)
, 148

Voice over IP (VoIP)
, 148

French telecommunications market. See Free Mobile

General financial information
, 10

Gigabyte (GB)
, 38, 168

Gigahertz (GHz)
, 16, 64, 130

2G (GSM) licensing
, 49–50

3G (UMTS) licensing
, 50–65

new entrants
, 51, 60–62

4G (LTE) licensing
, 66–86

Global System for Mobile (GSM)
, 163

GSM standard
, 143

Harvard Business Review (HBR)
, 3

Hong Kong Broadband Network (HKBN)
, 126

Hutchison
, 6, 13, 40, 59, 112

Hutchison Asia Telecommunications (HAT)
, 194

Hutchison 3G Italy Investments
, 64, 108

Hutchison H3G
, 63

Hutchison Telecommunications International Ltd (HTIL)
, 193–194, 198, 199

Hutchison Whampoa
, 8, 59, 63, 87, 111

Idea Cellular
, 163, 166, 168, 171, 178

Iliad
, 147–149, 152

Incumbents customers
, 2

Indian mobile market

adjusted gross revenues (AGRs)
, 181

2016auction
, 164–168

mobile network operators
, 163–164

restructuring
, 171–173

Securities and Exchange Board (SEB)
, 169

telecom regulatory framework
, 165

Telecoms Disputes Settlement & Appelate Tribunal (TDSAT)
, 169

Initial public offer (IPO)
, 131

Interconnection usage charge (IUC)
, 175

International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
, 25, 26, 34, 92

Internet of Things
, 6

Internet protocol (IP)
, 122

Internet protocol TV (IPTV)
, 147

Internet service provider (ISP)
, 38

Jio Prime Membership Programme
, 170

Kodak
, 4, 7

Long-Term Evolution (LTE)
, 16, 93, 216

‘Low-end’ disruption
, 1

LTE-Advanced (LTE-A)
, 66

Machine-to-machine (M2M)
, 6, 28

Margrethe Vestager
, 11

Megabits per second (Mbps)
, 16, 66

Megahertz (MHz)
, 16, 30, 38, 42, 88

Merger and acquisition (M&A) activity
, 16, 230

Mergers
, 97–98

Millimetre wave (mmWave)
, 130

Mobile market
, 93–96

Mobile messaging service (MMS)
, 26

Mobile network operator (MNO)
, 10

Mobile operator licensing, in Europe

first-mover advantages
, 48–49

3G licensing
, 50–65

4G licensing
, 66–86

GSM licensing
, 49–50

Mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs)
, 6, 98, 101

MTNL
, 164, 171, 180–181

Multifaceted nature, of disruption

contrasted cases of
, 215–217

internal and external factors
, 213–215

Multi-play

Asia
, 125–126

BT/EE
, 124–125

Cablevision
, 127

definition
, 121

Deutsche Telkom
, 131

Hong Kong Broadband Network (HKBN)
, 126

initial public offer (IPO)
, 131

Netflix
, 134

over-the-top (OTT) services
, 134

pay-off
, 134–135

quad-play
, 121

recent activity
, 133

Sky
, 132–133

Spectrum Mobile
, 133

21st Century Fox
, 132–133

Time Warner Cable (TWC)
, 126

T-Mobile
, 121

USA
, 126–128

Verizon Communications
, 127, 130, 131

Vodafone
, 122–124

Yahoo!
, 130

National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT)
, 179

National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT)
, 169, 177

NetCom GSM
, 99

Netflix
, 39, 134

Network coverage and quality
, 16–17

New entry
, 111–112

‘New-market’ disruption
, 1

Next generation network (NGN)
, 123

Ofcom analysis
, 21–22

aggressive behaviour
, 10

core hypothesis
, 7–8

disruptive firms
, 8

effects on investment
, 8–9

European countries cited
, 22–34

European countries not analysed
, 34–35

motivation, for disruption
, 9

summarised
, 9–10

One-off exception
, 97

Orange
, 154

Outcome-based approach
, 6–7

Over-the-top (OTT) services
, 134

Pink Minitel services
, 147

Quad-play
, 113–114, 121

Quadrant Televentures
, 164

Quality of service (QoS)
, 2, 16

Radio area network (RAN)
, 11, 109

RCom
, 163

Reliance Jio
, 35, 131, 164, 168, 170

Salop model
, 16

Securities and Exchange Board (SEB)
, 169, 172

Significant disruptors

CK Hutchison
, 40

ice
, 41–42

PPF Group
, 40–41

Tele2
, 40

SIM card
, 149–150

Significant market power (SMP)
, 177

Sistema Shyam
, 164

Sky
, 132–133

Smart Telecom
, 59

Spectrum Mobile
, 133

Stable three operator market
, 143–144

Strategic debt restructuring (SDR)
, 174

Takeovers
, 97–98

Tata DoCoMo
, 164

Telecom Italia
, 63

Telecommunications-based critique
, 5–6

Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI)
, 165, 168, 170

Telecoms Disputes Settlement & Appelate Tribunal (TDSAT)
, 165, 169, 177

Telenor
, 11, 26, 105, 164

Telia Norway
, 99

Time dimension duplex (TDD)
, 110

Time-Division Long Term Evolution (TD-LTE) licences
, 146

Timeline of Events
, 1989–2018, 142

Time Warner Cable (TWC)
, 126

T-Mobile
, 98, 121, 133

Triple-play
, 124

Uber
, 3, 5

Universal mobile telecommunications system (UMTS)
, 47, 67–77, 144

Verizon Communications
, 127, 131

Video-on-Demand (VoD)
, 148

VimpelCom
, 63, 64, 108, 109

Virgin Mobile
, 145

‘Virtual’ operators
, 6

Vodafone
, 63, 121–124, 163

Vodafone Hutchison Australia (VHA)
, 198

Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
, 35

Voice over IP (VoIP)
, 148

Western PCS Corp.
, 199

Western Wireless Inc.
, 199

WiMAX to LTE
, 36

Wireless fidelity (Wi-Fi)
, 125, 127

Wireless industry
, 15

Worldwide interoperability for microwave access (WiMAX)
, 36

Yahoo!
, 127, 130

Zapp Mobile
, 59