Saturday, February 9, 2008

Football's leaving home

If the UK papers are to be believed, Premier League football looks set for Singapore, Tokyo and Los Angeles. It would seem a safe bet to add Dubai to that list.

The Premier League, the world's most watched – and most commercially successful, sporting event, has long recognized the value of international sales. It estimates hosting games overseas, as it plans to do from the 2010-2011 season, would bring in nearly $500m in extra TV rights. There would be more to make on separate sponsorship deals. Host cities would be asked to bid for the right to stage one game, to be held in January (mid-season). Dubai, with a new all-purpose stadium at Sports City, great weather, and increasing ties to Premier League football (Emirates sponsor Arsenal, Dubai International Capital have been linked with Liverpool) must be a shoo-in for a top game.

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Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Thumb-power

SMS remains a technology with lots of potential applications waiting to be discovered and implemented — for everything from payment systems to information on demand. Given the mobile network operators' strong desire to maximize profits, and the need for, say, Etisalat or Du to differentiate themselves, a good idea from a start-up has an excellent chance of getting heard.

The trend-spotting site Springwise has a good example from the Philippines, where text messaging has caught on in a huge way.

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Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Quick thinking creates slow-tech solution

Full marks to Jazeera Airways for its quick and positive reaction to the ongoing internet connection slow down. With more than 60 per cent of the airline's bookings being made online, it has produced a slimmed down version of its site (just 16 kilobytes in size, loading in less than 4 seconds on very slow connections) to cope with the problem. And released a press release telling the media all about it.

I have no idea how well the site responds to the slow down, or much business Jazeera will make and/or save, but such responsiveness deserves credit. It will be interesting to see if it carries on with the low-tech site after the problem is cleared. Even on a good day, I'd bet customers prefer quick and simple to slow and complicated.

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Monday, February 4, 2008

Connecting with the right excuse

For commuters using the UK's rail network autumn mornings would be sprinkled with late running trains. The standard, slightly baffling excuse would be that there were leaves on the line. Retailers, explaining a poor season's sales, often fob off investors with the excuse that the weather was 'wrong', either too rainy or too sunny.

For Middle East telecom providers there is standard go-to line when services are disrupted: 'damage to underwater cables'. A cable in the Mediterranean was damaged last week causing a slow down in internet connection speeds across the region. This was followed by damage to a cable off the coast of Dubai, and then another off Qatar. If one is bad luck, and two is careless, what does that make three?

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Sunday, February 3, 2008

KFC flaps its wings

If you want to build the world's biggest sandwich you will have to top the 2,500kg monster created by Wild Woody's Chill and Grill. The longest line of pizza currently stands at 186.3m, in Treviso, Italy. Doha can now claim to be the home of the world's largest bucket of fried chicken – a 300kg mountain courtesy of Qatar Food Company, the franchisee owner of KFC.

Setting the record has certainly made the papers, at least locally, and no doubt QFC is proudly counting the press clippings. "We wanted Doha to be in the record books and what better way to offer customers abundant supply of the product they love, while setting a record on the way as well," says Sherif al-Ashry, a company official.

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