SMS price war could hit UK

Look out market - users won't mind MVNO aggression

By Tony Hallett, 28 June 2004 08:50

NEWS A war over the price of SMS text messages in the Netherlands could be replicated in the UK and even lead to a fiercer division between operators that choose to target businesses and those that focus on consumers.

The Dutch mobile market is one of the most competitive in Europe, with 10 mobile virtual network operators - or MVNOs - as well as five facilities-based cellular providers and growth of 14 per cent in 2003, as measured by Opta, the country's regulator. However, consultancy Current Analysis reckons price cuts in recent months on SMS messages for pre-pay customers could spread to the more valuable post-paid sector - with serious consequences.

"It's not surprising this is happening," said Current Analysis wireless analyst Emma McClune. "MVNOs tend to target the pre-pay market, offering no frills service - mobile's version of Ryanair."

The worrying thing is that after spending some time trying to reduce customer churn and stabilise their market, leading Dutch operators such as KPN Mobile and Telfort have slashed their per-message rates, from €0.23 to €0.09 this month in the case of the former. One MVNO quickly responded with a €0.04 per message offer.

The Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden - where similar price wars have raged - are among the most saturated markets in the world. As such, McClune sees a similar situation developing in the UK.

"The UK is vulnerable," she added.

But with the rise of MVNOs unlikely to abate - the UK counts Virgin Mobile and services from retailers such as Sainsbury and Tesco in these ranks - operators are working out their possible responses.

Some will set up their own no-frills, web-based offerings - a bit like BA starting up Go!, to return to the airline analogy.

Others will increasingly look to the enterprise market, where SMS messages are more likely to form part of high-value bundles, and more complex data and voice arrangements are usually beyond MVNOs, whose core business isn't mobility.

A research note by McClune concluded: "Should a price war develop to its logical conclusion - that is, the innovation of an entirely free SMS service - operators are vulnerable to the tune of 10 per cent of their entire service revenues."

Comments

There are 2 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. anonymous

    BE WARNED... SCAM ALERT....
    There are quite a few sites out there that offer SMS downloads to your mobile phone, and WAP. This is not the case.... These sites exist to charge you £1.50, £2.50 or more for a non existant service. The give you a code to enter on your phone, and a number, send your SMS, and you get 3 reply's, then they have your number, and send you 3 SMS messages at the charge, only the last message is always the one which tells you the code does not exist anymore (3 minutes after you send the SMS). YOU ARE BEING SCAMMED. You will receive the SMS messages and there is no way to stop them, other than getting your number changed (Lots of bother there). There is no watchdog, there is no policing of this service. BE WARNED.

  2. 2. Jon

    It would be nice to return to the early days of SMS when the networks didn't charge a penny.

    Its often cheaper to ring than text.

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