In the wake of Iceland’s Eyjafjallajoekull volcano eruption, mobile phone and dongle users that were stranded by the ash clouds are now being stung for whopping great data bills that they didn’t expect. This is not just a consumer phenomenon; in a recent Mobile Business survey, 75% of our readers said they were not confident to use mobile data while roaming.
Despite new legislation, are mobile operators doing enough to protect mobile data users from bill shock, which if anything seems to have got worse rather than better since mobile broadband made its mark? Do mobile operators actually care about end users and high bills, or are they happy to have a few burnt in order to put the majority off using their mobile’s and dongle’s abroad, clogging up the networks?
Steven van Zanen, Acision head of mobile broadband |
If you provide users with full control these people to use the service and, the door is open to structural and long term revenues and customer loyalty. While this gap in understanding may not have been completely breached just yet, this will also be the first real test of whether the caps placed on costs are having a positive impact on customers’ monthly mobile usage spend in practice. It will also highlight the difficulty of achieving full transparency when the current legislation is only applicable to calls and data usage within the EU, despite many passengers being stranded in far-flung places across the globe.
Operators still face considerable challenges in this area, though. First of all, most current bill shock capabilities are based on usage thresholds such as Megabytes. Consumers and regulators require controls that operate directly at the financial level, not some sort of derived measure. The ability to do this signifies a step change for operators and touches capability in deeply entrenched and complex billing and charging systems. Connecting these to a bill shock capability will not be an easy task for operators to achieve.
Also, operators need to view the bill shock capability in the wider context of customer dialogue. Communicating with customers on their bill is just one of the topics that operators need to have meaningful conversations. Many aspects of the consumer experience, such as congestion levels at certain cell sites, specific marketing offers or other relevant information provide ways to raise the quality of experience for consumers.
These require areas of substantial investment, but also opportunity, where operators are able to improve the quality of experience by support a sustained dialogue with their consumers. There still is a long way to go, however, and operators need to find ways to prioritise these investments.
We are now seeing the next phase of the legislation rolled out, where it is mandatory to offer a spending limit or cut off functionality to subscribers. Even if the subscriber has not requested a specific limit, they will be assigned a default one of €50 per month when roaming.
However, rather than simply being cut off when they hit their limit, they will get a warning message when they have reached 80% of the limit so they have the option to extend it before being cut off. No doubt those travellers returning to ‘bill shock’ will be among the first to sign up.
But what the volcano disruption clearly shows the mobile industry is that the success of the legislation relies heavily on achieving a very fine balance between consumers’ increasing need to be always connected via their mobile device, and their wish to stay in control of the amount they pay for this.
Bill shock is not in the interest of the mobile operator or the end user. If confronted with bill shock, end users will be reluctant to use their service abroad, which will hurt revenues. Also, negative PR around extreme bill shock hurts the operator and it will cost a whole lot more to turn this negative market perception around.
This is a clear cut example of penny-wise, pound-foolish. It is in both the operators’ and end users’ interests that the service offering and related costs are transparent, and that the customer is in full control over what they are spending. This will maximise customer confidence and loyalty and as a result, bolster long term revenues.
Keith Horsted, GTeq channel development director: |
It should not be beyond the wit of man or the technical ability of the networks to send a text when predefined spend limits have been reacted, even if they are indicative, so as to why don’t they do it, I refer to my previous statement; it’s not in their interest to do so and until now, with the new EU cut off point legislation, the status quo has been changed, but it has taken force to make the operators play fair.
Dr. Ekkehard Stadie, Simon-Kucher & Partners’ partner |
Vodafone offers an option called Passport, which allows customers abroad to buy flat-rates on a daily basis so they don’t have to fear bill shocks. Of course, as in every other industry, customers need to inform themselves about potential costs, too.
Now, the EU sees the necessity to cap data roaming prices, as it did with SMS. It’s most likely that, two years from now, operators will have included data roaming in their common bill plans.