Mobile Services May Act as “Customer Glue”
In the two weeks since the Mobile World Congress, there has been
surprisingly little coverage of an important research initiative by
GSMA and CGAP (the World Bank’s independent policy and research
center) on “Mobile Money for the Unbanked.”
Some
accounts focused on the Gates Foundation’s promise of $12.5
million to promote mobile banking among the world’s poor. But Vital
Wave Consulting attendees wonder whether the writers of these
accounts missed the Mobile World session in which GSMA, McKinsey and
CGAP representatives discussed the preliminary results of their
research on the nascent mMoney industry. According to their study,
mBanking will grow to a $5 billion industry within 3 years – a
noteworthy figure that got some attention.
But one of the most intriguing findings was that mMoney
services may increase “stickiness” among mobile customers.
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Mobile carriers in all markets are concerned with churn (i.e.,
customers who leave their service for another). “Stickiness” is that
elusive quality – part pricing, part quality of service, and part
brand loyalty – that all carriers desire.
The idea that a particular
service may convince consumers to stick with a particular operator
is not new, but evidence that this is true for mBanking customers in
emerging markets is particularly important. After all, there are
around 1 billion people in the world (nearly all in developing
countries) who own a mobile phone but do not have a bank account.
Among these consumers, churn is a major problem, exacerbated by a
liberalizing mobile industry with new carriers and lower prices, as
well as the introduction of new, multi-functional handsets and
stronger networks. According to CGAP, when a subscriber is also a
user of mMoney services provided by the operator, client stickiness
goes up considerably and churn goes down.
Though the GSMA research focused on mobile financial services, it
may be safe to assume that stickiness will result from other mobile
services as well. This presents a critical opportunity (or perhaps
an imperative) for carriers, service providers and application
developers. As new subscribers become harder to find and emerging
markets reach saturation points on par with mature-market countries,
client retention will be the name of the game. Distinct mobile
services and unique functionality will be the glue that binds
customers with a particular operator (and/or handset).
Telecommunications companies that invest now in the relationships
and technology required to expand the utility of the common handset
will attract and retain more customers as the market around them
grows to maturity. |