Analysis

By Denise A. Valdez
Reporter

LYSANDER R. BAGUE, a supervisor at a children鈥檚 hospital in Quezon City, has mastered the art of chatting using Facebook Messenger. He instantly reaches the people in his life by sending messages to friends and making audio and video calls to his family using the app, which is powered by his mobile data subscription.

鈥淚 barely do regular voice calls or send text messages because I can do everything on Facebook,鈥 he said in an interview.

鈥淢ost of the time, Messenger is my source of communication.鈥

Over-the-top messaging services — platforms that require only an Internet connection for communication — have been praised for the convenience they bring to customers.

But Facebook鈥檚 Messenger, Apple鈥檚 FaceTime, Rakuten鈥檚 Viber and Tencent鈥檚 WeChat have led to steep revenue declines in the legacy services of telecommunication companies, forcing them to adapt and make even more revenue by upgrading infrastructure, trimming costs and selling profitable fixed and mobile broadband services.

Last year, PLDT, Inc.鈥檚 mobile revenue from short message service or SMS dropped by 50% to P13.1 billion, according to the company鈥檚 financial statement. Revenue from mobile voice also fell by nine percent to P28.05 billion.

Mobile text revenue at rival Globe Telecom, Inc. likewise fell by eight percent to P21.28 billion, while sales from mobile voice declined by 6% to P30.35 billion during the same period.

DATA SHIFT
Now, the name of the game is mobile data, with both telephone companies experiencing healthy revenue growth from data services.

PLDT鈥檚 mobile data revenue jumped by 46% last year to P38.35 billion, tempering the drop in mobile voice and SMS sales.

For Globe, revenue from data services last year rose 28% to P55.3 billion, boosting consolidated mobile revenue to P106.93 billion, a 9% gain.

鈥淧eople are shifting to data-based services, both for messaging as well as voice,鈥 Globe Chief Revenue Officer Alberto M. de Larrazabal said in an interview.

鈥淪o the way to really look at it is one is rising, one is falling.鈥

The growth in data revenue from PLDT鈥檚 fixed and wireless business has 鈥渙utpaced in excess of the decline鈥 in legacy voice and SMS, PLDT Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Manuel V. Pangilinan said.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund unit MediaQuest Holdings, Inc. has a majority stake in 大象传媒 through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

The growth in mobile data revenue is forcing both companies to innovate further and harness its potential.

PLDT is allotting a record capital spending of P78.4 billion this year, while Globe is investing P63 billion, both aiming to support their network expansions.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a very capex-intensive thing simply because the data growth is very significant,鈥 Globe President and CEO Ernest L. Cu said at a recent forum.

鈥淕lobe today can almost sell every gigabyte that we can produce, given the demand for video and social media.鈥

FULL POTENTIAL
PLDT is set to deploy its long-term evolution (LTE) network to more than 90% of the country by year-end, Mr. Pangilinan said.

鈥淲e should continue to improve our network, especially the coverage.鈥

The major telephone companies, however, have yet to maximize the potential of mobile data communications, according to Pierre Tito Galla, co-founder of internet advocacy group .

鈥淒espite the generally poor quality of service and relatively high cost of mobile data communications, subscribers are continuing to explore the various use cases that Internet access provides,鈥 he said.

Mr. Galla also hinted at the possibility of 鈥渕obile data only鈥 companies springing up, even if voice and SMS are unlikely to disappear completely. 鈥淪imilar to AM radio, legacy mobile communications will continue to have their place in the bigger ecosystem,鈥 he said.

SMS and voice mail remain relevant because everybody has them, and no proprietary service will ever match their universality.

Both PLDT and Globe have no plans of retiring legacy services soon.

鈥淚f you look at it, voice and SMS would have been assumed dead many years ago,鈥 Globe Chief Finance Officer Rizza D. Maniego-Eala said.

鈥淏ut the fact that it continues to generate a little bit contribution in revenue for us is a plus.鈥

There鈥檚 still a class of users that won鈥檛 give up calling, and Globe would like to keep tapping it, said Gil B. Genio, Globe鈥檚 chief technology and information officer.

鈥淰oice interaction is a very human thing,鈥 he said in an interview. 鈥淚f you look at the retired people, they would rather talk.鈥