Monday, 30 April 2007

Keeping your ear to the ground

My experiences with SpinVox pro-actively contacting me got me thinking about customer service in the UGC (user generated content) era.

I often find myself searching the web for references to Esendex, obstensibly for web marketing purposes but really because I'm a little obsessed. Occasionally I'll come across a posting from someone and I'll help them out of let the relevant person in the company know so they can help them.

The leap for me tonight was that this should be someone's job. On a regular basis a member of our customer services team should be browsing the web, searching for issues that we can resolve proactively.

Now fortunately my intial searching didn't come up with any problems. I did come across this forum thread SMS Gateway Dilema which is a fascinating insight into the decision process that someone goes through when signing up for a service like ours. I was on the edge of my seat, we got down to the last three but there is no indication of who they went for. I'll see if our Melbourne office and let you know.

You hear about big companies striving to understand and harness UGC, but actually it's relevant to anyone running a business today. Ignore it at your peril.

SpinVox, nice bit of pro-active customer service

I blogged recently, SpinVox, I love it but, about the highs and occasional lows of using the SpinVox voicemail to text service. Well the guys at SpinVox are obviously perusing the blogosphere and decided to drop me a line.

Hi Adam, thanks for writing about SpinVox. I'm sorry to hear about the occasional delays you've been experiencing and I'd naturally like to look into this - as this is not the norm for SpinVox customers. Our average time delay is 3-5mins - so there must be something else affecting this?
If you can give me some more information on the messages that have been delayed, it would really help us look into this.
spinx@spinvox.com

So I've sent an example and will keep you posted.

It must be said that there haven't been any noticeable delays since I blogged. All messages have been delivered within the thresholds quoted.

Esendex, a personal overview

A lot of people ask me about Esendex and how/why Julian and I started it. I generally end up bending their ear for far too long about everything we've done and the passion we have for getting it right. It struck me that I should try and put together something more concise and considered and this blog seemed the appropriate place to publish it, so here goes.

Esendex has always been about business sms services. We deliver SMS services as a utility that businesses use alongside telephone, fax and email to enable them to conduct their business efficiently and cost-effectively. Our focus has always been on providing reliable, performant message using national carriers.

We decided early on that playing by the rules was important if you are in this for the long run and want to build a real business. To a certain extent this means a hard slog to reach critical mass. In the early days customers didn't expect too much but increasingly businesses are looking for levels of support and security of supply consistent with their other business communication channels.

I guess we built the company in our own image. I came from an enterprise development background, Julian from the utility sector and we just thought about doing things in the best way possible. There have definately been times where we wished perhaps we a little more fast and loose, but we're really bad blaggers and probably couldn't have carried it off.

In a recent customer survey, 93% of respondents were very satisfied with the service they received from Esendex, with reliability being cited as the most valued aspect of our service. Must have something to do with the team of technical experts, passionate about availability and performance, who monitor and maintain our systems 24 x 365.

All this is very laudable but not particularly exciting, which was the feedback during one of our PR flirtations over the past few years. The really interesting stuff, the stuff that's makes people understand what we do at parties, are the case studies.

In the early days this was also the education challenge, "so SMS is for kids or for spamming people, why on earth would I use it in my business?"

Both RAC Autowindscreens and NTL (Virgin Media as they are now) use our system to manage their mobile workers, sending and receiving job information. Which has meant saving money on voice calls and dispatch staff at the same time.

In NTL's case we have developed and host a bespoke application that manages job workflow all via SMS which has recently been rolled out to a number of other departments. We've also developed service checkers that confirm service availability for a given postcode, locations of local exchanges and switch gear, and a whole host of other services that bring enterprise data into the moble arena.

Another service I'm particularly proud of is the Car Data Check service we run for Experian. Taking a registration number for a car via text, matching that against Experian's vast motor and insurance database and sending a report of the vehicle's history and likely concerns via text. Once this service was live we then added in a Parkers valuation, gave it the keyword PRICE on 80806, and a very successful consumer service was born.

The great thing about all these services is they seed ideas among the rest of our customers and the business community as a whole. My personal view is that we have still along way to go with SMS and mobile messaging in general. It will become as pervasive as telephone, email and fax but in ways we're only just imagining.

Saturday, 28 April 2007

Mobile Phone History

Ewan at www.smstextnews.com posted recently about keeping your phone history. So I gave it a go and it makes for some interesting reading. Please forgive me if the order is a bit awry. I haven't included phones that I bought for testing purposes and didn't use on a day to day basis.

As you can see I'm pretty much a Nokia man through and through. I have also desperately tried to make Windows Mobile work for me, I really, really wanted it to work but finally gave up and got a BlackBerry.

  1. Nokia 101
  2. Nokia 6110
  3. Nokia 6120
  4. Nokia 8110 (pure class for those 'Matrix' moments)
  5. Nokia 7110 (ah the dawn of WAP)
  6. Sony Ericsson T39
  7. Nokia 6310 (best phone in the world ever)
  8. Sony Ericsson T68i
  9. Nokia 7650
  10. Nokia 6210
  11. Nokia 6230 (interspursed around the following)
  12. Orange SPV Classic
  13. Orange SPV E100
  14. Motorola V500 (my one and only clamshell)
  15. Sony Ericsson V800 (made one video call, once)
  16. Vodafone 3G Data Card
  17. O2 XDA
  18. i-Mate Jas-Jar (that's it, no more Windows Mobile devices)
  19. Nokia 7250i (loan)
  20. Sony Ericsson K800i (finally replaced the 6230)
  21. Blackberry 8707v (shame I broke it)
  22. Blackberry 7130v (loan)

I'm a phone manufacturers dream!

Thursday, 26 April 2007

Mobile Internet, finally it's time has come

The mobile internet has been talked about for a while now but I feel that it's time has finally come. The tipping point for me are the announcements by Vodafone and Orange that they're following T-Mobile and 3 by offering flat rate data tariffs.

This is so important.

We've been working with a number of clients who are keen to develop their existing online services into the mobile arena. The problem was low adoption of mobile internet because people were terrified of racking up enormous data charges on their pay per use tariff. Flat rates change all that.

Broadband at home is seen as a standard requirement for many and mobile broadband, whether it be 3G or HDPSA, will be seen similarly by many people. Now that the charging is on a similar flat rate basis, I have no doubt we will see an explosion in the number of sites and services delivered where-ever you are.

For those of you who can remember the damp squib that was WAP when it was launched, this is what we were promised way back then. Oh well, what's 8 years amongst friends!

Tuesday, 24 April 2007

It's a baby BlackBerry

Well I've got my replacement BlackBerry, not an 8707v as I hoped but a 7130v. Now this isn't a real BlackBerry, it hasn't got a Qwerty keyboard. Sot it looks I'm going to be wrestling with SureType technology foir the next few weeks.

But first to wipe the data from my current device, unlike the previous owner of the loan one. In case you don't know how:

Wipe BlackBerry Data

  • On the BlackBerry device Home screen, click Options.
  • If you are running BlackBerry Device Software 4.1 or later, click Security Options > General Settings. Otherwise, click Security.
  • Display the menu and select Wipe Handheld.
  • Click Continue.
  • Type blackberry. All the data on the BlackBerry device is deleted.

See the BlackBerry knowledge base article for the full details.

Monday, 23 April 2007

That Panorama programme

Have just watched the Panorama programme TV's Dirty Secrets about the reportedly fraudulent activities of, among others, Opera Telecom for GMTV, Eckoh for Channel 4. It appears this kind of thing has been going on for a while and millions of pounds have been defrauded out of the unsuspecting public.

Dodgy phone and text lines have been part of the premium telephony industry for a while, you only have to look at the ICSTIS adjudications web site to see that the premium telephony industry has it's fair share of chancers and fraudsters. The key difference is that now this is television. It's not dirty chat lines found in the classified ads in the red-tops. It's average people being defrauded by the TV brands they trust. The brands they trust to give them unbiased news, accurate information and fair entertainment.

My concern in all this, is the damage it is going to do to legitimate services. It could be premium SMS services that people find really useful and are quite happy to pay for like the Parkers Price Check. Or even worse, in my opinion, companies who are looking to embrace mobile services like two way SMS for the first time but are just put off because of the bad feeling surrounding SMS that these stories create.

It is beholdent on all of us in the mobile industry to insist on compliance by all of our clients. We must provide them the tools and the services that ensure trust is rebuilt among the users.

The success of interactive SMS in the broadcast sector has done a lot to raise the profile of SMS in the business sector. Everyone is, after all, a consumer. We need to make sure that it doesn't go on to ruin it.