| An application provider begins marketing to network operators,
expanding on its original strategy of direct-to-consumer marketing. |
When we wrote about HomeMovie.com last year, the company was
marketing its services directly to consumers. Customers mailed in tapes of
their old home movies; HomeMovie digitized the tapes; customers used HomeMovie’s
software to edit the footage, and then uploaded the results to share with
friends and family.
Today, the consumer service has been rebranded as StashSpace.com.
And the new HomeMovie.com has begun a journey out of the cloud and into the
network.
“We’ve taken our Web application for consumers and turned it
on its ear to bring additional benefits to users by working with network
operators,” says Lars Krumme, EVP of HomeMovie.com.
The new offering allows network providers to run HomeMovie.com
inside their networks and then either resell it to subscribers to drive profit
or give it away to reduce churn.
Faster Uploads and Downloads
Going in-network allows for much faster uploads. Uploading
files over the open Internet – not three-minute, low-quality YouTube-type
videos but hours of high-quality footage – is tedious and time-consuming. But if
the application resides in the access network, users’ uploads are limited only by
the bandwidth of the last-mile infrastructure.
In a fiber-to-the-home network, uploads may be extremely
fast. Even cable networks, which typically limit upload speed more strictly, may
be able to “open the throttle a bit,” as Krumme puts it, for in-network uploading.
On the download side, users watching the videos can also
benefit from in-network speeds – as long as they're on the same network as the
HomeMovie.com server, of course. “Instead of watching a 350 Kbps video over the
Web, they can actually watch up to a 2.5 Mbps full-frame video feed
in-network,” says Krumme.
Avoiding Service Problems
HomeMovie.com sells its software installed on a redundant
server set – that is, two servers bundled together. The redundancy guarantees
that the service won't go down and data won't be lost. “If there is any drive
failure, there’s an immediate swapover so that the level of service continues
uninterrupted,” Krumme explains.
But since this redundant hardware may make the solution prohibitively
expensive for networks with fewer than 1,000 customers, HomeMovie.com is
exploring the possibility of leveraging network operators’ existing hardware.
If network operators have servers with excess storage capacity or underutilized
processing power, they may not need to purchase hardware to run HomeMovie.com.
HomeMovie.com’s primary role, in addition to developing the application,
is managing the servers where its software is installed. The company monitors in-network
boxes 24/7,
just as it does with its own servers. “We are in constant communication with
the in-network servers,” says Krumme.
If a problem does occur, the first level of technical
support is typically handled by the network operator, which can troubleshoot
problems related to the network or the user’s computer setup. Problems that can’t
be resolved at this level are escalated to HomeMovie.com’s support system.
In addition, network operators who have deployed
HomeMovie.com receive automatic software updates so they will benefit from any
improvements to the user experience.
Sizing Up the Business Model
HomeMovie.com’s fees are based primarily on the size of the
network. The software license fee is scaled to the total number of network subscribers,
rather than the number of people actually using the product. Krumme says this
arrangement gives network operators an incentive to market the service aggressively,
since they put more “skin in the game” in exchange for the promise of higher per-subscriber
revenue.
Some larger network operators have expressed interest in
offering all of their Internet subscribers a basic HomeMovie.com account, and then
driving revenue from premium accounts with higher levels of storage space.
HomeMovie.com’s per-subscriber business model would also encourage this kind of
arrangement.
In addition to charging for storing high-quality video,
network operators can share in revenues by referring customers to HomeMovie.com’s
digitization services, which take old home movies on analog tape and transcode
them into a digital format.
Krumme also emphasizes that HomeMovie.com’s “stickiness” is
attractive to network providers. Consumers with hours of high-quality video
stored on the network’s servers are less likely to jump ship to another
broadband provider.
From HomeMovie.com’s perspective, marketing through network
providers is an “exciting morphing of our business” that allows the company to
focus on its core strengths. “We’re great at making cool technology and forever
making it easier to use and adding additional features. Now, we’ll be able to
continue our focus on technology while working with network operators, who know
their customers and are already marketing to them,” says Krumme.
HomeMovie.com has been talking with network operators about
possible deployments ranging from 300 to millions of customers. The company’s
first test deployments, this summer, are with a greenfield fiber-to-the-home provider and a
telco whose broadband networks include both DSL and fiber-to-the-home.
About the Author: Geoff Daily is the assistant editor of KillerApp.com. He can be reached at geoffd@killerapp.com.