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Media: Making money on wireless will take years

Fri Dec 1, 2006 7:08pm EST

Reporter's Notebook

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By Sinead Carew

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The wireless industry is pinning hopes for growth on video services, yet top media executives say they do not see cellphone projects reaping significant financial reward in the next several years.

Wireless operators now deliver everything to handsets, from Web surfing to gaming, and music to video. As the price of phone calls keeps falling, their aim is to boost revenue by convincing consumers to use phones for more than talking.

But even as carriers spend billions of dollars beefing up networks for these advanced services, executives at this week's Reuters Media Summit in New York were less enthusiastic about near term wireless prospects.

"At this point the revenues that are coming in to companies for programs like that ... they're small businesses for the most part," said Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc. (MSO.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) Chief Executive Susan Lyne.

"Maybe a decade from now it will be different," said Lyne, who has done some cell phone tests, but currently puts the lion's share of the company's new media resources into building its Internet business.

Merrill Lynch media analyst Jessica Reif Cohen said media and cable companies such as Time Warner Inc. (TWX.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and Comcast Corp. (CMCSA.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) are preparing for the time when consumers want the programs they get at home on mobile phones. But she sees services like mobile video taking years to make a noticeable difference to media company's financials.

Wireless "doesn't even show up. It's such a little blip right now ... I think that story, from my perspective, will be more like five years down the road," said Cohen.

Time Warner's cable unit and Comcast are part of a wireless marketing joint venture with mobile operator Sprint Nextel Corp. (S.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz). Both were part of a cable consortium that recently spent $2.4 billion on the purchase of wireless airwaves in a government auction.  Continued...

 
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