Some Observers - Emerging Futures + Technologies + Consumers
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E-readers in Africa: Continued

It seems that our idea of using e-readers to aid literacy efforts in underdeveloped markets is a viable concept. Such an effort has been taken on as a mission by Worldreader, a non-profit that is testing programs to use Kindles, donated by Amazon.com, in schools in Ghana. Having run limited trials outside Accra, Worldreader now has permission to broaden its efforts in a larger number of Ghanian schools. We wish them good luck and look forward to seeing the outcomes. You can keep track of this initiative at Worldreader.org's blog.

Filed under  //   Africa   Amazon   e-readers   education   Ghana   learning  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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Looking To a Post-Prahalad Future

 
This morning many awoke to read the sad news that renowned management professor and development theorist CK Prahalad passed away after a brief illness. Even though his most well known work, "The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid", was released in 2004, it seemed that in some ways, Prahalad's vision of a world where the poor, to paraphrase his obituary in the Times of India, are not seen as victims but as consumers in their own right, was reaching its largest audience today. In an era where so many companies in the developed world are seeking new opportunities to replace the weakening consumer markets of the West, Prahalad's enticement to create demand from, and deliver value to, people in emerging and underdeveloped markets looks very attractive. And not a few of these companies are staying in business at this stage due to the relative strength of these emerging market economies.
 
And now, many top global players followed Prahalad's advice and have poured resources into India, China, parts of Africa, Southeast Asia and Latin America in hopes of selling cars, soap, PCs, appliances and many of the trappings of "mainstream" consumer society to new buyers. Banks, NGOs and technology companies are hard at work finding ways to speed the arrival and movement of money and credit to these sectors. And local companies in these regions are rapidly developing inside tracks to serve their own markets. Ironic that the week of Prahalad's passing the Economist carries a special feature on bottom-up innovation and the success stories of companies and brands many in the West have only just become aware of. 
 
So, what comes next? What is the post-Prahalad world? As a futurist, my job is to think about these things—to observe, think, sketch and describe possible futures that may emerge, and look at possible models that aren't just extrapolations of the past, or fulfillment of management fantasies about the successful transplantation of Western strategies to other regions. To me, we are already starting to see some of the signals that outline this future: not just rising incomes and new consumers, but a fundamental shift in global power dynamics in economics, social values, technology models, and more. We are seeing a swing from acquisition to utility, from consumption to production. And the producers, creators and builders are the ones that will call the shots for some time to come. We aren't just seeing our own ideas and values with an Indian or Chinese or Brazilian name on the label. We've spent five centuries in the West creating models of commerce that reflect our deeper cultural values. Why will the next phase be any different for those people, countries and cultures that have the momentum in the next five centuries? 
 
If one believes that Prahalad's ideas have helped bring us to the edge of an era where "the other 90 percent" are the leading innovators, we need to be prepared for how those innovations differ from what's come before, with what values they will teach and shape us, and how we might find new economic and social pathways forward as our current ones increasingly falter. Prahalad's ideas have been interesting, stimulating and to some extent catalytic. It's what comes next, however, that will be really powerful.

 

Filed under  //   Africa   Asia   BOP   China   Economist   futures   India   innovation   Latin America   Prahalad   scenarios  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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Street View Coming to Africa

http://www.flickr.com/photos/byrion/ / CC BY 2.0

The Guardian today reports that Google plans to bring its Street View technology to South Africa in order to provide street-level views of locations to accompany its ubiquitous Maps. While some may be pleased that Africa is now able to share in a service and technology available in developed countries, local authorities are not as pleased, saying the availability of the images will make it easier for criminal interests to plan robberies without having to leave their hideouts.

Crime and technology and intertwined, and have been as long as their has been a crowbar available to pry open a door, or wheels to make a getaway. This dynamic is not African but global. It will be a shame if concerns about potential misuse of the data that could occur anywhere stands in the way of its deployment.

The positive benefits, on the other hand, far outweigh the negatives. First in South Africa, then potentially across the continent, Google's images will help boost the utility of the BOPNet in this area (see upcoming posts for more on this). Plans reportedly call for using more rugged vehicles to capture hard to reach areas. Mobile and Web users with access to Google Maps will be able to leverage important location and wayfinding data that may save them a much higher cost of having bad information. who knows? It may even encourage development in areas that can be scouted from a distance. This situation will bear watching. 

Filed under  //   Africa   BOPNet   crime   Google   location   South Africa   Street View  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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Is the African Mobile Market Poised for Takeoff?

Scanning the news today on mobile + africa over Google is throwing up some interesting dots that I thought might be fun to connect. I'm seeking signs of whether the sub Saharan African mobile phone market is about to take off the way the Indian (or even South Asian?) market did about four years ago when Reliance Comm just dropped their basic sms and phone call pricing. Of course, in the Indian market, that happened almost at the same time that our friend Nokia launched their then lowest priced phone ever, the immortal 1100. To be honest, that phone has been both the saviour and the bane of the Finnish company in global emerging markets. However, I digress.

I've just come across bits on Nokia's emerging market moves (something I'm sad to confess I stopped getting excited about about a year or so ago when I decided we needed to move on to making larger scale things happen in the wireless world, not just what one, albeit fearlessly pioneering, company would do), and I've come across these other bits just now. Snippets first:

Essar, an Indian conglomerate's moves in Uganda and Congo's telcom sector. South African pressure continues on cellular operator pricing structure. The indisputable fact that Africans pay higher rates for basic services (with Steve Song's hard  work on comparitive pricing across SSA here). And now, some interesting bits, from The East African:

Kenyan telecom companies are bracing for an increase in customer migration and the possibility of price wars when the proposed mobile number portability becomes a reality in a few months.

Speaking separately to The EastAfrican, the four operators — Safaricom, Zain, Orange and Yu — have indicated that they will start positioning themselves for the technology in such a way that it makes a positive difference for their subscribers.

“The move by the industry regulator is welcome and we are ready to embrace it,” said Michael Joseph, Safaricom CEO.

Yu, in case you weren't aware is the brand under which Essar operates in Kenya. Taking all of this together, especially this last one, I'm getting a stronger and stronger sense that a major upheaval is imminent over the next few months in the overall mobile pricing landscape in Africa. And if its anything like India's growth rates then the whole market is going to change, dramatically. And not just for actual tangible artifacts either, but also services and programmes and plans. What happens when the combined influence and effect of Nokia Money and FrontlineSMS: Credit start making inroads into the demographic population?

Filed under  //   Africa   credit   Essar   FrontlineSMS   Kenya   mobile   money   Nokia   Orange   Safaricom   SMS   Yu   Zain  
Posted by Niti Bhan 

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Double-edged Swords

http://www.flickr.com/photos/feinsteincenter/ / CC BY-NC 2.0

Durable mobile phones that can keep users in remote areas connected, allow for money and airtime transfers among handsets are a current hot topic in the ICT4D community. While we talk about putting them in the hands of the poor and disconnected, however, the same technology is being used literally just up the road for the opposite ends. 

John Robb points to a post today from Alex de Waal at Making Sense of Darfur about the Thuraya phone, the communications weapon of choice of Chadian and Darfuri troops who, along with roving teams of Toyota Landcruisers, move fast and coordinate on the fly using these satellite handsets in superempowered nodes that plan and attack on the fly in the contested region. While a villager many miles away may be checking weather or arranging taking goods to market, military commanders using Thurayas are negotiating deals with local warlords, says de Waal. We've had mobile revolutions in other parts of the world—de Waal asks if Darfur is "the first Thuraya war". 

Filed under  //   Africa   airtime   Darfur   mobile   money   satellite   Thuraya  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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Give One, Get One, Ikea-style

The Give One, Get One trend has been afoot for a while, kicked off by the One Laptop Per Child project several Christmases back. Kona took this model for its AfricaBike, which donates one to development programs and individuals in need in Africa when one is puchased elsewhere.

I noticed this take on the GOGO model at the local Ikea last week—with the ad on tabletops in the cafe. Ikea donates a Sunnan solar reading lamp via UNICEF to villages in Pakistan's Baluchistan province, which was heavily damaged in places from the October 2008 earthquake. The aim is to give children who live in areas that lost electricity lamps to read by, helping them complete schoolwork despite the disaster.

So far, these types of programs have targeted products purchased by more affluent middle-class families in the West—laptops, stylish city bikes, Scandianvian housewares. It isn't known whether these programs are effective collectively. Kona has shown some sizeable bike deliveries to African destinations, and OLPC says over 150,000 laptops total were shifted through last November, but it isn't clear how much of that was related to its GOGO program and how many were delivered.

The next step in GOGO will be more transparency, with the aid of technology. Tagging individual products and enabling connections between donor and recipient (similar to Kiva's approach) and even tracking donation usage (following a bike on its rounds, or perhaps seeing when a light is turned on) are possible, and play to the notion of a connected world. 

Filed under  //   Africa   GOGO   Ikea   Kona   OLPC   Pakistan   transparency   UNICEF  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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