How to make money with mobile – FreedomPop shows us how

Written by on June 20, 2016 in News with 0 Comments
FreeImages.com/ Jess Hall

FreeImages.com/ Jess Hall

LONDON (Reuters) – Mobile start-up FreedomPop says it is generating revenue from almost half of its British users by providing optional paying services in addition to free voice and data plans.

Tumbling data prices mean the cost of launching so-called “over-the-top” telecom services to challenge established companies such as BT Group, Telefonica and AT&T has never been lower.

But many of the new arrivals have yet to prove they can turn a profit and the industry is watching their performance closely.

Los Angeles-based FreedomPop, led by a former head of strategy at BT, has developed technology that analyses users’ behavior and sends them targeted offers for paying services such as extra data, online security and multiple phone numbers.

CEO Stephen Stokols said FreedomPop has a higher proportion of paying subscribers than messaging service WhatsApp or music site Spotify.

“Our conversion rate in the UK is 48 percent – people converting from free to paid services. Spotify is around 12 percent which is considered pretty good,” he said.

FreedomPop launched in the U.S. in 2012, came to Britain last September and plans to add Spain next month after raising $109 million in funding from investors including Partech Ventures and Intel Capital. Other investors include Mangrove Capital, DCM and Skype founder Niklas Zennstrom’s Atomico.

Stokols said he aimed for a deal with a second U.S. wireless network soon and expects FreedomPop to make its first net profit by the end of 2016. He did not give precise numbers for UK subscriber take-up, saying it was “at six figures”.

U.S. carrier Sprint looked at buying FreedomPop last year but the talks ended without a deal. Stokols said Sprint was interested in FreedomPop’s technology, which could help it bring down the price of its own subscriber plans and compete better.

FreedomPop partners with Sprint, selling Sprint-compatible phones and allowing Sprint’s wholesale data business to benefit from FreedomPop’s growth. Stokols sees more tie-ups with telecom companies to offer FreedomPop to their low-price subscription base.

He said they stood to gain by making revenue from its data traffic while having none of the customer acquisition or service costs.

“That’s on us. So Sprint is making a ton of money off us… And we take the risk if the model doesn’t work,” said Stokols. “I presented recently in Silicon Valley to 18 global telcos. The theme was not denial, but ‘how are we going to work together?’”

Start-ups are only part of the threat to the telecoms industry from technology companies.

Giants including Google, Facebook and Microsoft are developing their own networks to link their servers and these software-based IP networks can be far less costly to maintain than the complex legacy systems of the telecoms companies.

“There is one clear message – the party is over for the telcos and will not come back. You can shoot yourself in the foot today or be shot in the head,” said Dan Bieler, principal analyst at research and advisory firm Forrester.

(By Tom Pfeiffer; Editing by Keith Weir)

Tags: ,

About the Author

About the Author: Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. .

Subscribe

If you enjoyed this article, subscribe now to receive more just like it.

Subscribe via RSS Feed

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Top