Fortunately these operator are public listed company, hence we can retrieve the data from their published annual report.
Total subscriber data are as follow:
We can almost see the proportion whereby XL is about 50% of Telkomsel's subscriber and Indosat is about 50% of XL's data subscriber. The data subscriber here consist of Blackberry Subscriber, Mobile Broadband subscriber and Pay as You Use subscriber.
The following 3 charts are the proportion of data subscriber towards total number of data subs. Those legend with (calculated) means that this number is deduced, while estimated means that this number comes from verbal source or was assumed, and those without legend means that this number is taken from operator's report.
If you look at the number above, the proportion almost similar, mostly are Pay as You Use, and then coming at the second place is Mobile Broadband package, this is the data packages which are offered by operator, for example, Rp 50,000 for 1.2 GB a month, and then the last proportion is Blackberry subscribers.
Now let us see the total data traffic contributed by each data types:
The proportion is more or less the same between Telkomsel and XL. If we re-look at the total data subs number again, Indosat total data traffic should be more or less half of XL's data traffic. But however, it is obvious that Indosat has not generated enough data traffic. Looking at this chart, I was reminded that Indosat has not been aggressive enough in offering their data packages, hence much less data traffic compared the other 2.
Please be mindful, that the only actual data I can retrieve from the report is the TOTAL DATA TRAFFIC. All the others are deduced.
My take on the monthly average user consumption as follow:
Again, this number is not confirmed, because if you think logically, very less likely that one user will only consume 700 MB or 64 MB in 9 months (9 months because this data is based on the 9M3Q report from each operator).
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