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Sunday, November 8, 2009

MORE TO IT THAN MEETS THE EYE

 ‘Per second’ billing: Devil lies in the detail

Omkar Sapre PUNE 


SAHIL Shah, a kirana shop owner, was delighted to switch to the ‘one-second billing tariff’ plan offered by his cellular operator. However, he was in for a rude shock when he exhausted a fortnight’s talktime in just a week. He took a closer look and realised his mistake in opting for the plan.
 
    Mr Shah was earlier using a tariff plan of 30 paisa per minute before he switched to the ‘one-paisa per-second’ plan. With his calls lasting for an average 3 minutes, he ended up paying 180 paise per call in the new one-second billing plan, compared with 90 paise earlier. The one-second billing phenomenon, introduced in June by Tata-DoCoMo, the newest cellular operator, has caused a frenzy in the domestic telecom industry with all operators jumping on to the bandwagon. Impressed by subscribers’ frantic adoption of the tariff plan, industry regulator Trai mooted making telecom billing mandatory at one-second pulse, for subscribers’ benefit. Sections of the industry erupted with objections that such a move will cost the industry billions of rupees. HSBC Global Research, in a report, had described the ‘per-second plan’, a disruptive for the sector and said if all telecom operators adopted the plan, it could hurt the sector’s revenue by 10-15%.
 
    However, it has now emerged from an analysis by the ET that ‘one-second billing’ is a marketing ploy that will neither hurt the industry nor be a major game-changer for the industry. Instead,
 it will cause a churn in prepaid customers seeking operators offering this 
tariff plan. Users actually stand to lose, if
 they switch to the ‘one-second billing’ plan without understanding their calling patterns, and if their existing tariff plans are less than 60 paise per minute. While all operators are promoting the per-second plan aggressively, Idea Cellular has positioned the plan, along with an alternative plan at 40 paise per minute for those making longer duration calls. 
    Pradeep Shrivastava, chief marketing officer, Idea Cellular, said: “It is incorrect to say the per-second billing is inexpensive. So, while we launched a per-second plan to be competitive, we have an alternative plan for users making calls, which are longer than 2-3 minutes. The longer the subscriber calls, the more she/he saves, compared with the per-second billing.”

 

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Repository/getimage.dll?path=ETM/2009/11/09/9/Img/Pc0091200.jpg

 

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1 comments:

Stephen said...

For india growth i would like to add that India will actually benefit with the crash in commodities since its a net importer.
Also, its internal markets are what drives its economy to a large extent.

Contrast that with China which depends on exports esp to the US and Brazil/Russia which are commodity plays.

 

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