Home Cover storyWhat next?

What next?

Cyberia was quick to take the lead among Lebanon's Internet service providers. Will its expansion plans be enough to stay ahead and avoid the tech fallout?

by Carl Gebeily

A bude Omari is known· for his charm and pit-bull mentality:

When he has an idea between his teeth, he might be pleasant

about it, but he will never let go. For the boyish-looking

entrepreneur, with his casual attire and winning smile, the world of the

Web is a natural fit. He always looks to the future, say colleagues, and

his sales pitches cany a New Economy resonance. Striking a chord with

the general public, he calls his e-venture, “Internet for everyone” and

describes his concept as “the next breed in portals.”

As co-founder of Cyberia along with college roommate Walid

Fakhry, Omari has experienced the adrenaline highs and the growing

pains that accompany the transformation and sifting of ideas into

a cohesive business. The main pressure, bigger than earnings in a

topsy-turvy environment, is to build organizations – fast- before opportunities slip away.

His breakthrough idea? ‘There is no single

idea,” says Omari. “Cyberia doesn’t operate

with a unique selling proposition.” Instead, by

strapping on a family of value-added services

such as voice services – still in beta testing

phase – webmail and news, the company hopes

to move away from its position as purely an ISP.

“Our approach is not generic,” says Omari.

“From the start, we looked specifically at what

would make _a Lebanese customer go out and

start using the Internet.”

It took barely a year for Cyberia, launched

in September 1996, to climb to pole position, and it soon became

clear that the charismatic entrepreneur had tapped into the mindset

of the New Economy. Investors were drawn to his idea of a “Net

for the people.” And why not? Lebanese consumers flocked to his

user-friendly startup kits and were able to replenish their online credits

from a large distribution of resellers – both Cyberian innovations

that were later emulated by other ISPs. Omari had already signed

up some long-term investors, including Lebanon Invest, financier

Elias Hallak, founder of Invest Corporation, and Chase

Manhattan, whose names added cachet to the venture.

So what are the payoffs? The exact answer is safely guarded in

some Cyberian high-encryption electronic vault. However, the average

growth in revenues has been of the order of 64% over the past

two years, and by estimates gathered from both the local ISPs and

independent market research, Cyberia commands as much as

42% of the 200,000 dial-up access market, compared with

lnconet’s 29% and Data Management’s 19%.

None of the companies would divulge revenue or profit figures. But

it’s unlikely that any are profitable with their ISP services and questionable

whether they’re making money on anything else -just look

at the poor track record in that regard of Internet companies in the West.

Revenue is offset by Cyberia’s high operational costs. Other than

the overhead charges, the large office spaces in Hamra and the 54

employees, are the astronomical charges incurred by the ministry

of post and telecommunications (MPT) who have a monopoly on

phone lines and prices. Bandwidth is leased at the monthly rate of

$59,000 per 2mbs, which is split as a $27,000 fee for connection

to the Internet backbone, a further $27,000 in licensing fees and

$5,000 in charges to the international gateway. ‘The MPT still doesn’t

have a clear policy toward regulating the private sector in terms

of charges and frequency allocations,” complains Omari. “The

monthly charges hit you like a brick wall.”

This discomfort is shared by ISPs across the board, particularly when

they look with envy at the palatable US rate of $4,000 per 2mbs.

Cyberia’s Internet service runs on 8-10mbs, requiring monthly

charges in excess of $250,000. This expense is quite aside from the

$13 charge per phone – the company has some 3,000 lines nationwide.

If the company’s finances remain somewhat opaque, what is more

apparent is Cyberia’s corporate evolution from ISP to all-in-one portal

– an evolution that has its parallels and differences with other

ISPs. With mobs of new users logging onto the Net and annual growth rates of some 150%,

the future was looking bright for ISPs in

1997. Until they had the rug pulled out from

under them that is.

That year the number of ISPs peaked at over

20. Today there are just a handful of players. First

came an attack from an unexpected quarter.

Banque Audi entered the ISP market in August

1999, with a free dial-up service to win over consumer

Internet users. Offered in conjunction with

Inconet, the usual access charges were paid by

a monthly account-handling fee ofLLl0,000-at a time when unlimited access charges were

still about $30. Not wishing to be outdone by the Audi/Inconet

alliance, Byblos Bank teamed up with Data Management in a

PC/unlimited-internet package. The entrance of the bank Net accounts

spelled disaster for small ISPs and big trouble even for ISPs

like Cyberia, who hadn’t chosen a bank partner.

Barely a month later, Omari announced to a surprised Internet

community that his company had adopted a $12.99 unlimited

access price – slashed from $29 – in a desperate maneuver to consolidate

his electronic ground. The fallout was severe. The price cut

effectively signed the death warrant for many smaller ISPs.

“Many ISPs fell by the wayside,” recalls Jacques Hakimian,

Internet analyst with Dialog. “The ones who survived were forced

to differentiate in any way shape or form.”

ISPs have responded on several fronts. While some complain they

can’t survive if prices go any lower, others continue to use the access

charge as a key trump card. (Terranet has maintained a monthly $9.99;

and Libancom, having dropped its access charge to an unprofitable

$6.66 is back on $11.99.) Others still are concentrating on adding Web

services, such as website hosting, or are trying to lure customers with

promises of better service and access with less downtime.

A case in point is US-based PSINet, which entered the Lebanese market

by purchasing Lynx, a local ISP in its death throes. It is the only local

ISP with a direct fiber-optic link from Lebanon to North America. And

since about 85% of all Internet activities run on the American backbone,

this translates into significant cuts in delay – typically 53% on

the 30kpbs norm of a copper cable. This is an important selling point

in a cutthroat market that looks for added benefits. Mike Mansour, IT

consultant for PSINet Lebanon believes that speed, not ISP content,

is the way to survive. “We offer a super-carrier service that cuts out all

the middlemen,” he says. “That’s what will count in the future.”

Data Management adopted a different strategy to widen its revenue

base. Keen advocates of Web hosting, the ISP turned its focus

into helping startups find their footing such as E-comlebanon, a B2C

venture that was launched by entrepreneur, Karim Saikali. “Data

Management’s expertise was key in implementing my project,” says

Saikali. That expertise brings with it a startup fee of $25,000 for

average-sized Web ventures.

Data Management also launched Yalla! in 1999, a homegrown

Yahoo!, proving that their corporate focus had already shifted to

services, content and e-commerce. “In the Internet world, no one

is willing to invest in a company that grows slowly,” says Antoine

Haddad, advertising and marketing manager of Data

Management. “Go find an Internet company that said it was going

to be methodical.” Yalla! carries some 570 Web pages, ranging from

news and business to computing and kids, that are updated daily

or weekly and register a total 3 million hits a month.

“It’s not that ISPs are no longer providing Internet service,” says

Dialog’s Hakimian. “But they are having to evolve and cater to

niche markets.” Omari is more succinct in his assessment of the

changing ISP model: “Access will become more and more of a commodity

while content will become more and more relevant.”

Cyberia’s e-magazine was launched in July 2000 with sections

on news, business, arts &entertainment and sports, bringing to

fruition over a year of planning. Is the result another homegrown

Yahoo!? Not quite, says Wadad Awam, Yalla!’s editor-in-chief. “In

essence, we’re more of a portal than Cyberia,” she says. “Our content

is collected from various sources just like Yahoo!. Cyberia, on

the other hand, is more of an e-magazine, like CNN: that is, a one source

media.” Cyberia has four sections to Yalla!’s eight, but rather

than resorting to wirefeeds, the majority of their news and features

are written in-house by a newly hired staff of reporters and editors.

Independence comes at a cost. Cyberia’s news center carries a

running tag of about $30,000 a month- and with no significant post publication

boost to the roll of subscribers, the online magazine has

so far added little in terms of returns. With all the

other expenses, that’s quite a cash burn

rate. How long can it last

without having to

take austerity measures

that might

include staff or salary

cuts for instance?

Revenues from the online

news, if there are to be any, will come at a later stage. “For instance, a customer who reads a movie

review in the arts and entertainment section, and is interested in the film,

will want to know where it’s playing,” says Omari. ‘The next stage will

be to allow that customer to reserve and buy his ticket online- and that

becomes commerce that can generate profits.” And, reasserting its move

away from the original ISP model, Cyberia launched chat rooms and

message boards in October in a bid to drive more traffic to the site.

But some analysts believe Cyberia has done too much, too soon.

“They got going too fast,” says Sam Lutfallah, general manager of

Inconet. “They got unfocused.” The changes are draining cash, he

believes, and are wiping out any chance of profitability. “It may be

only a matter of time before they burn out.” Whereas he does see

the need for ISPs to play more of a portal role in today’s e-landscape

lnconet itself is working on plans to reposition – he maintains that

Cyberia is rushing headlong, almost impulsively. “The name of the

game is to hold on to your subscribers,” says Lutfallah – Inconet has

some 50,000 subscribers, about 45% of whom are signed up on Audi

Net-accounts. “Cyberia seems to be in the process of putting the carriage

before the horse’s head.”

Omari is certainly a young man in a hurry. But, for the time being

at least, he has a solid following among the mouse-clicking voters.

Cyberia registered some 13 million hits for the month of September

2000, an increase of roughly 450% from September 1999 and some

10 million more hits than Yalla!. And according to an inside source,

the arts & entertainment page has grown by more than 300% in hits

in the last two months.

The jury is still out on whether this new whiz kid on the media block

will meet with success. But traditional Lebanese newspapers are

extending their print operations to the Web to counter Cyberia’s

foray. Both An-Nahar and LOrient-Le lour have consolidated their

content into bright Internet portals that blends news with entertainment

listings and other local information.

So what next? Cyberia ‘s territorial ambitions aren’t limited to a home

turf. Plans are already afoot to expand into the relatively untapped e-markets

of Jordan and Algeria. The coming five years foresees expansion

throughout the Middle East- an e-market of roughly 2 million.

Given this pan-Arab goal, Omari can expect more competition – not

only with local rivals like Yalla! but also with such regional players as

Arabia.com, AiwaGulf and

California-based Planet Arabia.

It’s a strategy that has the support

of his shareholders. “Our outlook is

that there’s a great potential in

Cyberia’s future,” says Nicole

Gebara, assistant general manager at

Lebanon Invest. “Given the falling

prices of access charges, it makes

economic sense to extend the revenue

base by incorporating a portal

within the ISP model.” Through its

venture capital fund, the financial

house bought into Cyberia in 19% to

the tune of $1.1 million – or 15.4% •

of the ISP’s $7 .2 million value at

the time – and sold about two-thirds

a year later for about $3 million.

“Going regional is a logical progression,”

she says.

It’s a gamble that may just pay

off. In Lebanon, as in the West, the

gold-rush mentality has all but

gone, and it’s apparent that just

select dot-corns will strike the mother lode. However, in contrast

to the tortoise-like speed of development in brick-and-mortar

industries, capitalists with stars in their eyes might be more willing

to finance the handful of homegrown companies that they

believe will become the region’s eBays and Yahoos.

And why eBay or Yahoo!? ”The concepts that have the best chance

of surviving on the Web,” says Hakimian, “are those whose content

and services are not portered from traditional media and retailing, but

are purely Internet or interactive services.” Companies that fit best into

this slot are those that let consumers negotiate their own price, and the

best of these are auctions. The biggest online auction site, eBay, used

the Web’s technology to bring together an audience that had previously

been fragmented by geography. A collector of nargileh pipes, for example,

no longer needs to peruse every bazaar and souk in the Middle East

to find the perfect hubbly-bubbly; he just needs to search online.

But venture capitalists will need a lot more than theoretical models

to be moved into signing checks: They will need practical reassurances.

“Foreign capital, most of it from America, is hovering overhead

waiting to dive into Lebanon’s Internet industry,” says Joseph

Hanania, general manager of Compaq’s Middle East and North Africa

division. “All they’re waiting for is a firm commitment from the

Lebanese government to the New Economy – dropping Net phone

charges would be a start.” Others warn that capitalists, despairing of

any easy exit through which to sell their investments, may move on

to neighboring countries, leaving Lebanon’s nascent Internet industry

gasping for cash. The money could also quickly vanish or move

elsewhere because of regional instability. Foreign venture capitalists

could decide Lebanon, and indeed the entire region, is not

worth the risk, leaving people like Omari stranded.

It’s a delicate situation – but not one without its silver lining. Most

insiders and market analysts predict that Cyberia will do well in the long

haul and that its share price will eventually reflect that success. Even

in the West, the growing list of dot-com deaths is mitigated by some

good tidings. A recent report by Forrester Research, based in

Cambridge, Massachusetts, has predicted that global Internet spending

by consumers could increase to over $180 billion in the next five

years, up from $20 billion last year.

The money earned off the Internet is not yet sinking very deeply into

Lebanon’s economy. Buses and billboards that have been taken over

by dot-com advertising hardly make for a Net nation. And Cyberia’s

battle cry of ”All you need is love” can only go so far to drive the New

Economy. As mercantile Lebanese know only too well, capital is power.

Omari and other young Internet entrepreneurs will need to hang onto

their assets and make them grow if they wish to emerge as a potent force

shaping Lebanon’s economic – and political – future.

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