Mobile Data to Overtake Voice By 2018

Author: Adi Gaskell
Published: February 25, 2013 at 8:32 am
Share

mobile dataMobile phones have become so much more than just telephones used for voice calls.  GSMA, an organization that represents the mobile industry, believe that mobile companies will make more money from our data usage than they will with voice calls by 2018.

The organization attributes this shift to a surge in the number of connected devices, combined with an increase in the amount of machine-to-machine communications. To coincide with its Mobile World Congress event in Barcelona, the group has released a five-year forecast looking at how mobile is transforming lives, especially in developing world countries.

Of particular interest was the impact of mobile health services, which the group claims could help to save one million lives in Africa. The fight against deadly diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis and the ongoing fight against HIV, will increasingly be helped by the greater use of mobile connectivity, according to the report.

Mobile impact upon food

Food is another area that will be heavily impacted by an increase in mobile data.  For instance, the report reveals that 240 tons of food spoils each year during transit and storage alone.

If organisations used mobile data to keep better track of trucks and the temperature of storage facilities, they would save enough food to feed 40 million people.

Bringing education to the masses

Education is another key area of growth, with the report revealing that 1.8 million children could be educated using mobile devices by 2017.

"Mobile data is not just a commodity, it is becoming the lifeblood of our daily lives, society and economy, with more and more connected people and things," said Michael O'Hara, chief marketing officer at GSMA.

It isn't just the developing world that the group believes will benefit, as it outlines a number of major improvements in more affluent countries as well.

In developed countries:

  • mHealth could save $400 billion in healthcare costs in OECD countries
  • Connected cars could save one in nine lives through emergency calling services
  • mEducation can reduce student drop-outs by eight per cent or 1.8 million children
  • Smart metering can cut carbon emissions by 27 million tonnes – the equivalent of planting 1.2 billion trees

 What do you think of these predictions?

 
 

About this article

Profile image for cmimanagers

Article Author: Adi Gaskell

A writer on management issues for publications such as Professional Manager, CMI, HRM Today, Business Works and Technorati. I also cover social media for Social Media Today, DZone and Social Business News.

Adi Gaskell's author pageAuthor's Blog

Article Tags

Share: Bookmark and Share

Add your comment, speak your mind

Personal attacks are NOT allowed
Please read our comment policy