Your advert here!!!


Stop Press
Industry Comment
        Search

Our Guides
What is xxx? (FAQs)
Previous Mobile Insights
About Data Tags
About Mobile TV
About Push-to-Talk
Press Release archive
Free downloads
Our RSS/News Feed

About Dollargate
Free  weekly headlines
Editor/Publisher: Tony Dennis

Tone's Blog

Technical Editors:
Geoff Dennis

Jayker Shah

All enquiries:  Tel: +44 (0)7050 336647
Associated sites:






Last modified:
  30 Mar 2009
© DollarGate Publishing

eXTReMe Tracker

Ericsson says Payforit really works

On the quiet, the UK mobile network operators have been moving towards a generic 'branded' mobile payments system called 'Payfor it'. Ericsson has revealed that its implementation has raised sales by 20 per cent. Peter Garside, regional manager with Ericsson IPX, told Mobile Insight that his company has been providing Payforit services to three UK operators – T-Mobile, Virgin, and Vodafone since December 2006. The idea with Payforit is that the operators qualify suppliers to offer the service in order to offer a trusted mobile payment service to subscribers. Ericsson had previously being offering its own 'unbranded' service which it simply called WAP billing. The company's research has shown that amongst its own customers, those who have switched to Payforit have seen remarkable results. The number of one-off payments – for items such as ringtones – has risen by an impressive 20 per cent. Ericsson currently provides Payforit to around 11 content providers offering approximately 130 services. According to Garside, the rise is because the Payforit brand "has instilled confidence in consumers. They now feel far more comfortable about purchasing content when they see the Payforit name." Garside claims that other companies have gained accreditation to offer Payforit but they haven't gone live yet. Payforit is one of the mobile billing solutions offered by a recently launched service – Wapple Canvas. The other two solutions are Bango and MyGamma. Wapple Canvas enables its customers to swiftly create a mobile site using web-based tools rather than requiring any specialist knowledge of WAP, for example. Customers are charged upwards from £500 per annum. Driving force behind Wapple is John Leftwich who Mobile Insight readers may recall from his days with The Beast in the UK. "Tools like Wapple promise to do for the mobile Internet what products such as Frontpage did for the Web," Leftwich claimed.

The full Inquirer story ... Green Shield Stamps pop up on mobile phones