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| In Brief: Are Mobile Network Operators Pushing MNP on Social Media? |
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| Friday, 15 April 2011 | |
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Mobile number portability got off to a slow start. Partly, this is not surprising: experience shows that numbers will increase gradually over time. In emerging markets, where pre-paid subscribers dominate, the response is limited as well. In Kenya, many subscribers already have at least two SIM cards and a new SIM card is effectively cheaper to acquire than paying the porting fee of KES200, although Airtel, for example, have offered to cover the porting fee. Still, buying a second SIM is faster than the porting process – and makes sense if you want to hang on to an operator’s mobile money services. So there are several reasons why a stampede of clients was unlikely in the first place (In Brief: Kenya Introduces Mobile Number Portability), but the Communications Commission of Kenya (CCK) also sensibly emphasised that the objective was not to trigger mass migrations of subscribers, but to give them choice. Port This Way? Kenyans are known to be one of the most active African countries on the internet. Do companies take the battle for clients online? Here is a quick snapshot of the companies’ use of digital and social media:
Paperwork and the Fine Print To submit a porting request, subscribers need to visit an agent of their intended network, so the online and social media information only serves as information – it is not possible to submit a porting request online. With just two weeks of experiences in MNP, subscribers in general still seem very unsure how this service works, and what it entails. The CCK website has a comprehensive list of FAQs that are also repeated on both the Safaricom and the Airtel website – with a subtle difference: Safaricom lists them immediately in the section on MNP , whereas Airtel lists them in a separate FAQ section on the Nikuhama website where the landing page lists the benefits of joining Airtel. This is crucial information, and with some basic search skills, it is not difficult to find out. But not everyone has a smartphone or bothers looking it up before, and not every mobile subscriber spends a lot of time on social media. So consumer education is still a concern. And this week, Safaricom accused Airtel of omitting the section where subscribers need to acknowledge with a signature that they have fully understood the implications of porting, including losing access to their previous operator’s mobile money service and forfeiting loyalty points. CCK actually requires all operators to include it in the porting form as stipulated in the annex no. 1 of the porting guidelines. Comments (0)
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