Corporate News
By OKUTTAH MARK, mokuttah@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Safaricom has unveiled a suite of products, key among them –Safaricom guarantee - that commits to refund customers up to one minute talk time if their calls get prematurely disconnected while speaking to other Safaricom subscribers.
- In the event of a call drop, Safaricom subscribers will get a Short Message Service SMS notification and thereafter receive a minute’s worth of airtime compensation.
- Safaricom’s move comes at a time when the CA increased the penalties for poor quality services to subscribers from Sh500,000 to to 0.2 per cent of their gross turnover.
Telecoms operator Safaricom
on Wednesday moved to tighten its grip on the voice calls market with
the promise to pay subscribers for any disconnection that occurs while
they are making local calls.
The promise effectively means Safaricom has strengthened its
network enough to use quality as a differentiating factor in the
marketplace where it is embroiled in a bare-knuckle fight for customers
with resurgent rivals.
On Wednesday, Safaricom unveiled a suite of
products, key among them –Safaricom guarantee - that commits to refund
customers up to one minute talk time if their calls get prematurely
disconnected while speaking to other Safaricom subscribers.
In the event of a call drop, Safaricom subscribers
will get a Short Message Service SMS notification and thereafter receive
a minute’s worth of airtime compensation.
Bob Collymore, the Safaricom chief executive, said
the firm has in the past invested billions of shilling on infrastructure
upgrade but realised it did not mean subscribers were getting quality
service from end to end.
“We have in the recent past invested an average of
Sh30 billion a year to build the best network for Kenya, but we are
aware that there is a great deal of opportunity to enhance the
experience on our network,” he said.
Safaricom’s decision to compensate customers for
poor quality calls is also in line with the Constitution and the
Consumer Protection law that requires suppliers of goods and services to
automatically compensate consumers where the services or goods do not
meet the required quality or standards.
It was not possible to establish the number of drop
calls on Safaricom’s network, but the promise which came into force
immediately opens the giant telecoms operator to a floodgate of class
action suits should it fail to materialise.
Stephem Mutoro, the chief executive of Consumer
Federation of Kenya (Cofek), lauded Safaricom’s offer as proactive even
as he urged the telecoms firm to make it permanent after the stated 90
days of piloting.
“This is an initiative that ought to be made
permanent. Should they renege on the promise to compensate customers
then automatically they will lose public goodwill and attract
compensation suits,” Mr Mutoro said.
Safaricom’s launch of the product was attended by
the Communications Authority of Kenya (CA) director-general Francis
Wangusi, Information secretary Joe Mucheru and principal secretary for
Broadcasting and Telecommunication Sammy Itemere – giving it the
official stamp of approval.
Mr Wangusi, however, denied that his presence
amounted to an endorsement of Safaricom’s product but was in support of
the proactive stance the operator had taken in dealing with the issue of
service quality.
“I have not come here to endorse the Safaricom
product. However, the mobile operator’s initiative is a proactive
measure to ensure its customers will get better quality service,” Mr
Wangusi noted.
Mr Mucheru said Safaricom’s commitment was a clear
demonstration of the faith that the telecoms operator has in its network
and the company’s quest for the rollout of new products that meet
consumer needs.
“As the sector continues to evolve and focus shifts
to quality of services, this strong commitment demonstrates the fact
that Safaricom is ready to continually innovate to meet its customers’
needs,” the minister said.
Safaricom’s move comes at a time when the CA increased the
penalties for poor quality services to subscribers. The operators have
been paying a flat rate of Sh500,000 for non-compliance – a price that
has been seen as too lenient.
The three telecoms operators are now required to
pay a penalty equivalent to 0.2 per cent of their gross turnover for
offering poor quality services to consumers.
The CA’s latest quality of service report shows
that none of the three mobile operators met the required quality
standards threshold in 2014-2015.
The CA report says Airtel, Safaricom and Telkom
Kenya fell short of the 80 per cent quality mark – a target they failed
to meet for the third year in a row.
The report also noted that out of the eight
parameters, all operators met the handover, call set up time and signal
strength thresholds. There was also a remarkable improvement on the
quality of speech for all the operators.
Safaricom also introduced my-subscription service
that allows its customers’ to view their active subscriptions (Data,
SMS, Skiza and Premium Rate Services).
The move is in response to unscrupulous content
providers who have been enlisting unsuspecting subscribers to their
services or fail to unsubscribe them when they want to opt out --
ultimately depleting their airtime or data bundles.
Safaricom also introduced a service that enables
its customers to control data bundles usage and allows them to restrict
browsing on out of the bundles rates.
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