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Telcos must be more innovative to stop customer flight
Zain MD Rene Meza and Safaricom CEO Michael Joseph. Photos/FILE
Posted Friday, September 3 2010 at 00:00
With the commoditisation of voice calls, telcos that want to stay ahead of the competition have to seriously consider innovating and introducing new value added services to create new revenue streams.
Some telcos have figured this out and are aggressively building value added services such as mobile money transfer services and providing internet access and online content.
But other telcos appear stuck in the past and are struggling to provide basic services in both voice and data categories.
In this new age of broadband technologies, telcos need to think out of the box and consider launching new services that are not only innovative, but that provide real value to customers.
We are now in the new age of broadband multimedia where there is a whole new range of opportunities for telecommunications companies.
For example, telcos can leverage their nationwide broadband networks to launch security surveillance services where customers can access remote security cameras installed in their homes and offices.
Project managers and engineers in utility industries such as oil and electricity who are mandated with maintenance and servicing of numerous remote installations can be able to monitor their equipment from their mobile phones through the use of secure IP addresses.
Online maps
We are also in the age of online maps and all mobile phone users should be able to use their phones to navigate through the various cities and towns in the country.
For an annual subscription and a reasonable fee, we should be able to use our phones to download maps of different parts of Nairobi city to help us navigate with ease.
In the same breath, these maps should not necessarily be passive but should be active in such a way that subscribers are able to get information on roads that are congested and where there may be traffic snarl ups or accidents.
Telcos should move away from perceiving themselves merely as industry verticals and consider creating industry horizontals with non-competing but complimentary industries such healthcare and education.
By partnering with healthcare service providers such as doctors and hospitals, telcos can help establish databases that are accessible over their broadband networks to enable mobile users to schedule appointments with their doctors, gain access to their personal medical records and have a record of their vital signs stored on their mobile devices.
With the penetration of mobile devices reaching over fifty percent of the population, this presents are great opportunity for telcos to partner the government and send out social messages that concern all Kenyans such matters related to health, national security, crime and so on.
The opportunities are endless for telcos to reengineer themselves and aggressively pursue new sources of revenue.




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