Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

A Blyk day

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Mark Bridge writes:

Marketing, not unlike football, is a funny old game. I don’t claim to be an expert in either… but every so often something happens that starts sowing the seeds of doubt in my mind. And no, I’m not thinking about Liverpool's penalty claims in Sunday’s game at Tottenham. I’m thinking about Blyk.

Here at The Fonecast, we like Blyk. They shook up the industry and worried some of the big names when they arrived with their youth-focussed virtual mobile network two years ago. We interviewed their MD Shaun Gregory in May last year. And now they’re quitting the MVNO game in favour of arranging advertising deals for networks.

Well, things change. You can’t blame Blyk for adapting as the mobile environment evolves. But they way they’re doing it? That’s got me puzzled.

First, they appeared to be dropping their customers pretty unceremoniously. Their press release in July said “Blyk members will continue to enjoy all the benefits of the service until 26th August, at which point Blyk’s MVNO operation ends in the UK. Since Blyk’s inception its members have freely aired their opinions and demonstrated their independence and individuality. Thus, as young people do, Blyk members will select the best alternative on the market to meet their individual needs.”

That’s a message that could easily be interpreted as “clear off, we don’t owe you anything – you’ve got a month to find yourself a new network”. A few customers left less-than-positive comments on the Blyk UK blog – and that might have been the end of the negative comments if Blyk hadn’t asked its members what they’d thought about the Blyk experience. Fair enough; a bit of consumer research is generally useful. But then Blyk published its members’ comments. Over three thousand comments that, amongst the plaudits, included Blyk is crapA rip off and Your rubbish. You don't work. Those are some of the more polite ones. Yes, the majority are positive – but that’s to be expected when you ask your customers for their best experience. And now they’re preserved online. Well, preserved for a while anyway.

So that’s me doubly puzzled. Why give the impression that you’re dumping your loyal customers and you don't really care who they choose next – and why publish so many comments that are either negative or irrelevant?

Yes, irrelevant. Some of Blyk’s customers clearly didn’t have a clue about the fiscal mechanics of the world they inhabited. “I dont like to have a limit on how much i can text or cal,so why did u give limit? Now u might say, well u can top up, however why shall i waste my money when u can give me free credit?”

There’s no neat end to this particular article. No Izzard-like twist that returns me to the beginning. Instead I’ll leave with another of those negative comments that – as I said earlier – are very much in the minority but can’t help but make me smile.

Awful. Things just got worse and worse from the moment i joined. First you rip us off by "giving us more flexibility" and greatly diminishing our text allowance, then you sell out and stop your decreasingly helpful service to make an extra couple quid a month. Something tells me you won't be posting this one.

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

«June 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
25262728293031
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293012345

Archive