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Friday, March 16, 2012

Rebtel: the mobile VoIP rebel that speaks its mind

Mark Bridge writes:

Back in the 1960s, Hertz was the number one hire car company in the USA. Avis was trailing a long way behind. Looking for a new advertising campaign, CEO Robert Townsend spoke to Bill Bernbach - the ‘B’ in ad agency DDB - and a few months later “We try harder” became the Avis tagline.

“Avis is only No.2 in rent a cars” the headlines admitted. “We try harder. When you’re not the biggest, you have to.”

It’s a message I was reminded of when I met Andreas Bernström at Mobile World Congress last month. Andreas is CEO of Rebtel, the world’s second-largest mobile Voice-over-IP company. With Skype seen as market leader for VoIP services, I asked Andreas whether Rebtel also needed to try harder.

“I think any person who’s smaller and trying to disrupt the incumbent has to be better”, explained Andreas. “I mean, we need to be better at customer services, we need to be better on price, we need to be better on innovation.”

“From our perspective Skype are almost becoming an operator. They have connect charges, they are expensive to certain destinations, they have packages that people need to buy, they’re quite complicated to understand, their mobile solution is essentially a PC solution that’s been shoved onto a mobile phone. We’re very much designed specifically for mobiles, we try to do it in a way that’s intuitive for the user, we’re typically considerably cheaper than they are, we try to propagate ‘free’ as much as possible; so I think that would probably be quite a fair statement that we do try harder.”

Rebtel is a company with disruption running through its veins; the link between Rebtel and rebel is no coincidence. So does anyone in the mobile industry actually like Rebtel?

Andreas isn’t bothered. “I kind of look at it from a consumer’s perspective. What we’re doing is hugely enjoyed by the customer. Whether or not the operators like us or not, I don’t really care. Having said that, on a wholesale side, operators love us. There’s basically nobody in the market actually increasing volumes of minutes - but we’re going from half a billion minutes to a billion minutes to 1.6 billion. So somebody who is selling in the wholesale space thinks Rebtel’s the best customer since sliced bread.”

Although the direct-to-consumer side of network operators may not like Rebtel, Andreas says there has been a noticeable change in the last 12 months. Networks who previously didn’t want to talk with him are now investigating the possibility of white-label VoIP solutions that could be used for their own-brand free internet calling services.

But it’s not just the networks that are changing. Rebtel is looking to develop its services so they can be ‘dropped into’ applications as widgets, enabling mobile developers to add calling and messaging to a wide variety of apps. In addition, it’s also investigating the possibility of becoming an aggregator to connect between rival VoIP services. As for the longer-term future, Rebtel has its eye on mobile money transfers as well.

Yes, total customer numbers show that Skype is ahead at the moment. But that’s not worrying Andreas Bernström. And it doesn’t appear to be worrying Rebtel’s 15 million users, either.

You can hear my full interview with Andreas Bernstrom in a special podcast feature if you click here. To receive all our mobile industry podcasts as soon as they’re available, simply subscribe to our RSS feed or find ‘The Fonecast’ in the iTunes store.
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Opinion Articles

Is Android losing its impact for Google?

Mark Bridge writes:

Recent figures released by ABI Research have prompted the market intelligence company to ask whether Google is losing control of the Android ecosystem.

At first glance, Android dominated smartphone shipments for the final quarter of 2013. ABI Research says 77% of the 287 million smartphones shipped in Q4 2013 were running Android.

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It’s time to prepare for the upcoming surge in signaling traffic

Robin Kent writes:

After initially suffering from slow pick up by consumers, 4G has begun to accelerate, and is now well on the way to the forecasted one billion subscribers by 2017. In fact EE, owner of T-Mobile and Orange, recently announced the addition of 493,000 new 4G customers to its existing base of 1.2 million.

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Mobile phone coverage: is this as good as it gets?

Mark Bridge writes:

A new report has highlighted the issue of poor mobile phone coverage in rural Sussex villages. BBC Sussex invited me onto their ‘Sussex Breakfast’ radio show to explain what could be done - and, as usual, I made enough notes for a lecture rather than a three-minute interview.

Here’s what I would have liked to have said if I’d been given a disproportionate amount of time to talk.

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Last week at The Fonecast: 27th January 2014

Expecting the unexpected

Mark Bridge writes:

Great news for mobile phone users. Ofcom’s new rules preventing unexpected mid-contract price rises came into force last week, which means UK consumers can no longer be surprised by their subscription charge increasing while they’re still locked into a minimum-term deal.

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Ofcom changes the rules for mobile phone contracts... and so does O2

Mark Bridge writes:

This week, new Ofcom rules came into force. They’re designed to avoid unexpected price rises during the minimum term of a mobile phone contract. Yes, just because you signed a fixed-term contract doesn’t mean the charges can’t increase. Networks said they needed this option in case of inflation or regulatory changes. Customers felt trapped.

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