Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

I want to live in a world... where mobile tariffs are easy to compare

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Mark Bridge writes:

Supermarkets. You either love ‘em or hate ‘em. Actually, that’s not true. Most of us seem to be happy enough with a half-price bottle of wine but less convinced about globalisation and supplier relationships.

But none of that’s bothering me today. Instead, I’m troubled – as I have been for several months – by the TV commercial for Tesco’s prepay mobile phone tariff.

It starts as a parody of the kind of ads we saw in the mid-90s when the future was bright for Orange. “I want to live in a world where I can transform a whisper into a shout”.

Soon, a Tesco Mobile customer says she’d rather live in a world where people transform her £10 into £30 if she buys a top-up every month.

Lovely. £30 of credit for £10 cash.

Except… well… that’s completely meaningless, isn’t it?

After all, it’s Tesco that’s setting those charges – and in the ad it’s not telling us what they are. For all it’s saying, those basic charges could be three times higher than other networks. You might as well advertise the Apple iPad as being ‘thin’ instead of being a tablet computer.

In reality, Tesco's charges aren't outstanding – neither the best nor the worst – but they’re okay, which means the deal for £20 of ‘free credit’ is appealing. (Although it’s worth pointing out that existing Tesco Mobile customers don’t get the deal automatically; they need to register for it).

Which all brings me to the point of what’s starting to sound like a Meldrew rant. In its ad, Tesco is harking back to a day when mobile phones were relatively new and exciting. But it was also a day when pricing was rather more straightforward. Today, we’re faced with tariffs that – despite the best efforts of an Ofcom-approved comparison site – are nigh-on impossible to compare.

Do you want free music with your mobile phone?

Free calls when you’re visiting your favourite place?

Free texts for life?  (Whose life?)

Free weekend calls?

Don't get me wrong, Tesco's basic tariff is reasonably simple. However, despite mocking the big networks, it’s still involved in the same kind of tariff games as its playmates.

Have we really reached a situation where the biggest UK mobile operators can't afford to offer a prepay tariff that doesn't include any discounts?

 

Comments

Collapse Expand Comments (1)
James Rosewell

Tesco control the charges and can make it as good or as low value as they like. They've priced Mobile in the same way as they price Grapes! It'll work for their core customers, which is clever. However as soon as someone exceeds the "inclusive" amounts they're in for bill shock and that'll annoy a lot of previously loyal customers. Tesco beware. MNOs consider the merits.

1
0
You don't have permission to post comments.

Recent Podcasts

ExclusiveOur mobile phone industry predictions for 2013

It's the last podcast of 2012, so we're making some predictions about the mobile industry in 2013... and looking back to the forecasts we made twelve months ago..

Should we expect a renaissance at BlackBerry?  Is it the beginning of the end for SMS?  Will smartphones keep getting bigger?  Will the number of UK networks get smaller? 

ExclusiveGemalto and mobile financial services: we talk to Amol Deshmukh and Winston Yeo

Today's podcast feature takes a look at mobile financial services, from the current state of mobile payments to NFC adoption and the developments we're likely to see next year.

Joining us are Winston Yeo, Vice President Marketing and Product Management for Mobile Financial Services at Gemalto, and Amol Deshmukh, Gemalto's Director of Mobile Financial Services for North America.

RSS
First2425262729313233Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«May 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
1234567

Archive