SPECIFIC CHALLENGES FOR SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED
ENTERPRISES (SME) IN M-BUSINESS
A SME-suitable Framework for Mobile Services
Michael Decker, Gunther Schiefer, Rebecca Bulander
Institute AIFB, University of Karlsruhe, Englerstr. 11, 76 128 Karlsruhe, Germany
Keywords: Platforms/frameworks for mobile and wireless services, value added mobile data services, Small and
Medium-sized Enterprises (SME).
Abstract: It seems to be a widely accepted notion that Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SME) play an important
economic and social role and often contribute to innovation. But at the present situation the development
and operation of a service to be used with mobile and wireless terminals (mobile service) is not bearable for
most of them due to technical reasons and the market structure. In this article we will discuss the SME-
specific obstacles in m-business. We will also propose a technical framework as remedy for this situation.
1 INTRODUCTION
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SME)
represent 99 % of all enterprises in the Europe
Union (European Union, 2006) and play thus an
important role in the economy as well as in society.
But at the current state-of-the-art and market
situation in many European countries it is very hard
for them to set up data services to be used with
mobile and wireless terminals like cellular phones,
PDAs or smartphones.
In our opinion this is one of the main reasons for
the absence of success of mobile data services in
Europe. This phenomenon is called the “European
Mobile Data Service Dilemma” (Steinert & Teufel,
2005) or “Advanced Mobile Services Paradox”
(Blechar, Constantiou & Damsgaard, 2005); the
appellation as “paradox” stems from the fact that
despite of the high penetration rates of mobile
terminals and the success of simple data services
(e.g. SMS, download of ringtones and logos)
advanced mobile services generate only a few
percent points of the revenue of mobile network
operators (Brücker et al., 2006).
In the article at hand we discuss special
characteristics of SME and the special challenges for
them when they want to develop and operate mobile
services, may it be for own use (e.g. support for
mobile workers) or for customers of the SME. As
solution we propose a technical framework, which
offers a comprehensive runtime environment for
mobile services.
The remainder of this article is organized as
follows: in the second section we discuss definitions
of SME and their characteristics; section three
covers our comprehension of mobile services. SME-
specific challenges when dealing with mobile
services are covered in section four. Our proposed
solution approach — a technical framework for
mobile services — is sketched in section five.
Section six gives an overview about related work,
before we summarize and conclude in the last
section.
2 CHARACTERISTICS OF SME
According to the European Union (2003) SME are
defined as enterprises which have at most 250
employees and an annual turnover not exceeding 50
million Euros. Further there is the distinction of
small enterprises — they have fewer than 50 staff
members and less than 10 million Euros of turnover
— and micro-enterprises (less than 10 persons and 2
million Euros of turnover). But this is by far not the
only quantitative definition of SME: other sources
define SME as businesses with fewer than 500
employees (Audretsch, 1999) or even give different
values for different sectors (Marwede, 1983; p. 45):
a industry firm is small when it has 50 employees,
169
Decker M., Schiefer G. and Bulander R. (2006).
SPECIFIC CHALLENGES FOR SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES (SME) IN M-BUSINESS - A SME-suitable Framework for Mobile
Services.
In Proceedings of the International Conference on e-Business, pages 169-174
DOI: 10.5220/0001427701690174
Copyright
c
SciTePress
but a trade business is medium-sized with more than
2 employees. Using quantitative measurements
seems at least to be easy manageable, but how do we
count employees with different level of productivity
or part time workers?
There are also definitions based on qualitative
aspects like legal form, the role of the firm’s owner,
their position on the market, the organisational
structure or economic and legal autonomy
(Marwede, 1983).
Although there is no uniform definition of SME
the notion that SME play an important economic and
social role seems to be well accepted (OECD, 1982;
Acs, 1999). This is supported by surveys which state
that 70 % of all labour relations and over 80 % of
apprenticeship training positions in the German non-
public sector are provided by SME (Günterberg &
Kayser, 2004).
While SME are not able to exploit economies of
scale at the same order of magnitude as big
enterprises can do (Audretsch, 1999) they have the
advantage of flat hierarchies and thus being very
flexible. There are many examples of SME that
contributed to major innovations (OECD, 1982, p.
12; Almeida, 1999; Audretsch, 1999). In some cases
inventions that were rejected by major firms were
later brought to market by small start-up companies.
Also SME don’t change their managers as often as
big enterprises and thus can concentrate on long-
term strategies.
SME often have high-specialized know-how in a
certain area which could be utilized for mobile
services. But they have limited resources and cannot
afford to employ highly specialized employees.
Since innovations always go together with risk big
firms have several innovations running at the same
time to diversify risk, but SME cannot do the same
(Geschka, 1997).
3 MOBILE SERVICES
3.1 Definition
The core business of mobile network operators
(MNO) is the provision of wireless communication
capacity for both voice (telephony) and data
transmission (“bit pipe”) to be used with mobile
terminals like cellular phones, PDAs and
smartphones. In the article at hand we only consider
data transmission. Mobile terminals (MT) in our
sense means “handheld device”; devices like
notebooks or tablet PCs are not considered as real
mobile terminals, because one can’t carry them
along in a ready-to-receive-state most of the day.
Examples of standards for basic wireless
communication services for data are GPRS, WiFi or
UMTS. If a service provider (in our case SME) uses
these basic services for supplying additional
information we talk about a “value added service”.
An example for such a value added service would be
a navigation service, which guides the user to
facilities in his nearer surrounding, whereas a
GPRS-connection (basic service) is used to provide
the actual navigation hints in form of WML-pages.
For the sake of simplicity we use the term “mobile
service” in the remainder of this article if we actual
mean “mobile value added data service”.
4 SPECIFIC CHALLENGES FOR
SME WHEN DEVELOPING
AND OPERATING MOBILE
SERVICES
There are some specific challenges when developing
mobile services (see also Chittaro, 2006) which are
faced by big enterprises as well as by SME:
Display quality: MT have only a small display
with low resolution and reduced colour-depth, there
is no real keyboard or a “mouse” available for user
input.
Limited Resources: MT have limited resources
like memory, cpu-power and battery capacity; the
available bandwidth for wireless data
communication will be not as good, cheap and
reliable as for wired data communication.
Data protection concerns: Wireless data
communication is more vulnerable with regard to
security threats and could be eavesdropped. There is
also the danger that a MT with sensible data on it is
lost or stolen.
But there are more challenges, which are
particular hurdles for SME because of their limited
personal as well financial resources:
Different types of mobile terminals: There is a
plethora of different types of mobile terminals. The
estimation for the number of different types of
mobile terminals in the European market is several
hundred. They all have different capabilities and
support different formats for data exchange and
programming platforms. While for Personal
Computers several minimum capabilities can be
assumed (resolution of at least 640x480, HTML-
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browser and keyboard/mouse available), there is still
a lack of standardization for MT. The WURFL-
project (WURFL, 2006) tries to compile a list with
the capabilities of many different types of mobiles
devices and therewith demonstrates the
heterogeneity of mobile devices in an impressive
way. So it is no wonder that Schlickum (2005)
mentions that the effort for adapting a mobile
application/service for different devices often exceed
the effort for the actual implementation of the
application. Further the cost for the acquisition and
maintenance of the required arsenal of MT shouldn’t
be underestimated and could especially for SME
impose serious problems.
Heterogeneity of underlying networks: There
is also a great heterogeneity of underlying wireless
networks and it is likely that news standards will
emerge in the next few years. A mobile service has
to be adapted for many wireless standards, which
requires more resources than SME can afford.
Dominance of the MNO: Nowadays the market
for mobile services aimed at customers is dominated
by the portals of the mobile network operators, e.g.
the i-Mode-portals available in several European
countries. It is at the disposal of the portal operator if
a service gets into their portal or not. The
negotiations with the portal provider often take
several months. We heard reports that some portal
providers seem not to be interested in working with
SME. But in most countries there is more than just
one single portal: there is one portal for the
subscriber of each mobile network operator, so the
SME has to negotiate with all MNO and adapt the
service for all portals (the portals use different
technical standards and infrastructure) to reach all
mobile subscribers in one countries. Things get
worse if a mobile service should be made available
in different countries.
Lack of expertise: Developing mobile services
requires highly specialized experts, but SME cannot
afford such experts. Also the operation of a mobile
service is still a full-time job because of the great
complexity. SME often rely on the expertise of
external IT-consultants, but they are expensive and
are only called when there are problems concerning
the IT-infrastructure required for the day-to-day
business (Marmaridis & Unhelkar, 2005).
Decision process in SME: While in big
companies decisions about new technologies are
made by special departments with experts, in SME it
is often the owner of the firm who makes such
decisions. Without technical knowledge it is even
harder to assess the potentials of new technologies.
R&D Landscape: Research and Development is
mainly aimed at the needs of big enterprises, so
there is often a lack of know-how about latest
technologies in SME (DIKMU, 2006).
Brand-Building: For success in m-commerce
(customer services with direct revenue) a well
known brand is important, but it is very difficult do
build one for SME (Strüker et al., 2003).
Our proposal for a solution to tackle these SME-
specific hurdles is the development of a special
technical framework called M
ODIFRAME
1
for the
provision of mobile services, which will be
introduced in the next section.
5 A SME-FRIEDNLY
FRAMEWORK FOR MOBILE
SERVICE
5.1 Architecture
The proposed framework (see figure 1) provides a
comprehensive runtime environment for mobile
services and consists of several modules:
Application router: All incoming requests are
first handled by the application router, which
analyses the service requests and forwards it to the
corresponding service provider (SME). The data
communication between the MT and the framework
may be transmitted using several standards for
wireless data communication like GPRS, EDGE,
UMTS or WiFi. During a session the
communication standard used be can changed
(“seamless roaming”).
Transcoder: A transformation module is
responsible for the adaptation (transcoding). The
actual service provider (SME) delivers the content in
a generic format and the transformation module
transcodes it to a target format that can be displayed
by the MT that submitted the request, e.g. cHTML
(for devices with i-Mode-capabilities), (X)HTML or
WML. But binary content has to be transcoded as
well: for bitmap pictures and animations it might be
necessary to reduce the resolution or colour depth,
animations could also be deanimated or have the
frame-rate reduced.
1
„MODIFRAME“ stands for „Mobile Dienste Framework“
(„Dienste“ is the German word for „services“)
SPECIFIC CHALLENGES FOR SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES (SME) IN M-BUSINESS - A
SME-suitable Framework for Mobile Services
171
Context: According to our understanding
context information for mobile computing is any
information that is available in explicit form at
runtime of a service (or application) and is used
deliberately to support the user when interacting
with his mobile device (see also Dey (2001)). Since
MT have ergonomic limitations like mentioned
above (small display, cumbersome data input) it is
especially import to have context-aware mobile
services. The framework thus provides context
services which can be used by individual services
hosted by the framework, e.g. the current position of
the user (“Location based services”), the weather
(services like tourist-guides shouldn’t recommend
outdoor-activities when it is raining all day long),
user profile or the available technical resources
(bandwidth, profile of MT, etc).
Authentication: For some services
authentication of the user might be necessary and
maybe even age verification. Unlike in the fixed-line
internet many standards for wireless communication
demand an authentication of the MT (e.g. using the
information on the SIM-card of a GSM device). This
network authentification can be used for service
authentication, so the user hasn’t to enter a username
and password like for many conventional internet
services.
Anonymisation/Pseudonymisation: The
framework can mediate a service request between
MT and SME without revealing the identity of the
originator of the request and thus acts as anonymiser
(for single request service) or pseudonymiser (for
multi-request sessions).
Billing: Some services for customers are thought
to generate direct revenue (e.g. a navigation service
with a fee for each session). For these services the
framework will provide interfaces to several billing
systems. Billing means that telecommunication
services are paid over the telephone bill. (M-
payment also covers the case of non-
telecommunication-services that are paid with a
mobile device, e.g. send a SMS to a premium
number to buy a chocolate bar from a vending
machine).
Whitelabel-Content: Whitelabel-Content is
content provided by third parties to be used by
service provides (SME) for enriching their own
services. For example a service aimed at soccer fans
may include latest sport news or a mobile event
guide might resort to a navigation service provided
Figure 1: Overview of the framework.
Framework
Context-Provider
Location
Weather
Transcoder
Authentification/
AVS
SME 1 SME 2
SME n
Whitelabel-
Content
Context services
Network 1
Network 2
Pseudonymisation/
Anonymisation
Mobile
terminals
……
Provider 1
Provider 2
Application-Router
Interface to
Billing-Systems
Different networks with
different standards,
Operated by different
operators
Different types of mobile
handheld devices
Wrapper for
legacy service
Web service connection
Overlay network
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as whitelabel content to show users how to get to the
locations of the recommended events.
Migration-support: So called “wrappers” help
to operate legacy services developed for other
platforms with the framework. Wrappers are a well
know instrument for the migration of software.
The communication between the framework and
the SME as actual provider of the services is realized
using webservice technology (Cerami, 2002).
Webservice are a popular and reliable technique for
the realisation of distributed application: the call of a
remote function is transparent for the developer,
which means remote functions can be invoked like
local ones. The whole process of encoding and
transmitting the data over a network is encapsulated
by special libraries. Based one a machine-readable
description in form of a WSDL-file (Web service
description language, a XML-grammar) the
developer generates so called stubs, which can be
invoked like local functions and perform all the
“remoting” behind the scenes.
It is also easy to bundle different mobile services
hosted by the framework to get a compound service.
The framework follows the “All-IP-Approach”:
all communication is realized using the Internet
Protocol (IP); the different standards for wireless
communication are used to transport IP-packets.
When an IP-layer can be build upon a given standard
for wireless data communication this standard can be
used for communication between mobile terminals
and the framework.
6 RELATED WORK
6.1 Industry-Solutions for Hosting
Mobile Services
There are many gateways for sending SMS/MMS or
receiving (premium) SMS. These gateways only can
be used for simple forms of mobile services like the
delivery of digital content (ringtones, pictures, etc)
and messaging-based services (e.g. delivery of
advertisement messages, information services etc.
controlled with SMS-commands). Many gateway-
operators ask for high setup-fees (four-digit-number
of Euros) and/or even a guaranteed turnover each
month, so setting up a mobile service is a very risky
venture for SME.
As part of UMTS the IP Multimedia Subsystem
(IMS) is an architecture with three service platforms
— SIP, OSA and CAMEL — and aimed at the
provision of IP-based multimedia services like Push-
to-Talk in packet oriented networks (Licciardi,
Moiso & Palama, 2003). Since IMS is operated by
the mobile network operator as part of his
infrastructure he will control access to the IMS
platform and will not allow every SME to set up a
mobile service.
There are solutions like those from Extended
Systems/iAnywhere or Mobileframe to bring the
data from the backend systems like ERP to MT, but
these solutions aim at bigger enterprises and focus
on B2E-scenarios.
6.2 Empirical Studies Concerning
SME and Mobile Services
There are not many empirical results concerning
mobile services and SME:
A study by Villanen et al. (2004) is concerned
with mobile B2E-services in SME: Their findings
are that one third of the companies with mobile
employees but without a mobile solution to support
them state that they see a need for mobile support.
There are also short descriptions of seven case
studies that demonstrate how SME from different
industrial sectors use mobile technologies to support
their workforce
A qualitative study by Harker & Akkeren (2002)
tried to explore the perceived needs concerning
mobile data technology of SME in Australia across
three levels of adopters of new technology (non-,
partial-, and full-adopters). Another study by this
group (Akkeren & Harker, 2003) concentrated on
SME that already used the internet for e-Mail and
had an own website; it was found out that 60 % of
these full adopters were “very interested or
interested in acquiring” mobile data technology.
7 SUMMARY AND OUTLOOK
We discussed the special characteristics of SME and
the hurdles that keep of most of them away from
participation in m-business. In our opinion this is
one of the major reasons for the lack of success of
mobile data services on the European market. Our
solution-approach is a technical framework for
hosting mobile services developed by SME. The
framework hides the heterogeneity of the underlying
wireless network infrastructure and mobile
terminals. Even the MNO would benefit from the
framework, because they hadn’t to support multiple
SME while developing mobile services and the
SPECIFIC CHALLENGES FOR SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES (SME) IN M-BUSINESS - A
SME-suitable Framework for Mobile Services
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services hosted by the framework will generate
additional data volume and thus revenue for the
MNO.
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