Financial Times FT.com

Mobile phone groups take on iPhone

By Maija Palmer in London

Published: June 13 2007 22:02 | Last updated: June 13 2007 22:02

The mobile phone industry will on Thursday launch a challenge to Apple’s iPhone, by unveiling a low-cost, flat-rate music service that can be accessed on most handsets in Europe and Asia.

The MusicStation service has backing from the handset manufacturers Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Motorola and Samsung and 30 mobile phone operators and all four music majors – Universal Music Group, Sony BMG, EMI Music and Warner Music International – as well as several independent labels.

Music companies are hoping that MusicStation will help kick-start mass-market consumption of music over mobile phones.

The service launches just ahead of Apple’s iPhone debut in the US on June 29. The iPhone will give users easy access to Apple’s iTunes online music store, building on the success of the company’s popular iPod portable music player.

“We were keen to jump through the finish line first,” said Rob Lewis, chief executive of Omnifone, the privately-owned UK start-up company behind the MusicStation service. “All European and Asian consumers will have access to MusicStation well before iPhone’s arrival in those regions.”

Telenor, the Scandinavian operator, will be the first to launch the service in Sweden, but it is expected to be rolled out throughout Europe, Asia and Africa over the next few months.

Manufacturers will begin producing handsets that have been pre-loaded with software to access MusicStation. Many of these devices will be mid-priced, in contrast to the iPhone, which will have a price tag of about $499. It is estimated that 100m MusicStation-enabled handsets will be sold over the next 12 months, dwarfing the 10m iPhone handsets Apple aims to ship in the next year.

The industry estimates that mobile music consumers on average download just six songs a year, at a typical price of £1 (€1.48) a song.

Music groups stand to increase their earnings significantly by taking a share of the weekly €2.99 flat fee that MusicStation charges consumers for unlimited access to a catalogue of more than 1m songs. The fee includes all downloading charges.

Users will be able to listen to the songs and store them on the phone, but not burn them on to CD or distribute them over the internet.

More from this sector

Samsung feels the heat from iPhone

France Telecom loses in European court

Ex-Vimpelcom chief returns to lead group

Malaysia’s Maxis lines up $6bn in India push

Carphone Warehouse raises guidance

Further delay to 3G licences in Thailand

France Telecom optimistic on Swiss link

Telefónica buys Digital Plus stake

Vodafone plans to end final salary scheme

Tesco to sell iPhone by Christmas

Vivendi Frères

Jobs and classifieds

Jobs

Search
Type your search criteria below:

Deputy Finance Director

Department for Work and Pensions

Risk Professionals

The Asset Protection Agency (APA)

Experienced Bankers & Credit Professionals

The Asset Protection Agency (APA)

Area Sales Manager (Africa)

Material Handling, Capital Equipment

Recruiters

FT.com can deliver talented individuals across all industries around the world

Post a job now