What can mobile operators learn from Laloo

January 24, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Uncategorized

laloo What can mobile operators learn from Laloo
I am sure a lot of you have no Idea who Laloo or ‘Lalu Prasad ’ is. He was long term of Bihar state in India is well known for and (as are many other politicians in India). In 2004 he became the Railways Minister of India.

is a very sensitive topic. As much as people like to complain about it, its makes everyone proud. Its one of the biggest in the world, employs over 1. people and the total distance covered by the trains is 3.5 times the .

In 2001 an expert declared that Railways will be bankrupt by 2015 unless privatised. It was making huge losses and was expected to make US$15.4 billion loss by 2015. Lalu turned it around in 2-3 years and now its made profit of U$2.47 billion.

To turn this huge organisation from loss making to profit making he followed some .

  • Reduce the fares instead of increasing them and the occupancy will improve
  • Increase the freight loading hours from 10 hours to 24 hours daily
  • Make everything simple for ordinarly people to follow including reservations
  • Once the basics are working keep improving the infrastructure and make further cost reductions

UKNetworks What can mobile operators learn from LalooNow lets compare this to how mobile operators behave.

  • They provide big for the but they think this gives them right to charge whatever they wish.
  • The ’s are still not competetive for and while roaming abroad. A simple call making and receiving for a on roaming to US can be charged to £1.20 per min. Compare this to making it free using Skype. This puts off so many people in calling home when abroad and receiving calls on their mobiles. If its cheaper more and more people will make and receive calls when abroad.
  • Using data abroad could be like commiting suicide.
  • There are couple of networks who give huge but with them can take upto 12 hours to be delivered.
  • Some networks have customer service open for limited hours and they charge calling the number even with the same network mobile.

The mobile operators like to complain that the voice call revenues are decreasing and there is still not enough data uptake. I would urge them to set their house in order before they complain. In the end the consumers will always find cheaper alternatives like VoIP and WiFi unless its something important. On the oher hand if some cheap options are available we do not mind trying them.

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