In March of 2009, the Opinion Research Center estimated that 8.7b million Americans already had discontinued their mobile service because of the recession, and suggested that as many as 60 million mobile users would seek ways to reduce spending.
One way many consumers seem to have done so is to substitute prepaid service for contract plans. That would account for robust subscriber growth for virtually all providers of prepaid service since then.
But Wal-Mart's new “Straight Talk” prepaid service, offered at the $30 and $45 levels, could end up being the “tipping point for millions of consumers who are already considering moving away from expensive contract-based cell phone service,” says Allen Hepner, New Millennium Research executive director.
Hepner believes that the $30 plan (with 1,000 minutes, 1,000 texts per month, mobile Web access and no-extra cost 411 calls, with no contract and no penalties) and the $45 plan (unlimited calling, texting, mobile Web and 411) that Wal-Mart now offers under the “Straight Talk” brand are going to get serious attention.
With average monthly contract plans reported to be about $81, the more than 140 million U.S. contract-based wireless customers who use less than 550 minutes a month may now have even more reason to consider switching to a less expensive cell phone option, particularly in a changing environment in which plans for 1,000 minutes are available through Wal-Mart for $30 per month, Hepner argues.
In March 2009, ORC estimated that there were 29 million prepaid accounts in service, representing about 16 percent of the total base of mobile users.
“We see that 8,740,000 Americans, that is 19 percent of consumers without a cell phone, report that they already have ‘discontinued cell phone service in the last six months because of actual job loss, fear of job loss, the recession, or any other related financial concerns," said Graham Hueber, Opinion Research Center senior researcher.
At the same time, ORC suggested that 39 percent of postpaid mobile customers--60.3 million consumers--were likely to cut back on their cell phones to save money, the Opinion Research Corporation estimated.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Wal-Mart Straight Talk a Tipping Point?
Labels:
mobile,
prepaid wireless
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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3 comments:
Switching to prepaid was a concept I adopted a long time ago. Acutally, since the economy started going down hill I cancelled my plan with AT&T and switched to TracFone. They're the best provider I could find with the most reliable service at the right price. Now, with Straightalk, they've taken mobile connectivity to a whole new AFFORDABLE level! For just $45/month I get unlimited voice and text + 30 mg data, all powered by Verizon, the most reliable network in the nation! Absolutely the best mobile plan out there. I think this is going to be an eye opener for all contract providers. The best part, by selling it at Walmart, it opens the aquisition opportunity to the majority of the people who really need it!
I agree, this seems like it could be the one thing that makes millions of people realize they have been overpaying for cell service. These plans are on a quality network - the same network in fact, on which people pay in the vicinity of $100 for unlimited talk/texting. Now available at $45. I bet a lot of people will be asking themselves why they put up with contracts in the first place.
With the state of the economy, any cost saving is a must! StraightTalk really offers up a great deal. My saving since I made the switch is about $45/month. The service is also very reliable. And if you don't like it, there's no contract hence no cancellation fee. I remember paying $175 once to cancel my cell service...ouch!
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