Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

Doro aims at the sweet spot for easy-to-use mobile phones

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Mark Bridge writes:

Here’s a statement that’ll come as no surprise to anyone who works in the UK mobile industry.

For many people, their mobile phone isn’t just a communication device. It’s a personal statement.

Of course it is. Why else can you buy a gold-plated iPhone, a diamante-encrusted Blackberry or a Samsung Galaxy SIII in colours “inspired by the Earth’s richest materials”?

Then there’s the design. Are you working outside?  Perhaps you’d like a rugged phone. Film buff?  Choose a large screen and Dolby sound. Busy sending messages?  You might want a QWERTY keyboard.

However, there’s one demographic that many manufacturers shy away from. Seniors. Older people. The aging population.

I can’t really blame many of those companies. Produce a device that’s tailored for people with age-related challenges and there’s a good chance you’ll be condemned as patronising. Even consumers who’d benefit from larger buttons and bigger on-screen icons don’t always want to admit it.

Doro is a company that’s successfully walking the tightrope between ‘too simple’ and ‘not practical’. Having originally started in the fixed-line business, it now produces a range of mobile phones that are sold in a number of countries. At one end of the scale is a handset that has four large buttons to store four essential contacts - and at the other is a touch-screen smartphone that goes on sale this month. I recently caught up with Chris Millington, managing director for Doro UK & Ireland, and asked him to explain more about the new device.

“This is the Doro PhoneEasy 740 - the product is designed to be an easy-to-use smartphone. It can do many different things; it’s a camera, it will also do email, internet access, and everything on the device is seamlessly backed up to the cloud. It’s therefore very easy to push information onto the device and from the device to other people. So if you wanted to share family pictures it’s incredibly easy, if you wanted to update your calendar you could do it from a computer or somebody could update it for you.”

“We recognise that not everybody can deal with touch-screens so we build in a keypad underneath; you slide the product up, you’re able to access an alphanumeric keypad. That means the buttons are nice and big and it’s easy to dial a number.”

However, even the best phones won’t sell particularly well if retail staff aren’t interested in talking about them. I asked Chris what kind of reaction he’d seen from retailers.

“When you first start off in this sector of the marketplace it’s clear that what people consider the ‘senior market’ is not exciting to an industry that’s looking at 4G and the fastest processors. So it’s been an interesting journey. We have people like Carphone Warehouse and O2 working really well with us, getting the staff to understand they shouldn’t talk down to a user group. Just because somebody doesn’t want a smartphone or wants something that’s easy to use doesn’t mean they don’t enjoy their device as much as anyone else does. So we’re working extremely well in partnership with key players and they’re able to get that message across. O2 are delighted, Carphone are delighted, Orange (Everything Everywhere) are absolutely delighted with the results they’re finding with our products, as are Tesco. The products are selling very well and the feedback that the retailers are getting is also extremely good.”

We went on to talk about Doro’s plans for smartphones and tablets, including the possibility of using Doro devices as part of a mobile healthcare or telecare solution in the future. You can listen to the full interview on our website audio player, via iTunes or by downloading the mp3 file.

Comments

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

Recent Podcasts

ExclusiveSmartphone shipments, multiple messages and a Best Buy buy-out

This week's news report begins with quarterly figures from Samsung and Apple - and a discussion about what the future may hold for iOS.

We also talk about instant messaging versus SMS, the end of Best Buy's European joint venture with Carphone Warehouse, patent wars, white spaces and connected cars.

ExclusiveHanging on the Telephone

It feels like many people are hanging on to mobile advertising as the future of mobile marketing.

Yet there's much more to mobile marketing than the banner ad. In this podcast a panel of experts considers the latest trends and innovation that could change the future of marketing.

ExclusiveVisiting the GSMA Connected City at Mobile World Congress 2013

In this special feature we're looking around the GSMA Connected City at Mobile World Congress 2013.

Mark Bridge and Grant Notman discuss machine-to-machine communications and the Internet of Things, meeting people who've worked with 4G-enabled cars, port logistics, connected houses, m-health and the GSMA's own app development programme.

ExclusiveBring Your Own Device: A Faustian Pact? (part 2)

This is the second part of our programme recorded at the April 2013 meeting of Mobile Monday London, where a panel of experts discussed the topic 'BYOD: A Faustian Pact?'

The panel was chaired by David Rogers of Copper Horse Solutions. His panellists were Caroline Maloney from Telefonica, Charles Brookson of Azenby, David Arnold from BlackBerry and Gemma Coles from Mubaloo.

RSS
First1819202123252627Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«May 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
1234567

Archive