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Click below to find interesting information from our January 2012 newsletter relating to:

Roaming
Travel
Mobile phones

Roaming 

Mobile advertising? Ha! Try roaming!

Gartner recently estimated mobile advertising (the market that Google and other big-time players are targeting) as being worth $3.3bn in 2011.

Hefty money, you might think. But not compared to the $42bn revenue networks creamed off travellers for global roaming in 2011 (according to Informa).

That's a significant impost on international travellers - you pay for it either directly (yet often unknowingly) or by the cost of being out of contact when travelling.

Save more on roaming when you use our vSIM post-paid alternative.


Travel

The new business traveller

Airlines invented many of the principles and practices of market segmentation (offering a somewhat different product at a different price to customers with different characteristics).

An interesting change is now underway in airlines, involving low-cost airline carriers (LCCs). The "classic" LCC is the pioneer Southwest Airlines, which invented many of the LCC features (point-to-point high-frequency service, one-class cabins, low fares with extra services charged for).

Research from Cristian Huse of the LSE shows that the "business traveller" segment has now split into two - the traditional high-service/high-price traveller, and a cost-sensitive lower-service segment. Apparently once some traditional business travellers experience an LCC, they reassess their willingness to pay for the frills. Hence Southwest (and other LCCs) are carrying more business travellers, as traditional airlines carry less.

Interestingly, the research also shows that the difference in product between the legacy airlines and the LCCs are diminishing. We see both effects domestically in Australia with Virgin Australia carrying a larger amount of business travel (and Qantas losing some share), and business-type features being added to Virgin's product (lounges, premium seating, included meals etc).


Mobile phones

Mobile payments

Many retailers are partnering with banks, payment processors and Google (among others) to let shoppers use their mobile phones (with NFC technology) instead of swiping their credit cards to pay for goods.

A KPMG study released in December found only 23 per cent of consumers were willing to use their mobile phone for payment.

That means that the hopes of retailers becoming more efficient at checkout and banks finding another revenue stream will be delayed - retailer payment terminals need to be installed almost universally, banks and mobile networks have to sort out how it all works together and shoppers doubts about security have to be overcome first. It will still take another few years for widespread adoption, according to potential participants in the mobile payment industry.

One of the possible candidates for universal mobile payments is Google Wallet. Google has signed agreements with Visa, Amex and Discover, and hopes to include those cards in Google Wallet.

Despite the delay, there is a sense of inevitability about mobile payments. "You're more likely to leave your home without your wallet or your cigarettes than you are your phone. And I mention cigarettes because the phone has become more addictive than the most addictive substance out there," Mastercard executive Mario Shiliashki said.

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