Vodafone
Portugal is offering free communications on 24 and 25 December for its
customers. They can choose one of two options: voice, SMS and MMS
communications or free data for internet access. The offer is valid for
the first 500,000 individual customers and must be activated by 21
December in the My Vodafone App, or by calling the number 1275.
Meantime, 3 UK has launched a marketing campaign encouraging Britons to
not use their phones at all on Christmas Day. The “Go Cold Turkey”
campaign will run on social media, urging people to “properly enjoy the
wonders of a delicious Christmas dinner, paper hats and watching TV
repeats with loved ones,” the mobile operator said. A short film
produced by the company—viewable on Three’s YouTube, Facebook,
Instagram and Twitter pages—speaks of “a Britain afflicted with extreme
device addiction” and shows the extremes to which people will go in
order to use their smartphones, such as unplugging the Christmas lights
to charge a phone.
Christmas
has traditionally been a time for creative and generous promotions from
mobile operators, who offer discounts and free services in celebration
of the holiday. Such initiatives can increase customer satisfaction and
loyalty and thereby boost retention—while costing the operators
relatively little. This season, we were struck by the sharp contrast
between two approaches by two operators in two different countries.
While Vodafone Portugal takes the tried and true road of offering free
communications—with a choice of either voice and text or data—3 UK is
actually encouraging Britons—and not just its subscribers but all
Britons—not to use telecom services at all during the holiday.
It
certainly seems counter-intuitive and even self-destructive for a
telecom operator to try and inhibit use of its core services, but
arguably 3’s strange initiative could actually serve a similar purpose
to that of the Portuguese promotion. By identifying “device addiction”
as a social ill and making a token gesture toward fighting it, 3 UK will
potentially accrue positive feelings from customers, which could have
the effect of bolstering the company’s image and brand and thus helping
with retention and even acquisition. And from a different angle, it is
possible that taking a one- or two-day hiatus from mobile services could
have the effect of increasing customers’ appetite for those services
after the hiatus is over and end up driving up net
consumption.
Tarifica
is the global leader in monitoring and analyzing telecom pricing.
Covering hundreds of operators in every region of the globe, Tarifica’s
databases of mobile and fixed line data and voice tariffs are among the
largest and most in-depth in the world. Tarifica is also a leading
publisher of benchmark and other pricing reports, and its analysts are
recognized authorities in the telecom industry, relied upon by operators
and businesses worldwide for pricing insight and guidance.
To learn more about Tarifica, please visit www.tarifica.com
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