Vodafone has changed its mind. The telecommunications company decided not to introduce new data charges for prepaid customers. It had planned to lift data rates from a per-kilobyte rate to a per-megabyte rate, claiming the price rise was needed to invest in its network, according to newspaper reports.
Network issues โ namely limited and unreliable coverage โ have been an issue for Vodafone, which has lost 700,000 subscribers since early 2011, according to The Australian Financial Review. However, Vodafone customers are not willing to pay now for better service later.
The backflip is a humiliating one, with the company left looking like it is in a panic and making kneejerk decisions. Is there sense in Vodafoneโs reversal, and would the company have been better off if it had stuck to its guns?
Under pressure
James Mason, managing director of coaching company, Mindshop, says: โWhen most people are making robust decisions, they bring in four or factors, and they give different weights to them, and then run their various options through a filter of whether it is good for customers and good for the company.
โWith kneejerk reactions, decision makers are more looking at the options directly: what is going to be politically best.โ
Paul Harrison, a senior lecturer at Deakin Universityโs Graduate School of Business, says Vodafoneโs approach to marketing is unsophisticated, and sales driven rather than focused on service. However he says the whole telecom industry is sales driven and, since customers are locked into long contracts to pay for their phones, the sales focus makes some sense.
โThe trade-off for Vodafone is that if it has lots of customers now, it doesnโt matter because they have them for long time,โ he says. โLow pricing is a great way to reduce peopleโs perceived risk. We are always trying to reduce risk and so, if the price is lower but not ridiculously low, we think maybe they are as good as Telstra.โ
Modus operandi
This is not the first time Vodafone has backed down on a price hike. Pricing expert, Jon Manning, CEO of Pricing Prophet, says: โThey did this before when they were the only telco with no flagfall [minimum charge per call]. They sent a message to all customers saying we are introducing a 25-cent flagfall and immediately saw customers churning. So they sent out another SMS, saying โWe have listened and we are only introducing a flagfall of only 20 centsโ. That was legal price signalling: signalling a change of price to see what their customers and competitors would do.โ
Manning says the move to round up data charges from kilobytes to megabytes is a huge jump (there are 1000 kilobytes in a megabyte); the size of the pricing jump made it difficult to carry off.
The problem with Vodafoneโs low pricing model is that data prices are falling fast, says Mason. โIn any negotiation there needs to be a win/win, but they havenโt given anything. They seem to be grasping at straws, almost buying themselves time as they ask themselves: โWhere will we get our revenue from? What is the new model?โโ
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