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MDA Unveils BBC Partnership To Help U.K. Use MMS; The Mobile Internet Must Be Plug & Play; Will Google Dominate Customer Care Too?

Author: Peggy Anne Salz

MDA and MMSKudos to Mark Hawkins and the team over at the Mobile Data Association (MDA) for bringing media and U.K. mobile operators together in a partnership that recognizes the skills gap that threatens to stunt the spread of mobile data services and, ultimately, the growth of the mobile Internet.

On the face of it, the partnership between BBC Radio 1 and all the major U.K. mobile operators is aimed at allowing listeners in the U.K. to send the radio station picture messages (MMS) from their mobile phones for the first-time ever all day today (December 11) free of charge. But dig a bit deeper and the event has been set up as a springboard to encourage people to use their phones to do more.

To this end the MDA has also launched an educational website with the long-term aim of helping people to send picture messages: http://www.getsettings.org. The idea is to provide people a “single, unified hub of settings information” and address configuration issues around older handsets in circulation and SIM-only contracts.”

Of course, this problem isn’t limited to the U.K. and I hope this educational effort sets a precedent other professional organizations and mobile companies follow.

NIGHTMARE AHEAD

In fact, the job of solving the myriad of issues around customer education to make using our phones and accessing the mobile Internet a no-brainer is widely considered to be the chief business imperative of the coming year.

This is the view that came across loud and clear at MIDAS: Managing Innovative Devices and Services, an industry event I attended and spoke at last year (organized by my esteemed colleague Abraham Joseph, Founder, Device Management Forum).

During the event we discussed the advance of the mobile Internet and what the impact would be on stakeholders (device makers, mobile operators and software vendors, distributors and retailers) when we all need assistance to surf the Web, send email and download/install apps. The scenario, we agreed, was a nightmare.

Fast forward, and the problem is no longer a discussion point for passionate technologists; it’s a business issue for companies across the ecosystems banking on us all to use our phones to do more.

Yes, people need assistance to understand and configure their devices. The MDA recognizes this, which is why it has launched an educational web site for precisely this purpose. However, people also need fast track training to get on the mobile Internet and the industry is under pressure to have to come up with some solutions – sooner than later.

PEOPLE ARE BAFFLED

Indeed, a raft of studies shows that we are baffled by our new phones and features. One that stands out comes from independent research firm Coleman Parkes, which asked 4,000 people in the U.K. and U.S. about their pet mobile peeves. (The study was commissioned by Mformation, a provider of mobile device management (MDM) technology. But vendor spin aside it sheds some important light on this real problem.)

Among the key data points, the survey found that a whopping 85 percent of people said they were frustrated by the difficulty of getting a new phone up and working. Additionally, 95 percent said they would try more new services if phones were easier to set up and 61 percent said they stopped using an application if they could not get it working straight away.

So, we know people would like to do tasks as browsing the Web, reading email or sending picture messages, but the complexity of mobile phones (really handheld-computers at this point) is too much for them.

TOP TEN HEADACHES

During the MIDAS event that impressed me with the scope of this problem, I met with Wouter Deelman, CEO of Qelp, who blew me away with his presentation and an eye-opening list of the Top 10 device management challenges. (By way of background, Qelp is a Dutch software-as-a-service company sharply focused on solutions that increase revenues and reduce customer support costs.)

Wouter co-presented with Blyk, a Qelp customer and ad-funded MVNO model (this was before Blyk shifted its focus to becoming a media company). Blyk revealed that it had achieved a 60 percent success rate getting users to accept Over-the-air (OTA) settings (critical since much of Blyk’s ad-funded model was built on users’ ability to receive and respond to MMS mobile advertising messages). In effect, Blyk admitted a 40-percent failure rate – a problem Blyk said it solved by working with Qelp.

Indeed, OTA settings top Wouter’s list of Top 10 device management headaches.

1. Over-the-air (OTA) settings require user acceptance.

2. Some devices do not support OTA and require manual configuration.

3. New handsets are coming to the market through different channels (not just via mobile    operators), so the problem and the responsibility to solve it is fragmented.

4. Remote access to a device requires access to the mobile Internet (which is what most users are trying to set up in the first place).

5. Users are confused when settings arrive, and often don’t know what they are for or where to store them on the device.

6. Each handset has a different UI (user interface).

7. Call center support is an option – but costly for the operators and frustrating for the users.

8. Second-hand devices are preconfigured incorrectly.

9. Network operator settings get preference over MVNO settings.

10. New IMEI ranges and handsets not yet recognized by the operators systems.

It may seem that Apple’s iPhone and the slew of new touch screen interface devices/ smartphones solve this problem (because they come preconfigured by the iPhone exclusive channel on the market and most available services are displayed via icons on the screen and not buried in a sub-menu).

But the range of new devices and multitude of UIs only exacerbate the problems. And let’s not forget the many people unlocking their

iPhones because they want to have the devices and the operators they want (!) and therefore need to configure the device themselves, manually.

UI examples

NEED HELP? GOOGLE IT

Can the device management issue impede the growth of mobile Internet usage? The jury is out on this one – but it’s common sense that we would use it a lot more if we could. (We cannot use what we cannot use.)

Ironically, the mobile operator – the player you would expect would want to educate us to use mobile data (and generate additional data revenues in the process) – appears to have missed the plot – and the opportunity.

In a recent must-read guest post for VisionMobile, Wouter road tested six U.K. mobile operator websites to look for support and set up email on a Nokia N96. The result: a mix of irrelevant results and no results at all. Wouter’s conclusion: for an end-user seeking help to get a service up and running on their mobile phone, the answer is not just a few clicks away.”

Wouter then looked for the same information using Google. The answers are marginally better – but the search results do include sites such as Know Your Mobile, that do the job just fine.

Understanding that Google is destined to play an increasing role in customer care (becoming the first place people look for help to configure their phones) KPN (also a Qelp customer) has applied search engine optimization techniques to ensure it’s website (and brand) at least show up in the top Google search results. (Daily statistics now show that 50 percent of KPN’s subscribers go to Google first for answers.)

The takeaway: The MDA has literally done us a service in the U.K., but there is a lot more work to be done. The advance of the mobile Internet has encouraged us to check out the wealth of apps and content available. However, many of us need help setting up our phones before we can explore this brave new world. Providers have a choice: improve customer education and support, or deal with customer frustration (and lost revenues) when people quite literally turn off.

December 11, 2009

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4 Responses to “MDA Unveils BBC Partnership To Help U.K. Use MMS; The Mobile Internet Must Be Plug & Play; Will Google Dominate Customer Care Too?”

  1. MDA Unveils BBC Partnership To Help U.K. Use MMS; The Mobile Internet Must Be Plug & Play; Will Google Dominate Customer Care Too? Says:

    [...] 1 votes vote MDA Unveils BBC Partnership To Help U.K. Use MMS; The Mobile Internet Must Be Plug & Play; Will … Kudos to Mark Hawkins and the team over at the Mobile Data Association (MDA) for bringing media [...]

  2. msearchgroove » Blog Archive » MDA Unveils BBC Partnership To Help … Says:

    [...] Peggy Anne Salz. MDA and MMS Kudos to Mark Hawkins and the team over at the Mobile Data … [...] Uni Ego / msearchgroove » Blog Archive » MDA Unveils BBC Partnership To Help [...]

  3. James Barnes Says:

    Thanks for highlighting the greatest and most overlooked issue facing Mobile. As you rightly say, the connectivity issue does not exist on the iPhone, well, in some parts of the world, where customer service is paramount, this problem does not exist at all. Buy a phone in Shanghai and you won’t leave the shop until everything works. How many settings does China Mobile have for Internet access? Three: APN, UN, PW. The last two text strings are the same. Western Operators need to give up the limits of control.

    Walk into a UK Operator’s high street store or dealer franchise and ask for settings, chances are you’ll be sent away with a hastily scribbled URL on a scrap of paper. This is not a ‘go to the website’ issue. The service providers with the best Customer Care will win.

  4. London Calling » Last carnival of the mobilists for the decade #cotm Says:

    [...] Peggy Anne Salz from MSearchGroove outlines the MDA initiative held on December 11th to send free MMS messages. [...]

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