Europe
: The European Commission's plan to reduce mobile roaming charges
is undoubtedly a positive step for the consumer, but generally mobile
operators will not be happy about the news. Deriving between 10-18%
of revenues from roaming services, operators will be hardest hit should
the European Commission's proposal become legislation.
The recent case
of a UK-based Orange user who received a bill of over GBP 750 for
using his 3G card overseas highlighted the problem facing customers.
It was estimated at 75 times more than the cost for the same amount
of data download at home. Roger Steare was unaware of the excessive
cost of using his 3G datacard overseas, though he lost his appeal
to an adjudication panel. Whilst an extreme example, the volume of
complaints over roaming tariffs has prompted the commission to act.
Of course, whilst operators
are required to pay pre-agreed levels on behalf of their roaming subscribers
to the foreign operator, the home operator will also add on an additional
premium for its efforts. The major problems behind the roaming issue
are that charges to the end-user are deemed too high and customers
are often not aware of the price of calls. Confusing tariffs and disparities
between countries have contributed to this. For example, British tourists
in Italy are charged 50% more for calls than French tourists. In addition,
charges vary so much from country to country and operator to operator
that consumers are confused as to how much they will be charged for
making a call. All of which is unacceptable to the European Commission,
which has the backing of European Telecoms Regulators in EU countries.
If the EU does step in
this is likely to have a more serious impact on the level of roaming
tariffs than if operators were to act more competitively on the area
and advocate a program of self-regulation. The potential impact of
political intervention is another worry for operators' profits, which
are already threatened with voice revenues in decline and a slower
than expected uptake to advanced services offered by 3G.
Moves to reduce roaming
charges are long overdue, as consumers have been paying excessively
for too long. European operators are expecting the end of inflated
and disparate roaming charges, but this must be seen as a call for
increased competition in the market, before regulation is imposed.
As the premium points that mobile operators can charge extra for are
gradually being eroded by competition trying to attract new subscribers
and reduce churn, it is only a matter of time before roaming becomes
a serious point of competitive advantage.
Visiongain believes that
the operator's would actually benefit from being more open about roaming
charges. If roaming charges are more transparent and simple, subscribers
abroad might actually use the service more frequently, this would
potentially offset revenue loss from decreased tariffs. Furthermore,
the operator's image with their customers would receive a much-needed
boost, and would reduce churn for an operator.
The move by the
Commission is a good starting point for solving the roaming problem,
from the consumers' perspective. But visiongain believes that operators
need to be more proactive in providing a solution to this problem
and using it as a competitive advantage rather suffer the political
intervention that could further harm voice revenues.