Case Study Into Loyalty In The Mobile Network Market Case Study

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Mobile Loyalty Background The mobile telephone system is part of a global communication sector that has a number of distinct but interlinked elements. Whether one talks on a telephone, searches the net, emails, sends texts or downloads and participates in web-generated data sharing, one is using the mobile telephone network more and more, to the point where it and some of the competing companies appear to be reaching their service capacities. Or at least this seems to be the case when it comes to doing what these large providers should be best at: adding and keeping customers. Maintaining a loyal buyer base -- one that truly likes and advocates for the provider -- or at least happily retaining one beyond a small contract period is critical for any company that wants to be able to serve the global marketplace (Sharpley, 2009).

Underlying many of the customer service practices and promises is the notion that customers tend to be loyal and to retain their contract allegiance when they are treated fairly in relation to the promises made by their contract agreement (WDS, 2011). If these companies are going to keep their core base of customers, they have to demonstrate a capacity for giving them some of the basic elements that have been previously thought to be less important in the high-technology communication sector. But the truth is now hitting home. Customers want something more when it comes to personal treatment; they want it quickly, and they want it to come along with good prices, a fair representation of what they are buying and all of the newest of hardware (like handset) appeals (Tecmark, 2011). And if they don't get it, they are very likely to switch to another service, big or small, no matter where their previous allegiance was -- churning moves that are keeping the larger companies actively pursuing their buyers and that cost those companies a good deal of money (Genesys, 2009).

While these issues are important across nearly all segments of the telecom industry, they are particularly relevant to those in certain markets. Most significantly, established markets that have a grand selection of recognized and large companies that rely on an existing infrastructure for service and customer interaction seem most vulnerable to loyalty and retention concerns. It seems that customers in these markets are less willing to stay as happy as they used to be as the advantages jump from one company to another (Tecmark, 2011).

The United Kingdom is a premiere example of an established market. It has a number of well-known and large mobile sector providers, and it is restricted to some extent by the limitations of the carrying capacities and expectations of its infrastructure. As such, can serve as a positive example of where this market as a whole it heading in regard to what customer loyalty and retention means for the future.

MAJOR UK PROVIDERS

To understand the position of the UK, it is first necessary to review the infrastructure that already exists, including some of the specifics of where the major providers stand -- who they serve and what they are trying to do to keep their base. It should be noted that much of what they are doing changes quickly and can be seen by looking at contemporary online postings and similar resources. While these sites may not always be reliable, collectively the present a consistent picture of what is likely happening in the UK region (MobiThinking, 2012). Other resources, such as academic and corporate studies, offer insights too, many of which will be reviewed in the literature section that follows.

Each of the major five (now four since a significant merger has happened) carriers has its own approaches for generating loyalty or retaining buying customers, as will be discussed below. Overall, however, it can be said the all of the leading companies are learning that a key element of success in the future will be a requirement that they take very seriously their responsibility for learning about what these millions of individual consumers want -- and treating them respectfully through this learning process. The evidence appears to suggest that the main core of loyalty and satisfaction in an established market is very much "contract loyalty," which is more about companies living up to their promises more than a buyer's allegiance to a given corporate entity. This issue is becoming even more important in the face of "next generation access" where large and small companies alike are fighting to use their sensitivity to advancing capabilities to attract or keep their buyers (BuddeCom, 2012; Telecom, 2012). Yet, in return for this interest, there appears to be much more interest in judging whether the companies are actually doing...

...

Before looking at these specifics, it is worth looking at an overview of the "digitalbuzz" (2011) is in regard to the global future. This summary sets the tone of the market overall on several fronts, many of which will be seen to be mirrored in what the top UK companies are looking at:
(Our) infographic shows that over 1 billion of the world's 4+ billion mobiles phones are now smartphones, and 3 billion are SMS enabled (weirdly, 950 million mobile phones still don't have SMS [basic text] capabilities). In 2014, mobile internet usage will overtake desktop internet usage and already in 2011 more than 50% of all 'local' searches are done from a mobile device. 86% of mobile users are watching TV while using a mobile phone, 200+ million (1/3 of all users) access Facebook from a mobile device and 91% of all mobile internet use is 'social' related.

Locally related, socially oriented, entertainment focused. These components play into what companies have to do to keep their customers loyal even as their reach extends to new and emerging markets.

There are now four significant mobile providers in the UK. Until 2009 or so, there were actually five and much of the existing literature reflects this fact. With the merger of Orange and T-Mobile into one, which is now called Everything Everywhere, that conglomerate has positioned itself to be the segment leader in the UK, with a commanding lead in the number of core buyers. As of 2011, the percentage of market control by each of the leading companies was as follows (Telecoms, 2012):

Telefonic O2 -- 27%

Vodafone -- 24%

T-Mobile -- 21% (Everything, Everywhere Partner)

Orange -- 20% (Everything, Everywhere Partner)

Hutchinson 3 -- 8%

For comparison, a 2010 summary (Telecoms, 2012) noted that Everything Everywhere had a combined total of 33.5%. This has subsequently increased to approximately 41%. Vodafone has increased from 21.3% and Hutchinson 3 moved from 6.8% to 8%. It appears that the majority of this growth has come about at the expense of smaller providers. T-Mobile was apparently losing its share prior to the merger. Corporate announcements now indicate that the merged company will be called Orange in order to appeal to customers in the UK and in certain global markets where the name still resonates with credibility.

The major reason for the steady growth amongst these companies is directly tied to their access to certain handset products. Android, Blackberry and the iPhone are the leading products, though some resources dispute whether Apple is as prominent as it seems (Tecmark, 2011). For the most part, O2 benefited through 2007-2009 by having closed access to the iPhone high-value customers. Now that these products are gaining greater customer interest and carrier options, the market is spreading and the other companies are benefiting across the board. Higher churn rates for Vodafone and Orange were directly related to the fact that until recently they could not gain the kinds of high-value customers associated with the iPhone (WDS, 2011).

The future of the sector has been tentatively outlined in at least one private vender forecast that projects markets trends through 2015 (Telecoms, 2012). It is expected that the total number of users will grow from about

81.6 million in the end of 2010 to 91.4 million in the end of 2015. With the merger between Orange and T-Mobile, (our company) market research expects that the merged company, Everything Everywhere, will have approximately 32.2 million mobile subscribers in 2015. It forecasts that Telefonica O2 UK will have 24.6 million mobile subscribers in 2015 (26.9% market share). We expect that the number of mobile subscribers of Hutchison 3G UK will continue to increase, reaching 6.6 million by the end of 2015. (See http://www.telecomsmarketresearch.com/resources/UK_Mobile_Operator_Subscriber_Statistics_3.shtml.)

The success of O2 because of its handset advantage, however, seems to have given way to other sector practices (Wireless Intelligence, 2011). Prepaid-to-contract migration (moving from short duration agreements to longer term agreements) benefited O2 because their high-value customers wanted to maintain the iPhone advantages. However, with the implementation of the "Simplicity tariff," it has become easier for customers to stay with a provider even after their shorter contract periods have past. The tariff changes…

Sources Used in Documents:

BIBLIOGRAPHY & REFERENCES

BBC Mobile (2011, Aug. 31). Mobile Internet use nearing 50%. Viewable at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-14731757.

Bomsel, O., Cave, M., Le Blanc, G. And Neumann, K-H. (2003). How mobile termination charges shape the dynamics of the telecom sector. The University of Warwick. Viewable at http://www.cerna.ensmp.fr/Documents/OB-GLB-F2M-FinalReport.pdf.

BuddeCom (2012). United Kingdom - Mobile Market Insights, Statistics and Forecasts. Viewable http://www.budde.com.au/Research/United-Kingdom-Mobile-Market-Insights-Statistics-and-Forecasts.html.

DigitalBuzz (2011). Infographic: Mobile statistics, stats & facts 2011. Viewable and downloadable at http://www.digitalbuzzblog.com/2011-mobile-statistics-stats-facts-marketing-infographic/.
Ernst & Young (2010). Top 10 risks in telecommunications. http://www.ey.com/Publication/vwLUAssets/Top_10_risks_telecommunications/$FILE/Top10_risks-telecommunications2010pdf.pdf.
Genesys (2009). The cost of poor customer service. The economic impact of the customer experience and engagement in 16 key economies. Viewable at https://www1.vtrenz.net/imarkownerfiles/ownerassets/1076/Genesys_Global_Survey09_screen.pdf.
LightSpeed Research (2010). 29% of European Mobile Consumers Respond to Mobile Adverts They See. Viewable at http://www.lightspeedresearch.com/press-releases/29-of-european-mobile-consumers-respond-to-mobile-adverts-they-see/. Accessed March 2, 2012.
Mobi (2012). Global mobile statistics 2012: all quality mobile marketing research, mobile Web stats, subscribers, ad revenue, usage, trends… Viewable at http://mobithinking.com/mobile-marketing-tools/latest-mobile-stats%20" target="_blank" REL="NOFOLLOW">http://mobithinking.com/mobile-marketing-tools/latest-mobile-stats%20.
MobiThinking (2012). Global Mobi Statistics 2012. Viewable at http://mobithinking.com/mobile-marketing-tools/latest-mobile-stats.
OpenSignalMaps (2011). UK Mobile Notspots Report - August 2011. Viewable athttp://opensignalmaps.com/reports/uk-august-2011.php. Accessed March 2, 2012.
Satmetrix (2010). Orange Business Services. Case Study. Satmetrix Systems, Inc. Sharpley, D. (2009). Customer loyalty anchored on customized services. TelecomsEurope. Aug. 27, 2009. Viewable at http://www.telecomseurope.net/content/customer-loyalty-anchored-customized-service.
Tecmark (2011). Mobile and UK Web Traffic. Research by Tecmark, Ltd. Viewable at http://www.tecmark.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/Mobile-and-UK-Web-Traffic-August-2011.pdf.
Telecoms (2012). UK Mobile Network Operator Subscriber Data 2007-2011. Viewable at http://www.telecomsmarketresearch.com/resources/UK_Mobile_Operator_Subscriber_Statistics_2.shtml#Vodafone . Accessed on February 29, 2012.
Wakefield, J. (2011). 3G mobile data network crowd-sourcing survey by BBC News. BBC Mobile. Viewable at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14574816.
WDS (2011). Mobile Churn: Industry Report. WDS, Inc. Viewable at http://www.wds.co/enlightened/churn/WDS_Churn_2011.pdf.
Wireless Intelligence (2011). O2 records lowest churn rates in UK. Viewable at http://www.wirelessintelligence.com/analysis/2011/04/o2-records-lowest-churn-rates-in-uk/.


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