After oil, Mukesh Ambani waits to run a digital empire
The ambitious Jio project could give Reliance unprecedented access to the country’s ‘big data’: how millions eat, shop and have fun.
At the vast open-plan headquarters of Indian telecoms start-up Jio,
Reliance Industries chief Mukesh Ambani stands in short sleeves beneath a
digital tracker that logs every new subscriber to his service.
Now, the country’s richest man, and head of India’s most profitable
company, is betting at least $20 billion on building, from scratch, a
national digital empire stretching from phones and hardware to home
entertainment and custom-made apps.
The ambitious Jio project could make Reliance the most comprehensive
provider of telecom and internet services across India — and give it
unprecedented access to the country’s untapped ‘big data’: how millions
eat, shop and have fun.
“For Reliance... data is the new oil, and intelligent data is the new
petrol,” Mr. Mukesh Ambani said in March, explaining his drive to move
closer to India’s consumers.
Reliance has said little publicly about Jio, and even less about the
potential for wide-scale data mining in a country where consumers have
not, to date, made a big deal about online privacy. But top executives
are clear on the opportunity.
“It’s called Deep Packet Inspection, and what you can do with the
analytics of that is mind-boggling,” said a senior Reliance executive,
referring to a practice that digs into ‘packets’ of data created by
computers for efficiency, mining them for information.
Jio is unlikely to contribute significantly to Reliance profits anytime
soon, but is hugely significant for its future. Reliance has dabbled
previously in consumer sectors, yet Jio is seen as an opportunity for
Mr. Mukesh Ambani to set a new course for a company still dominated by
his late father, its founder.
Jio is also a potentially landmark opportunity for India, where
smartphone usage has ballooned and services like mobile payments and
online entertainment have become commonplace.
The prospect of Jio, which has not yet been commercially launched, has
raised hopes of cheaper, more reliable data for Indian users. It has
already drawn queues at some stores by offering free connections with
unlimited data for a three-month period, allowing it to test its
network.
That has stirred rivals. India’s largest wireless provider Bharti Airtel
this week cut its 3G/4G data tariffs on prepaid connections by more
than 40 per cent, after halving them a month ago.
All about ambition
But Jio — named from a Hindi exhortation to ‘live on’ — is behind
schedule and over budget, say several former employees, who, like
current staff interviewed by Reuters, did not want to be named. It was
initially expected to launch by end-2014, with total capital expenditure
within $15 billion, they said.
Reliance has never provided a specific date or figure, and declined to respond to specific queries for this article.
According to filings at the Commerce Ministry, Jio has more than Rs.
32,500 crore ($4.9 billion) of long-term debt, and other liabilities
topping Rs. 58,000 crore, as of March. In addition, Reliance has spent
over Rs. 29,000 crore on Jio and is expected to invest more — all adding
up to more than what it has been spending on its core refining and
petrochemicals business.
Reliance says its oil business is pumping out cash, and any investment in Jio has to be ambitious.
Two-thirds of India’s 1.3 billion population are not online, and Jio
hopes to capture 100 million users — nearly half of India’s current
smartphone users — within a year of launch.
Mr. Ambani, who employees say taught himself to code, ran Reliance’s
nascent telecom operations in the early 2000s, before a feud with his
younger brother Anil triggered a split and a bitter non-compete deal.
Mr. Mukesh Ambani took the family’s energy business and Mr. Anil Ambani
the communications assets, setting up Reliance Communications (RCom).
Before long though, Mr. Mukesh Ambani was laying fibre cables again and
setting up a subsidiary, Rancore, to build its own mobile telephony
technology.
In 2010, Mr. Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries bought Infotel
Broadband — on the day Infotel won nationwide spectrum — and decided it
needed to offer more than a high-speed 4G network service. Instead, it
would pitch an all-Internet service, where even voice calls would be
carried as data, cheaply, beating its rivals Airtel, Vodafone and Idea
on quality and speed, according to Jio officials.
Airtel, Vodafone and Idea declined to comment on Jio.
Naveen Kulkarni, co-head of research at Phillip Capital, said the Jio
technology was “very efficient from a cost point of view,” but needs
India’s smartphone ecosystem to evolve, making it unlikely Reliance will
make money from Jio for at least five years.
Reliance city
At Jio’s biggest campus, a sprawling cluster of glass buildings,
manicured lawns and giant Jio logos outside Mumbai, the scale of Mr.
Mukesh Ambani’s vision is evident. Reuters was offered a rare
opportunity to visit the site earlier this year.
The campus has 15,000 employees working for Jio alone, plus hundreds of
consultants and service providers working alongside the group. There are
large guest houses and hotels.
In a single hall, Reliance has put on show everything from its e-payment
mechanism and music-streaming app to its messaging app, sleek Jio
smartphones — sold at a fraction of the cost of an iPhone — connected
cars, and even a replica home.
“As they go out, they will have a very aggressive posture," said Rajan
Mathews, director-general of the Cellular Operators Association of
India.
On campus, Mr. Mukesh Ambani, who flies in by helicopter once a week,
was flanked at his desk by his eldest son, Akash, who is Jio’s head of
strategy, and by Manoj Modi, a long-serving adviser, and a reminder of
the influence of trusted employees, most from the oil business.
One company insider said the Jio logo is actually a mirror image of the
word ‘oil,’ reflecting in a way Reliance’s journey from oil drilling to
data mining.
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