Free A2P SMS Messaging in France

February 3, 2012

Free. It’s a short, yet highly powerful word. Free denotes liberty, independence, self-control. At the same time the use of the word can trigger a powerful response, drawing on basic human emotions.

Free is also France’s youngest Internet Service Provider and since a few weeks also its hottest new mobile telco. Launched in 1999, Free started by offering free Internet access, adding telephony and TV services in the years thereafter while continuing to upgrade its network.

Free mobile

This month, Free launched its own mobile network and a subscription model that appeals to the company name.

Using a strategy of very low pricing and an unlimited voice and data bundle, the new operator managed to win almost 2 million subscribers overnight. The number is growing fast – it currently stands at around 3 million.

This already represents 4.5% of the French market, which counts some 66 million subscribers currently according to The Netsize Guide.

Netsize and Free

Netsize messaging solutions are directly integrated with Free. Netsize customers can thus reach Free subscribers and efficiently send Application-to-Person (A2P) SMS messages, reliably and quickly. In addition to using our SMS gateway API, they can also reach the Free network with Netsize mMarketing, our easy-to-use web-based mobile campaign solution.

At present, Free is taking its place at the French mobile operators’ dining table. While the saying goes, “there’s no such thing as a free lunch,” Free seems to prove the opposite. Meanwhile, Netsize focuses on delivering the best solutions for reaching all French subscribers – via messaging as well as operator billing.

Click here to discuss your needs to launch or extend mobile services in France.


Coke’s Tom Daly Talks Mobile Marketing Strategy & Branded Apps

April 18, 2011

The new, updated Netsize Guide (released in December 2010) counts over almost 2,500 downloads. A main attraction is the exclusive interview with Tom Daly, Coca-Cola Group Manager, Global Connections,a mover in the mobile space who walks us through some of the brands’ recent marketing campaigns — and impressive results.

Few major brands are as sophisticated in their use of the mobile channel as Coca-Cola. To date the company has embraced a wide variety of activities and mechanisms, including apps, games, high-performing SMS campaigns, and even a music download store. At the other end of the spectrum, Coca-Cola has also reported successful mobile commerce trials involving mobile phones and specially equipped vending machines.

Coca-Cola is also one of the first to actively embrace branded apps. In December 2010 it joined with the GSMA to sponsor the Brand App Challenge, a competition in which mobile app developers created “brand apps” for a select group of global consumer brands, including Coca-Cola, with its Coca-Cola, Coke Zero and Diet Coke brands.

While Coke has been quick to jump into branded apps, some recent reports question whether applications can deliver positive results across the board.

A survey of 781 adults in the U.S. conducted by EffectiveUI on behalf of Harris Interactive found the vast majority (76 percent) of mobile app users felt that all brand name companies and organizations should have mobile apps to make shopping or interacting with them easier. However, 38 percent of mobile application users revealed they were not satisfied with most of the apps currently available from their favorite brands. What’s more, 69 percent reported that a brand name mobile app that is not useful, helpful or easy to use, results in a negative perception about the brand.

“Mobile applications are the sure fire way to extend a brand,” Rebecca Flavin, CEO of EffectiveUI, said in a statement. “It’s time for organizations to understand how to fully leverage the mobile channel and optimize a user-centered approach to drive adoption, as well as reinforce and drive brand loyalty.”

tom daly photoWhat is the business value of branded apps? Which marketing approaches deliver the best results? How has Coke harnessed mobile to encourage brand engagement and deliver effective (even location-linked) mobile advertising? We ask Tom Daly, Coca-Cola Group Manager, Global Connections.

Q: Coca-Cola is a mover in the mobile space. Your company is a premium member of Mobile Marketing Association (MMA) and active in promoting the benefits of the mobile channel. Why is mobile so central to your strategy?

A: You need to first understand how we see mobile. For us it’s all about idea of making mobile an “enabler of desire”. Essentially, our mobile strategy was written some 70+ years ago, way before the first cellular connection was ever made. Back then it was about putting our brands “within arms’ reach of desire”. That sentiment was expressed by Robert Woodruff, who was our chairman. That was the way we defined the company’s role as a brand marketer, and as a partner to the bottling companies that manufacture and distribute our brands and our retail partners who carry our brands.

Our task is to create desire for the brands that we create. We have a choice: we can make the mobile phone and enabler of desire, or we can make it a barrier to desire. We chose to make mobile an enabler.

Q: Desire is the end-game – making consumers want to and be able to connect with your brands. What are the recent mobile activities you have pursued to achieve this goal?

A: We use all the mobile mechanisms available. Take simple SMS. We use SMS in a campaign that allows consumers to earn free airtime. They just purchase a Coke and text the code on the packaging to receive free airtime or free text messages. Teenagers, in particular, love our brands and love their phones, so it’s a natural marriage, if you will. It’s a great opportunity to leverage consumer desire for Coca-Cola and mobile.

For the World Cup we did a great program where we let consumers express their feelings about the brands using mobile. Consumers could upload videos of how they celebrated the goals. So this is a great expression of people’s passion and energy for football, which is their same energy and passion they have about Coca-Cola. We connected the two using mobile videos.

Q: One of your most successful campaigns has been Gimme Credit, which received an award from the MMA for its effectiveness and exemplary use of mobile. What can you tell me about the campaign and the key learnings?

A: Yes, that’s the campaign I mentioned that gives consumers free airtime. We have rolled it out in multiple markets and it’s been successful everywhere we’ve tried it. As a company we are testing and learning what works not in one market; but in many markets. We’ve learned that there are certain things that consumers everywhere want and Gimme Credit is success because people want free airtime and rewards for their purchases.

We’ve done something like Gimme Credit in India, the U.K. and Germany, and we’ve done it in tests in the U.S. as well. The challenge – and the opportunity – is how to get scale. The next step is to get the scale of The Coca-Cola Company and the scale of mobile technology aligned so we can really start building bigger, more broadly accessible programs. That way, by the time we get to events like the London Olympics or the next World Cup, we will have the ability to deploy these mobile campaigns on a much larger scale and on a much more global level.

Q: Gimme Credit is universally accepted, universally appreciated. But brands still have to have a local focus. What are the tensions or challenges of being a global brand and maintaining a local focus?

A: The challenge is to develop powerful core ideas for a campaign and then to localize the “art” of execution, while scaling the “science”.  One way we accomplish that is to empower a country to take the lead for certain global initiatives. For example this year’s [2010] Festive campaign is a global campaign with the digital –including mobile – led by teams in Germany. Whether you celebrate Hanukkah, or Kwanza, or Christmas, or have just celebrated Ramadan – it’s all about family and bringing people together. Coca-Cola is a part of that experience, but there’s enough that is similar to create common experiences around the world and across digital and mobile campaigns.  Broadly speaking, that’s the territory of the “big idea”. From there, we find ways to scale while at the same time enabling maximum flexibility for localization.

Q: Staying with the global push for a moment, how do you manage these, to drive global mobile services and marketing innovation at Coca-Cola?

A: It’s a disciplined process, as you might imagine. The key is to keep a clear understanding of the roll out and who is doing what. So, we may have a single lead agency for mobile, a company that is doing work at the center. The work they do and the deliverables they are responsible for are clearly defined. There may be a transition to a local agency that has the latitude to take a hand- off related to certain core ideas and assets.

We have elements that can be reused across geographies. It’s back to the idea of scaling the science and localizing is the art. Underlying it all, from a technical point of view, are well documented standards and processes.

Q: You are sharply focused on mobile and it is listed as a line item in your budget, which is quite a statement. Could you quantify for me the opportunity in mobile for Coca-Cola?

A: I can certainly share are a couple of data points with you. We serve our products 1.6 billion times a day, which means that 1.6 billion servings of Coca Cola are poured every day.  There are five billion mobile subscribers worldwide. Do the math and there is a lot of opportunity to use mobile to reach these consumers. And again, when you think that our core strategy is about enabling desire for our brands, then there is also opportunity to use mobile to reach and retain many of the five billion consumers who have mobile and may not currently drink Coke, for example.

Mobile is a line item in the budget. Mobile is included because we know we need to manage and understand mobile. Most importantly, we can not treat mobile as a standalone activity. We know that mobile works best when incorporated in a larger marketing context. So, to help us understand the optimal mix, we’re keeping track of it along with other line items. I can’t share the precise trajectory, but it wouldn’t surprise anyone to know that mobile is growing.

Download the updated Netsize Guide 2010 to read the rest of this interview.


Brand New Netsize Guide 2010 Out Now – Fresh Market Data and Thought Leadership

December 2, 2010
The Netsize Guide 2010 Updated Edition

It is with great pleasure that we present to you a brand new edition of the Netsize Guide 2010, Mobile Renaissance. For the first time in its 9-year history the book is now updated in its publication year with five new interviews and hot new 2010 telecommunications market data. We´ve kept the original 2009 data, providing you with a unique quarterly view on the mobile telecommunications market trend in 40 countries globally.

Download the Netsize Guide 2010 Updated Edition

Share with us your opinion of the Netsize Guide. Please take a moment to take part in our Netsize Guide reader survey. The questionnaire will take a few minutes to complete. Your feedback will help us to stay focused on what matters to you.

Take the Netsize Guide reader survey

We´d also like to stay in touch with you via social media. Follow @NetsizeCorp and @NetsizeGuide on Twitter. You can also visit our Netsize Guide microsites – Mobile Renaissance and the Netsize briefing room on MSearchGroove – where you are welcome to post your suggestions regarding new topics and trends you feel we should explore in the Netsize Guide.

We are confident you will benefit from the content and case studies we are covering in our upcoming projects, and we look forward to learning what content and companies you would appreciate most.


Mobile Marketing: 5 Ideas to Score

May 17, 2010

What makes Mobile Marketing such a fascinating element of the marketing mix, and what are the factors to consider for setting your mobile marketing strategy? In our Mobile Marketing Survey Report we identify five main factors that influence adoption and success of mobile marketing.

  1. Relevancy Rules

    The ability to deliver the right message to the right person is one of mobile’s biggest selling points. Add the right context (content, location and timeliness of the message), and the relevancy of the message is boosted in a major way. Precise targeting is the top reason for marketers to include mobile marketing in their plans.

    Mobile Marketing Drivers (Source: Netsize Mobile Marketing Survey 2009)

    Mobile Marketing Drivers (Source: Netsize Mobile Marketing Survey 2009). Copyright 2009-2010 Netsize. All rights reserved. www.netsize.com

  2. Inhibitors Vary

    Starting with mobile marketing will find you overcome a few hurdles. The quality of your database, in particular acquisition of opt-in mobile numbers and maintenance of data quality might be a concern, and adherence to rules and regulations. What should be a realistic expectation on conversion ratios, and how to objectively measure campaign results? What tools to use and how to integrate with your existing CRM or campaign systems? Discuss these questions with your mobile marketing provider to set the strategy that is right for you.

    Mobile Marketing Inhibitors (Source: Netsize Mobile Marketing Survey 2009)

    Mobile Marketing Inhibitors (Source: Netsize Mobile Marketing Survey 2009). Copyright 2009-2010 Netsize. All rights reserved. www.netsize.com

  3. Messaging Leads the Pack

    The survey uncovers a decidedly positive attitude toward mobile marketing approaches and formats that build on the popularity and usability of text messaging and made-for-mobile destinations. For reaching a mass market, SMS is best positioned by far. Quick and easy to use, well understood, and flexible to be used for two-way text communications and in combination with more advanced media and formats, such as the mobile web, barcodes and also mobile applications.

  4. Keep the Customer

    Mobile marketing is used to acquire new customers as well as to retain existing customers. In the given economic circumstances it does not come as a surprise that retention marketing is showing strong growth. Mobile marketing adds value to loyalty programs, where relevant and timed messages increase the closeness of the brand to the consumer, and provide stimuli for him to act, or as some say, spend.

  5. Teams Work

    Mobile marketing is team work. While companies are convinced of the benefits of mobile marketing, the vast majority of companies still lack the resources and know-how to achieve their goals alone. Activities that are typically outsourced to an external service provider are campaign execution, and analytics and reporting.

    Mobile Marketing Resources (Source: Netsize Mobile Marketing Survey 2009)

    Mobile Marketing Resources (Source: Netsize Mobile Marketing Survey 2009). Copyright 2009-2010 Netsize. All rights reserved. www.netsize.com

To learn more about how companies make the most from mobile marketing, visit www.netsize.com. Here you can also download the full Netsize Mobile Marketing Survey Summary Report (free pdf download).


mMarketing Tips and Tricks #3

May 7, 2010

Import your mobile contact database in Netsize mMarketing

A good database of contacts is key for many mobile messaging applications. Whether used for sending individual messages or large mobile campaigns, the database is the basis for your recipients lists and targeted, personalized messages.

The contact import wizard of Netsize mMarketing allows you to setup your database in a breeze.

To import large numbers of contacts, use Import contacts in the left navigation menu (1). Select a text file that contains the contacts’ names and mobile phone numbers (2). The values should be separated by a comma or another delimiter that you specify. Click Next (3).

Netsize mMarketing - Import mobile contacts database, step 1. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

Netsize mMarketing - Import mobile contacts database, step 1. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

Select the columns that you would like to import, and map the column header name to the proper contact attribute (4): does the column contain the first name, last name, mobile number, etc. Click Next (5).

Netsize mMarketing - Import mobile contacts database, step 2. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

Netsize mMarketing - Import mobile contacts database, step 2. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

In the final step, indicate how the contacts are to be stored, and if they should be added to a new or existing list of contacts so that you can start using them in a mobile campaign immediately (6). Click Import to accept all settings and start the import (7).

Netsize mMarketing - Import mobile contacts database, step 3. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

Netsize mMarketing - Import mobile contacts database, step 3. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

In a later article we’ll go in more detail into how you can use the database for personalizing your campaigns.

Try mMarketing now
No access to mMarketing yet? Register here for a free 30-day trial of Netsize mMarketing, the easy solution to mobile marketing campaigns and business mobile messaging using SMS.

More tips & tricks:
mMarketing tip #1: Send a quick SMS message
mMarketing tip #2: Send an SMS campaign
mMarketing tip #3: Import your mobile contact database


mMarketing Tips and Tricks #2

May 7, 2010

Send an SMS campaign with Netsize mMarketing

Creating an SMS campaign with Netsize mMarketing is easy! With your database at hand, it takes only a few steps to launch a campaign. Click New campaign in the left menu, give the campaign a name, enter phone numbers or click Add contacts from list, enter the message text or select a predefined message, and click Send. The figure below shows the steps.

Netsize mMarketing - Send an SMS campaign. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

Netsize mMarketing - Send an SMS campaign. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

Try mMarketing now
No access to mMarketing yet? Register here for a free 30-day trial of Netsize mMarketing, the easy solution to mobile marketing campaigns and business mobile messaging using SMS.

More tips & tricks:
mMarketing tip #1: Send a quick SMS message
mMarketing tip #2: Send an SMS campaign
mMarketing tip #3: Import your mobile contact database


mMarketing Tips and Tricks #1

May 7, 2010

Send a quick SMS message with Netsize mMarketing

What better way to reach someone urgently than via SMS. Netsize mMarketing makes it easy for you. Login to mMarketing, and use the Quick Message box on the home page to send the message. The figure below shows how it is done.

Netsize mMarketing - Send a quick SMS message. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

Netsize mMarketing - Send a quick SMS message. (c) Copyright 2010 Netsize www.netsize.com

Try mMarketing now
No access to mMarketing yet? Register here for a free 30-day trial of Netsize mMarketing, the easy solution to mobile marketing campaigns and business mobile messaging using SMS.

More tips & tricks:
mMarketing tip #1: Send a quick SMS message
mMarketing tip #2: Send an SMS campaign
mMarketing tip #3: Import your mobile contact database


mMarketing Tips and Tricks

May 7, 2010

An SMS message is one of the most convenient ways to reach people on the move and inform large audiences in a timely fashion. An SMS is fast, precise, and always read.

With Netsize mMarketing you now have an easy to use solution for business messaging and mobile marketing campaigns using SMS. Try it out for yourself. Register here for a free 30-day trial of Netsize mMarketing.

mMarketing tips & tricks:
mMarketing tip #1: Send a quick SMS message
mMarketing tip #2: Send an SMS campaign
mMarketing tip #3: Import your mobile contact database


Apple Leads the Pack of Application Stores, Android Distant Second

January 28, 2010

Netsize Survey of Professionals, Practitioners and Execs Identifies Mobile Trends and Industry Leaders Netsize previews survey results at M-Days mobile conference and trade show in Munich, Germany

Netsize, a leading mobile commerce and communications enabler, today revealed the first results of the Mobile Trends Survey 2010. Drawing from an online survey of 1,000+ professionals and practitioners, the survey provides insights into key trends that top the industry agenda, including the advance of mobile applications stores, progress towards global mobile commerce and the pivotal importance of mobile as a means to bridge our virtual and physical worlds.

Read More


Gemalto increases its investment in Netsize, a leading mobile communications service and commerce enabler

January 5, 2010

Gemalto (Euronext NL0000400653 – GTO), the world leader in digital security, today confirmed that it has subscribed to a capital increase in Netsize, with an option to potentially acquire the company outright at a later date. The terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

Netsize offers mobile payment solutions based on operator billing (through premium SMS, MMS and WAP for example) for 100 mobile operators in 28 countries, reaching over 1 billion billable subscribers worldwide, and provides mobile messaging, with SMS and MMS delivery to over 200 countries.
Read More


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