| Breaking away from established norms, Idea is all set to become the first GSM network in the country to offer high-end data services to its prepaid customers. |
| "We have realised that the purchasing power of the prepaid customer is no less than that of the post-paid customer," said company's vice-president (marketing) Nilanjan Mukherjee. |
| By the end of the month, subscribers to Idea's prepaid service will have access to premium services like high-speed Internet and video-game downloads over the operators GPRS and Edge networks in the eight circles where it has presence. |
| Currently, around 75 per cent of cellular subscribers in the country are in prepaid customers, up from around 40 per cent five years ago. Prepaid customers also have a much lower ARPU than the postpaid segment - a fact which has kept major networks from investing in data-services for prepaid users. |
| "Despite the best efforts of the operators, the ratio of prepaid to post-paid customers has only gone up over the last few years," pointed out an industry official, "So, when you can't beat them, better join them," |
| The company is learnt to have put in place a real-time billing facility for pre-paid data-consumers, the only one in the country to do so. The facility, called Intelligent Content Delivery System (ICDS), will allow the operator to charge pre-paid customers according to the amount of data consumed by them, much in the same way as they are charged for their voice-usage. |
| "Till now, pre-paid customers were being billed on a per download basis for ringtones, wallpapers etc and on a flat rate for GPRS because companies had not put in place the infrastructure to do real-time billing for data consumption. Now with the new system we will not only be able to offer high-end non-voice applications like high-speed data over Edge, but also be bill our consumers exactly on amount of data transmitted and automatically terminate the connection when they run out of balance," Mukherjee pointed out. |
| The move marks a departure from established norm-that of converting most prepaid customers into post-paid-that all cellphone operators follow. |
| GSM operators have been loathe to invest in data delivery infrastructure for pre-paid customers. Going by traditional wisdom, prepaid customers are not likely on be heavy data users. |
| The move is also seen to be a reaction to the emergence of data services as money-spinners in the prepaid services offered by rival CDMA operators. |
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