Cellular Marketing Strategies

PhoneDog LLC
Updated on Aug 22, 06
by PhoneDog LLC,
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Fixed Monthly Cost

While only some major carriers offer "no contract," pre-paid cellular service, almost all of them offer fixed monthly cost plans as their preferred terms of service.  Pre-paid plans offer the flexibility of paying only for the minutes you actually use, but carriers make the average cost-per-minute much lower on monthly plans to drive consumers towards fixed contracts.

Fixed monthly contracts require a minimum one- or two-year commitment from the consumer to the carrier.  In return, the consumer gets a lower average cost-per-minute as well as other perks often including discounted or free handsets and accessories, free nighttime and/or weekend service, and discounted add-on services including multi-line "family plans," and messaging and data plans.

Most consumers looking for new cellular service these days will opt for a fixed monthly plan.  The major carriers all offer multiple plans with varying numbers of monthly minutes at different price points.  When choosing a monthly plan, take the time to ask questions before signing a contract to insure that you understand all of the terms of the deal.  For instance, some carriers offer free weeknight minutes beginning at 7 pm while others don't start until 9 pm.   Some carriers offer free mobile-to-mobile calling within their network while others offer free calls between any mobile handsets (i.e. You can call a Verizon customer for free even though you have Cingular).

Also, be sure to find out what overage charges (when you've used more than your alloted monthly minutes) and early termination charges (when you want to cancel your service before the one- or two-year term has expired) are.  There's virtually no way to sign a contract without agreeing to these charges, but some carriers make them heftier than others.

Two year contracts

Signing a two-year contract will often get you a better deal up front on a new handset or other equipment.  Some carriers will even offer a slightly better monthly rate on a two-year contract over a one-year term.  While one-year contracts used to be the norm, more and more carriers are now pushing two-year contracts as fixed monthly subscribers are the bread-and-butter of their businesses.

Free Phones

Carriers usually offer a choice of free and discounted phones with the signing of a new service contract.  Rarely do major carriers offer the newest state-of-the-art phones for free, though you will see the occasional promotion offering a hot new phone for free or close to free (generally with a two-year contract only). 

Independent cellular dealers are more apt to offer top of the line phones for free or lower cost than corporate stores are.  However, independent dealers do sometimes add additional charges for tax on the retail price, SIM cards, and so on which make those "free" phones wind up costing upwards of $50 - 75.

Upgrading Phones

Carriers will usually offer an upgrade path to customers who have completed their initial contract term and are willing to sign a contract extension of one year or longer.  Upgraded phones are rarely as inexpensive as when the same handset is purchased with a new service contract, but carriers can sometimes be talked into offering better upgrade deals if they sense a customer is ready to leave for a different carrier in order to get a good deal on a new phone.  If you're in the market for a phone upgrade, be sure to check ebay and other online marketplaces as well, as deals can often be had on new and lightly used equipment.

Free Long Distance

Almost all major carriers now offer free long distance calls with fixed monthly plans.  The norm nowadays is for carriers to charge for actual calling minutes, treating local and long distance calls the same so long as the calls are within the Continental United States.  Some regional carriers do charge extra for long distance calls - particularly those carriers offering "unlimited local calling" under fixed monthly plans - so be sure to read the fine print if you plan to use a regional carrier to place long distance calls.

Unlimited Nights and Weekends

In lieu of cutting monthly fees even further, many carriers now offer unlimited nights and weekends as incentives under their fixed monthly plans.  This means that any cellular calls made or received during these times won't count against your monthly allotment of minutes.  Nights and weekends start and end at different times from carrier to carrier, so be sure to check your contract lest you start making "free" calls that actually eat up your minutes.  Nights generally start at 7pm or later, while weekends can from Friday evening or Friday midnight until sometime Sunday night.

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jenluv
Friday, November 28, 2008I am looking to buy a replacement phone for service I have with Immix Wireless. They do not appear on the list above. Would it be safe to say that any unlocked GSM 1900 phone would work with the carrier?
Nerd008
Saturday, November 08, 2008The site is great for those who are quite unfamailiar with the mobile and communications terminilogy. Thanks to phonedog. :)
Juan
Wednesday, November 05, 2008hello, i was wondering if T-Mobile would reject me for a free phone for their flexpay service, if on my credit report i have already verizon and sprint on my credit? i mean they werent defaults on payments just something that went wrong with billing that both companies would not fix cause it was not their fault. but will T- Mobile deny me?
lucky strike
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GaGa
Wednesday, October 29, 2008hey Linnea, Nokia N95 would be good for you. It has Wifi, 3G, GPS or maps, mp3 player and you could install a lot of good applications as well. I have the 8GB version and I'm with T-mobile.
Linnea McCrary
Saturday, October 18, 2008I need a phone with good GPS and instant messaging and Wifi and a big screen, speaker phone, voice command, of course bluetooth. I'm with T-mobile. What can I get that those things will work on their network? Like the GPS, will it work there with full data. I was set on the instinct then saw that there is no Wifi, oh and need something that can tether to computer for modem with on the boat! I have to buy soon so any help would be really great. Thanks
Me
Wednesday, October 15, 2008thats like saying its not worth it to pay your car insurance. i have a pda with tmobile and only paid a quarter of it to get a new one when it broke. its was sooooo worth it not to have to shell out another 500 for a new pda.
Jonathan
Tuesday, October 14, 2008If I buy the Nokia n81 from the website can i use it for AT&T and T-mobile? and i live in the US.
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Thursday, October 02, 2008I live in a rural area. I just got a new Nokia 6555 and the signal reception is terrible. What phone has the best signal reception??
kris
Sunday, September 14, 2008I have a verizon phone and i have to admit it`s great. Before I had tmobile but they were terrible. service sucked and the costumer service was crapy too. I bought the phone from small store retailer in brooklyn and i m happy with it. As far as online stores i think people are still not trusting online as person to person sale. I know yodaphone.com is pretty good at this with bunch of other sites. Cheers.
luis
Sunday, August 31, 2008hi noah,...i just wanna know how much is the LG env2,... cauz i just wanna buy the phone only,...and it can be carry by verizon wireless,....and which is the better, env2 or sony ericson w580i??,....please,..reply to my questions,...thank you
portia
Sunday, August 24, 2008hey how are you doing
Raymund Del Rosario
Friday, August 22, 2008I have a helio fin phone and i haven't seen any reviews on it. I just wanted to know if i missed out on the episode. i really like this web site and thanks for all the hard work. Ray
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Frank Sarfo
Tuesday, July 29, 2008I have had a nice information from your website. Keep it up!
eric s.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008Which firm would you go with for a two week GSM phone rental for use in Japan, with v/mail, calling to and from U.S.?
bev Chirhart
Thursday, July 17, 2008Is there any plan that does not require a two year contract to start service. I have t-mobile, my contract is running out, but I am upset with the service we have had and don't want to have to commit to another two years, tho I can't seem to find a plan that works better for us
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Wednesday, July 16, 2008I lost my ATT (GSM) phone and would like to buy a replacement so that I do not have to extend my existing phone plan. Because my phone is lost (fell in the bay), I cannot exchange the SIM card. Can I still buy a replacement phone with this plan?
apondi christine
Friday, July 11, 2008this is informative1! can i have it please?
Michelle -
Thursday, June 26, 2008Thanks for the good information on Insurance.. I thought I was the only one who thought it was nuts, but I never realized it was that bad. I think a manufacturer's warranty is good enough for me, but the Ebay idea is really smart!

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