|

Coburn Ventures Conference
Call:
"The Free World and Its Implications"
As the price of everything on the internet plummets towards
zero, a pair of analysts discuss the passing of business empires.
"… nothing is more difficult than to introduce a
new order. Because the innovator has for enemies all those who have
done well under the old conditions and lukewarm defenders in those who
may do well under the new…"
Niccolo
Machiavelli
It certainly wasn't the usual topic for a Wall Street conference call,
but Pip
Coburn is an unusual Wall Street analyst. He founded Coburn
Ventures when he left UBS in 2005, with his research team.
The promotional copy for his book, The
Change Function: Why Some Technologies Take Off and Others Crash and Burn,
to be published this summer, notes, "Pip Coburn became famous for writing
some of the liveliest reports on Wall Street. He quoted everyone from
Machiavelli to HAL, Anaïs Nin to Yoda, Einstein to Gandhi. But along with
the quirky writing, he consistently delivered sharp insights into technology
trends and helped investors pick stocks with long-term potential."
As part of the promotion of the book, Coburn hosted a conference call
with research fellow Arnie
Berman, also a Wall Street analyst, called The Free World and Its
Implications.
The e-mail introducing the conference call said:
"Are we moving toward a world where the expectation
is that everything is FREE? As the Digital Demographic Shift takes hold,
we suspect more and more companies will have difficulty finding their
cash registers. On the call, we'll dig deeper into this change, discuss
who is at the wrong end of being "freed" by the market, and how much
worse the whole mess can get..."
On the call Berman said he and Coburn approach research matters from
slightly different points of view. "I'm more Wall Street," Berman said.
"Pip is more digerati."
Coburn expressed his digital perspective at the start of the call. "Analogueists
will have to migrate to the digital world. Society is changing. We look
at 25 year olds, not 45 year olds, to forecast change. People in the financial
world are both fascinated by and worried by the use of technology by young
people. If you feel you do not need to master this change, you could find
yourself reporting to a boss who's younger than you. If that happens,
you had better master the technology that your boss has already mastered."
For established companies, the internet is a threat. "Look at the products
and services that younger people are accustomed to not paying for," said
Coburn. "They download King Kong the movie, read newspapers, and make
phone calls for free. Just as an analogy, imagine if the oil company came
into your office and said that people won't pay for oil anymore, but they'll
watch ads while pumping gas. We'd sell their stock right away."
Coburn sees almost all content producers as threatened by the internet,
but "newspapers are at the top of the list, especially those for whom
online is a small percentage of revenue, with most of the revenue coming
from circulation."
The obvious paradigm
Berman has a slightly different take on the way technology causes change.
He said, "money tends to flow from the controversial to the obvious,"
meaning that when a new technology is introduced, it's not obviously the
right thing to do, but the moment it becomes accepted wisdom that it works,
the technology starts minting money.
Berman said that a tectonic change is occurring in technology, one that's
been heralded for years, but has been controversial. Now, the revolution
once called Application Service Providers (ASP), more recently called
Software as a Service (SaaS), has arrived. The last major technology revolution,
Berman said, happened in 1991 with the ability to network PCs. "The ability
to have PC users working in close proximity to share files paved the way
for SAP-style apps. Novell NetWare, in retrospect, is quaint," he said.
But today, as it becomes easier to deliver applications over the network,
established players like SAP could be replaced by products that can be
deployed more cheaply. "SAP is to this revolution as IBM was to the last
one," said Berman. He implied that Salesforce.com is the way to the future,
that it will replace SAP.
Coburn said that his company uses salesforce.com, and joked that the
company's service is too good. "Sales, General, & Administrative expenses
are at 70 percent," said Coburn. "What worries us about this company is
the scalability. If SG&A stays at 70 percent, that's a problem."
Coburn said that a rule of thumb about change is, "change happens when
the current pain is perceived as less than the pain of making a change,"
and argued that adopting an SaaS application is still seen as a challenge.
Berman said that Salesforce.com has received negative publicity from
a recent
outage, but that previous highly visible outages at eBay and AOL has
resulted in investment in infrastructure. He predicted that the infrastructure
that SaaS requires will be built, perhaps by the telecom sector.
"In the telecom sector, we're de-emphasizing consumer plays like Apple
and Google," Berman said. Instead, the profits will be made in business
services.
We at ISP-Planet are also seeing money move from investing in residential
services to investing in business services.
Outsourcing
Coburn said that the wave of outsourcing is overstated. He did not say
that outsourcing's power is overstated because of politics, but that seems
a logical conclusion. Coburn stuck to the facts. "The six largest companies
in India offering outsourcing did $9 billion worth of business last year.
IBM generated $47 billion in consulting. The publicity surrounding outsourcing
does not match the revenue stream."
He said that India's outsourcing business will be unable to grow as
fast as the wildest predictions. "It's difficult to grow a headcount business
without messing up. Infosys told us that they had seen a million applications
in recent months. Execution is key. There could be short term problems."
The telcos
Coburn prefaced his first statement about the telcos with the boast that
he was saying something no other Wall Street analyst would. "Their core
asset is the ability to lobby. The top three spent over $2 billion in
the last election cycle. I would not write off their ability to write
favorable legislation."
Berman was more cautiously pessimistic. "The big hype out of CES is
IPTV, so it's odd that the Street likes IPTV but is thumbs down about
the money Verizon is spending on it. In fact, Verizon is not spending
enough, but Wall Street is complaining about 'squandering shareholder
assets.'"
Berman and Coburn agreed that SBC and Verizon will have a real opportunity
to eliminate competition in the business Internet market.
In a dig at Qwest, Coburn concluded, "who would have thought a few years
ago that we would go from seven providers to three or two?"
Conclusion
We'll review Coburn's book when it's published. As you can see from this
brief discussion, Coburn always thinks about the big picture, and is willing
to say exactly what's on his mind.
End
|