We all think Apple will introduce 5G support in the next-generation iPhone, but it looks seriously as if it has a wider plan to turn the mass market on to the mobile broadband standard.
Apple’s services are built for mobile
Apple has been heavily focused on building out its services in recent years, and there’s a great deal of activity going on in this space:
- Apple TV+: This service continues to generate attention as high profile A-listers sign up to work with Apple on future shows.
- Apple Music: The company recently added two new radio channels, dropped the Beats name and continues to build out and add content to its music streaming service. iOS 14 adds integration with Snapchat, improved search and a few other features.
- Apple Arcade: While Arcade still seems to be short of a hit game, recent bad blood between Apple and Epic suggests a wider competitive rift. Given Apple’s focus on Metal and ARKit, does the company intend publishing a range of AR titles that compete?
- Apple News: The company continues to woo users with cut price deals and partnerships, though publishers seem disappointed at the revenues raised.
What’s most notable in recent days as we head toward the inexorable online iPhone 12 range announcement is the emergence of new deal packages from Apple and selected mobile partners. For example, in the UK:
- Three UK has announced an unlimited home broadband service and an Apple TV 4K for both 4G and 5G users. Under the deal, you get up to 200Mbps network connection, no use restriction, and a year of Apple TV+ access for a set monthly fee.
- UK network EE has introduced a mobile package comprising a new iPhone along with access to Apple Music, TV+ and Arcade for the duration of the tariff. This also includes unlimited data and the option to upgrade the device at any point.
I am interested to learn of similar deals in other territories, as these would suggests some coordination to Apple’s approach.
What do these deals tell us?
These deals quite clearly spell out Apple’s focus on making its services an integral part of its wider platform, as it aims to generate recurring income streams and reduce customer churn.
They also make it crystal clear that the company sees 5G as an enabling technology that will let it leapfrog its service offerings directly to consumers, reducing the hold on high speed broadband access currently enjoyed by fixed line cable companies.
That Apple One services bundle also lends itself to this.
In this model, the mobile telcos get to replace the cable companies. In the UK, that’s likely to spell bad (and, in my opinion, deserved) news for expensive operators such as Virgin Media, but this impact will be felt internationally as 5G is rolled out to a wider congregation of consumers.
My opinion is that the only fixed line-based providers likely to survive will be those serving security-conscious enterprise clients, providers such as Orange Business Services and Verizon Enterprise come to mind.
The push to 5G has now begun
The deployment of 5G will take time. Ericsson research suggests that by 2025 there may be around 2.8 billion subscribers. There may be as many as 190 million such subscribers in place globally by the end of 2020, that report also claims.
In other words, 5G rollout while relatively fast will take a couple more years before it peaks.
When it ships, the 5G iPhone 12 will help accelerate deployment. The world’s biggest selling smartphone during the pandemic, Apple’s customer base remain deeply loyal and see investment in the mobile tech as essential to maintaining life during the crisis. Some analysts expect a ‘supercycle’ when the device ships.
While critics argued that Apple should have introduced support for 5G years ago (they were wrong, as I argued here), Apple famously follows its own path, and instead invested time building service-based propositions to justify investment in the fast broadband tech.
That is why the company will now indeed become the catalyst for North America’s 5G adoption (even as its industry-leading silicon development teams strive to deliver proprietary Apple-made 5G radios).
What about the enterprise?
For enterprise users, Apple’s move to push mass market adoption of the technology opens up additional opportunity to build customer-facing 5G mobile solutions – which may themselves become essential as habits inevitably change post pandemic.
This has additional implications for sectors such as Industry 4.0, healthcare, connected manufacturing and beyond.
In sum, it means that years of hype around 5G are about to be realised, ushering in yet another wave of digital transformation and shaking up industries everywhere.
It’s also worth looking at nations with underdeveloped fixed line infrastructure, as 5G deployments there may open up access to services and economic opportunity to an extent not yet seen. Apple is about to flick the 5G switch. Are you ready?
PS: Don’t be too surprised to see 5G support appear in future Macs.
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