Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

I'm unconvinced about the new T-Mobile hybrid tariff

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Mark Bridge writes:

I don’t like marketing spin. You know, the kind of thing where the small print contradicts the headlines or where an embarrassing u-turn becomes a benefit. Given my chosen profession, I find it tends to stand out.

And so I turn my attention to T-Mobile’s new You Fix tariff. Sounds rather like T-Mobile’s 2005 U-Fix tariff, but that may be coincidence. You pay a fixed monthly fee and - if you use all of your inclusive calls - you can add an additional allowance during the month by paying a bit more. Rather like buying a top-up on a prepay phone.

Apparently it “combines the benefits of pay monthly with the flexibility and spend control of pay as you go”. The flexibility of pay as you go?  I don’t think so. The flexibility of not paying every month?  Afraid not, there’s a 12-month minimum term. The flexibility of just paying £5 for a little credit if you’re short of cash. Afraid not, it’ll cost you at least £15.50 a month.

Now, I’m not saying You Fix isn’t any good. Far from it. The appeal of a set monthly allowance for a fixed monthly amount may well be attractive to many people (much like U-Fix and its predecessor, Mix-it).

But please don’t tell me that You Fix allows “the same level of spend control” as a pay as you go tariff. Please don’t talk about the “best of both worlds”.

No unexpected bills, yes. However, it’s still a monthly contract with a minimum term and minimum payments. That’s nothing like prepay.

Comments

Collapse Expand Comments (0)
You don't have permission to post comments.

Recent Podcasts

ExclusiveMobile industry predictions for 2015, from smartphones to spectrum

The Fonecast predicts 2015: Iain Graham, James Rosewell and Mark Bridge gather round a sapphire crystal ball and make their forecasts for the next 12 months in the mobile industry.

Whose product line won't survive until December 2015? What will happen with the BT/EE merger? Which new features will be introduced by smartphone manufacturers?

ExclusiveMobile industry podcast: new smartphones, new network equipment and new insight

It's time for another news-packed mobile industry podcast from TheFonecast.com, starting with the European Parliament's latest ruling on in-car emergency communication.

After that we're talking about Microsoft's departure from the Nook eBook business, Three UK's 4G growth, Acer's tablet-sized phone, EE's rural coverage solution and some interesting new research about mobile-enabled customer service.

ExclusiveBT talks to O2, Nokia and Jolla announce new tablets, Apple Watch developers get started... and Ofcom plans for more mobile capacity

In this week's podcast we're talking about the potential purchase of the O2 UK mobile network by BT.

We also discuss new tablets from Nokia and Jolla, the end of a patent battle, mobile payments via instant messaging, app development for the Apple Watch and plans to make even more spectrum available for mobile broadband in the UK .

ExclusiveThe week's UK mobile industry news, including BlackBerry, TalkTalk, 4G data and much more

Time for another podcast presented by Iain Graham, James Rosewell and Mark Bridge. They begin this week's programme by talking about the latest enterprise-friendly developments from BlackBerry.

Next comes a new survey from Ofcom about the UK's 4G data speeds, followed by news about TalkTalk's MVNO deal with Telefonica, the growth of WiFi in the home and a report from AVG about social media sapping smartphone performance.

RSS
245678910Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«May 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
1234567

Archive