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Analyst:
Joseph Braud
Manager: Guy Engon Zibi
The number of Internet users in this country of nearly 73 million
stands at 330,000 by Pyramid Research estimates and grows by nearly
30% every six months. Internet CafŽs offering broadband access had
been widely used by younger segments of the population to make low-cost
telephone calls to relatives and friends abroad via Voice-Over IP
(VoIP) services. Sources in the government-owned Telecommunications
Company of Iran (TCI) confirmed that international long-distance
revenue has fallen somewhat in recent months.
The closures come on the eve of Iran's presidential elections. Although
reformists and hardliners alike have hailed the Internet's potential
and called for increased uptake and the development of a suitable
infrastructure, they differ on the extent of the government's role
as a regulator, operator and filter. The country's religious establishment
and news organisations have already made extensive use of the medium,
and some Internet business ventures recently began to show a profit.
A conference on the development of an Internet free zone was held
earlier this month in the southern island of Kish, winning public
and private sector support and attracting 2000 visitors from abroad.
Iran's government of clerics has not yet deployed a filtering device
to local ISPs, unlike Saudi Arabia, where all legal Internet traffic
runs through a proxy.
The Pyramid Perspective
G2G
projects and new laws to streamline mainland access
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Gloomy media pronouncements notwithstanding, most entrepreneurs
in Iran expect broadband Internet cafŽs to reopen shortly after
the June elections. The closures stem from a dispute between reformists
and hardliners over the best way to make ISPs and Internet cafŽs
sign on to a new government bandwidth provision initiative Ñ a satellite
to be operated jointly by the governments of China, India and Iran.
TCI, in which supporters of reformist president Muhammad Khatami
wield considerable influence, gave broadband cafŽ owners two weeks
to make a modest advance payment on capacity through the new satellite
service, to be launched later this year. When few responded favourably,
legislative and executive authorities backed by hardliners moved
to strong-arm the industry.
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High-speed bandwidth is available to ISPs in Iran through a variety
of operators, including a semi-independent subsidiary of TCI and
some foreign and domestic private sector initiatives. Many of the
latter ventures may be forced out of business by new laws and G2G
initiatives. In mid-June, TCI will unroll 2 Gigabyte connectivity
services in 180 hitherto offline towns and villages through a joint
venture with Eutelsat, a pan-European government satellite operator.
This project, together with the Chinese-Indian satellite venture
covering Iran's main cities, will help TCI recover lost international
long-distance revenues and facilitate control over the new medium.
Eutelsat will also give the government of Iran the ability to filter.
Censorship policies toward foreign political and religious web content
will be determined by the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance,
and there is widespread public consent for a thorough purge of pornography.
A niche role for Kish
- Streamlined connectivity and access on the mainland will leave
the southern island of Kish, a free trade zone permitting 100% foreign
ownership of businesses, in a unique position to serve entrepreneurs
in Iran and abroad. The Kish Electronic CityÓ conference held earlier
this month served to showcase a commitment by government and businesses
to further enhance infrastructure while maintaining a hands-off
approach to the island's connectivity and access. Kish has two connections
to the Internet cloud and will soon introduce a third. The first
comes through Amsterdam via Eutelsat, in a joint venture with an
Italian company. The second is a double hop connection via satellite
through the United Arab Emirates to the global fibre optic network.
By year-end, an 8-meg download, 6-meg upload connection will also
be provided by ITC.
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Entrepreneurial initiatives hatched at the Kish conference include
an e-banking project to be developed with a Nassau, Bahamas-based
bank. For some, Kish offers the additional attraction of dramatically
discounted software. Since Iran is not a signatory to international
copyright agreements, one may acquire Microsoft BackOffice, for
example, for less then US$6.
Domestic
Internet business remains modest, with small wireless partnering
and vending opportunities for foreigners
- Pyramid Research forecasts rapid Internet uptake in Iran. In a
country where more than half the population is under the age of
17, the number of users stands at 330,000 presently and will exceed
1.2m by year-end 2003. The value of the domestic e-commerce market
remains modest, however, because credit cards are not in use. Users
will access the Web mainly via Internet cafes and universities;
the $850 average cost of a personal computer remains prohibitive
for most Iranians. VoIP is still the main draw and primary uptake
driver. In a country where entertainment is sharply curtailed, Internet
users browse American web sites above all, with Yahoo! topping the
list of portals.
- Iran's ISPs pay US$1200 monthly for a 64 Kbps leased line, but
only $40 monthly for a dedicated 33k line. Internet cafŽ access
costs users an average $0.80 per hour, roughly the cost of a cinema
ticket for a two-hour movie. Some ISP owners use VSATs and others
have expressed an interest in acquiring them from foreign vendors,
although new legislation may hinder such prospects. As broadband
connectivity continues to grow one way or another, Iranian ISPs
will turn to Canadian and American companies for VoIP call termination
services, a market Pyramid values at $3m for 2002 and $3.7m for
2003. ISPs also hope to join forces with foreign companies to service
TCI in the provision of voice mail for the country's 1m mobile phone
subscribers. Voice mail functionality, still unavailable in Iran,
will cost the phone company $5m over the next two years.
- TCI may see fit to deal directly with foreign vendors and contractors
to acquire the software and infrastructure needed, but may task
the private sector with aspects of the project's implementation,
such as upgrading base stations. Canadian companies are already
in talks with TCI and some ISPs. Some of the requisite software
may be available at a better price elsewhere, however, notably India
and Egypt, where IT houses have developed effective voice mail and
other messaging applications for mobile operators.
- But the global addressable market for Persian-language and Shi'i
religious content is large and growing
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Despite Iran's modest domestic e-commerce prospects, a large and
affluent diaspora community has already shown enthusiasm for the
country's web sites. Pyramid Research estimates that the average
annual income of foreign browsers to Iranian web sites is $17,500.
The figure is based on available surveys of Iranian communities,
juxtaposed with traffic analysis of Iranian web sites provided by
ISPs in Tehran, Isfahan, Qom and Kish. Persian language speakers
abroad include 7m Iranian nationals living outside Iran, a figure
that excludes millions of political refugees and expatriates' children.
Iranians abroad like to follow their homeland's news and maintain
an appetite for Iranian music, literature, carpets and handcrafts,
all available for purchase through Iranian web sites. In the long
run, the audience for Persian language content could increase significantly
as new audiences in central Asia go online. Tajiki and Dari forms
of Persian are spoken by more than 10m people worldwide. The new
fibre optic cable line running from China through Turkey to Europe
will pass through Iran and numerous central Asian countries, raising
hopes to bring new online communities into the Persian orbit.
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The two pie charts in Exhibit 1 are based on a global traffic analysis
of visits and hits to various Iranian web sites. The chart on the
top is an amalgam of Persian- and English-language media and commercial
sites based in Tehran, Isfahan and Kish.
The
chart on the bottom represents traffic data provided by leading
Arabic-language religious web sites based in the religious capital
of Qom. The latter sites far exceeds the former in traffic volume,
reflecting the enormous prestige Iran enjoys in the broader Shi'i
Islamic world. US visitors figure prominently into both charts,
although Saudi Arabia dominates the latter, a fact that is worthy
of note because Saudi Arabia's proxy bans most Iranian religious
sites.
Iranian
Internet players to watch
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The country's most widely surfed web sites are government media
organs and religious sites. Some have already begun to pick up revenues
through advertising, and others are open to the possibility of corporate
sponsorship. The Islamic Republic News Agency's Irna.com wins more
than 400,000 visitors per month. Some of its overhead has been offset
by advertising revenue. Rafed.net, a clearinghouse of Shi'i religious
edicts and writings, has 120,000 visitors per month and subsists
on annual funding of $100,000 from Qom's religious endowment. Its
employees face the logistical challenge of communicating regularly
with as-Sayyid as-Sistani, the leading cleric in Najaf, a city holy
to Shi'is in southern Iraq. Surfers can e-mail their religious quandaries
to Sistani via the site and expect an answer in the form of a fatwa
(religious edict) within two weeks. Communication with Sistani is
managed via discrete human messengers and occasional fax contact.
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Early successes in the private sector demonstrate that there are
viable business models for web content, e-commerce and applications
development in Iran. Isfahan-based Rahnema.com is a portal run by
a staff of 40 offering a bouquet of e-commerce and non-profit sites.
The first to show a profit is Iranmelody.com, an online catalogue
of the country's music industry, featuring streaming audio clips
from locally produced cassettes and CDs. Rahnema also operates a
portal-indexing doctors in Iran and a portal for exporters. The
company is working to develop Persian-language translation software,
along the lines of the profitable Arabic translation software now
available on the Internet through the Saudi company al-Alamiah.
A local B2B venture under consideration is a portal for the dairy
and cattle industry, for the exchange of cows, dried alfalfa and
other foodstuffs. The company is struggling to find a way to guarantee
transactions. By contrast to some of the religious and media sites
which are visited overwhelmingly by foreign nodes, Rahnema receives
3,500-4,000 visits per day, 30% of which are local.
Additional
Pyramid Research Resources
Iran: Is the Communications Market Opening up for Foreign Investors?Ó
Pyramid Perspective, February 28th, 2001
Saudi
Arabia: STC Adopts a Home-Grown Restructuring Strategy,Ó Pyramid
Perspective, April 9th, 2000
This
Perspective provides Pyramid's view on a significant development
in the communications industry. Perspectives are a component of
Pyramid's Advisory Services. For information about our Africa/Middle
East Advisory Services, in-depth market analysis reports, or strategic
consulting, please contact Marcel van Galen in our London office
at 44 207 8301062.
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