The rise of IoT in Africa: MNO strategies for network monetisation

MNOs are well positioned to capture the opportunity in deploying IoT in Africa but need to look at the challenges first, writes Feraz Ahmed, CEO, Hayo

MNOs are well positioned to capture the opportunity in deploying IoT in Africa but need to look at the challenges first, writes Feraz Ahmed, CEO, Hayo

Mobile network operators (MNOs) operating in Africa have an opportunity to accelerate growth and monetise their network assets with IoT. In markets where MNOs have deep roots, they can play a mission-critical role in local digital transformation while capturing new revenue. They just need a path forward.

For too long, MNOs globally have prioritised consumer services that target a limited number of subscribers when enterprise and government customers can provide a limitless opportunity for growth. IoT has emerged as a driver for digital transformation and an extremely sticky service offering that MNOs in Africa can use to build monthly recurring revenue. It enables them to target vertical segments in local markets and use existing network infrastructure to deliver innovative services.

The GSMA predicts licensed cellular IoT connections in sub-Saharan Africa will nearly double between 2023 and 2030, from 27 million to 51 million. Over the same timeframe, the economic impact of mobile will grow from $140 billion to $170 billion in sub-Saharan Africa. It is a high-growth segment in a high-impact market. 

MNOs are well positioned to capture the opportunity in IoT, but they have to look at how to enter the market, and do it before competitors make the first move. There are challenges, but the potential is too great to overlook.      

MNOs need to find the simplest way forward and use IoT to diversify their offerings while boosting network ROI. It just takes the right partner and strategy to expand beyond traditional connectivity.

Targeting key IoT segments in Africa

IoT deployments are having a massive impact across local vertical sectors. MNOs who already serve these segments or operate in large local industries can prioritise outreach and bundle offerings to help enterprises and government initiatives to grow.  

Removing barriers to IoT adoption in Africa

In a rapidly growing African IoT market, MNOs need to remove barriers for going to market. They need a partner that understands common challenges in IoT, but has the local knowledge to accelerate and ensure service delivery. While digitalisation has come a long way across the continent, providers still have a number of challenges to overcome:

Partner strategies for IoT monetisation

Collaboration is vital for a successful IoT strategy, and MNOs must focus on establishing a unified ecosystem for their different stakeholders to work together. By working closely with an Africa-centric partner, service development, regulatory compliance, and go-to-market strategies can be delivered faster with minimal risk.   

Deploying the right IoT platform can play a huge role in simplifying IoT adoption and streamlining the onboarding of new devices and applications. It can also simplify SIM card management and provisioning, reducing time-to-market and enabling new growth opportunities. The right platform will also provide standardised security protocols and compliance to reduce threats.

With an expert partner, service providers can also utilise add-on services such as Roaming Data Steering (RDS) to improve operational efficiency and customer experiences. RDS channels additional data roaming traffic from target MNOs, such as those with discounted rates. This results in reduced data usage with a higher data roaming revenue and margin return.

On-the-ground expertise is crucial for service providers to make the most of the IoT opportunity across Africa, and the right partner will provide the end-to-end support and market-specific insights needed to maximise monetisation.  

Accelerating access

The IoT market in Africa is booming and enabling smarter, more efficient communications and connectivity. By developing the right strategy and working with an expert partner, MNOs can establish themselves in this rapidly growing sector.

This model is key for service providers to gain the necessary building blocks to take the lead in IoT and be the driving force for transformation in Africa. Key developments in AI and 5G are propelling IoT adoption across more African markets than ever before, and it’s time for MNOs to capitalise on this opportunity to meet growing demands, drive long-term growth, and make a lasting impact.

Feraz Ahmed is Hayo’s CEO and a global telecom innovator. His career of over two decades in telecommunications spans launching global aggregators for government voice operations to leading a 350+ team of experts. Specialising in the African and Middle Eastern markets, he has played a pivotal role in connecting these regions to the world.

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