It looks like this means affordable Internet, and free voice calls, for
anyone with a smart phone or other sim-card-based connection.
If so, then it's what we need.
  _____  


 

 


 



 

 

Telkom rings mobile use changes

 

 

Thabiso Mochiko, Business Day, Johannesburg, 25 July 2016

 

Telkom is positioning itself as a data-driven mobile network operator - a
move that is set to shake up the industry.

 

The fourth mobile network operator in the country, with 2.7-million
subscribers at the end of March, is overhauling its mobile data and voice
packages as it aims to simplify its services and gain market share.

 

In the first of a number of competitive products that will be unveiled in
the coming months, Telkom launched last week data-first mobile services that
will see customers choosing from six packages - ranging from 1GB to
unlimited data bundles - that will come with varying amounts of free-call
minutes to other networks, and free calls for WhatsApp, Viber as well as
BBM.

 



 

For example, 1GB of data will come with free WhatsApp, Viber and BBM calls,
50 texts per day and free minutes to Telkom mobile and fixed-line numbers.
Customers will have to pay for phone calls to other mobile networks.

 

A 20GB and unlimited data bundle will have between 1,500 and 3,000 free call
minutes to other networks.

 

Telkom believes its new products fly in the face of industry tradition,
where mobile users have to navigate confusing contracts, seemingly endless
terms and conditions, high peak rates and pricey extras.

 

Telkom Consumer CEO Attila Vitai says data has become the central
requirement for most smartphone users, hence the group has prioritised it.

 

"We think this will disrupt the industry," he says.

 

Vitai says there is a large disparity in the South African market between
the prepaid and post-paid (contract) tariff, with prepaid customers tending
to pay more.

 

No difference between contract and prepaid

 

The new packages will not differentiate between contract and prepaid
customers.

 

Telkom has experienced a sharp rise in mobile data consumption in recent
years because of the increase in smartphone penetration, and application and
social-media platform usage.

 

The company seems to have an advantage, given its size in the market, to
execute these data-driven packages. Its biggest rivals are heavily reliant
on voice revenues, with data making up about 30% of their total revenues.

 

World Wide Worx MD Arthur Goldstuck says while most networks do not realise
it yet, they are already operating in a data-first economy as far as their
most valuable customers are concerned.

 

"We're moving into a dual-behaviour world, where high-spend customers
primarily spend on data and low-spend customers on voice.

 

Data-first

 

"The challenge is to bring the low-spend customers into the data world
without forcing them to spend more money," Goldstuck says.

 

"This can only be done if they embrace the concept of becoming data-first
organisations and make data more accessible to those who cannot afford the
punitive rates charged outside of bundles," Goldstuck says.

 



 

Antony Seeff, CEO of cellphone spend-management company Tariffic, says while
the other operators are complaining about over-the-top (OTT) usage on their
network, such as WhatsApp, Skype, and Facetime services that use data but
don't pay networks for it, Telkom "is going in the opposite direction, and
endorsing them - offering packages where the network won't even make a cent
off these services".

 

Consumers throughout the world are making fewer voice calls on their
cellphones and are using exponentially more data every year.

 

"It's great to see a mobile operator that gets this and is making data the
focal point of a new set of tariffs, while still catering for certain voice
usage," Seeff says.

 

The new packages are a game-changer for Telkom, as it marks a shift from its
mobile division being voice-driven to being data-driven.

 

"Revolutionary"

 

"This is quite revolutionary for an organisation that was built on voice,
and marks the final proof that its cultural transformation under Sipho
Maseko is real," says Goldstuck.

 

Telkom has seen significant improvements in its operations in the past three
years. It has also managed to move its loss-making mobile business into the
black.

 

Goldstuck believes a key element of Telkom's new mobile services structure
is its positioning, meaning it is a factor not only of its business model,
but also of its marketing abilities and flexibility.

 

"This points to the fact that it's not just a bunch of accountants working
out how best to sell services, but in fact evidence of an ecosystem that
integrates, among other, business goals, marketing strategy, and service
capacity.

 

"If Telkom gets it right, it won't be something that can be replicated
overnight by the competition."

 

 

From:
http://www.bdlive.co.za/business/technology/2016/07/25/telkom-rings-mobile-u
se-changes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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