Advertisement
Promo

Mobile devices Toolkit

European mobiles dial up ringback tones

Tony Hallett silicon.com

Published: 26 Aug 2004 10:35 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

The growth of ringback tones in Europe is set to mean hundreds of millions of euros in extra revenues for mobile phone operators -- but that growth is below some previous estimates and held back by certain factors, not least confusion over what the service is.

Not to be confused with ringtones -- which many people are now comfortable with buying over-the-air, sometimes for polyphonic handsets -- ringback tones involve the calling party hearing a song or film excerpt or DIY message left by the called party instead of a brrring brrring sound (or brrrrrrrring in some countries).

This is a further phase in mobile phone personalisation and one that analyst house Ovum today said will be worth $721m (£401m) in Western Europe in 2008, up from around $16m this year.

However, in only February this year, mobile entertainment company Netsise put a figure of $1.5bn across Europe by the end of 2005.

Such forecasts were somewhat understandable. In South Korea, a spin-off from SK Telecom called widerthan.com has done well, enabling SKT's ColoRing service. It costs consumers around $2 per month, which now translates into $8m in monthly revenue and 30 per cent user-base penetration.

Ovum points out that in the Philippines, the launch of a service from Global Telecom led to 100,000 eager users in its first week.

But all is not well. Ovum and others say ringback tones are difficult to explain and therefore market and managing the service can be complicated at a network level for operators, at device level and in terms of securing rights with content companies such as music labels.

T-Mobile has had some success in Europe since its ringback launch across the Czech Republic, Germany and the UK at the end of last year, with other operators such as Tele2 Sweden, Telefonica Spain and Vodafone Germany now following. But all may want to note the performance of operators such as M1 in Singapore and NTT DoCoMo who haven't done well - and that's in Asia where such services are generally thought to catch on faster.

Ovum said Western Europe is set to account for around 30 per cent of ringback tone sales.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
62 out of 98 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:








Video icon

Video

Enterprise Smartphones Special Report Special Report

Nokia E63

Nokia E63

Review Although it's missing some features (chiefly HSDPA and GPS), Nokia's E63 is a well-thought-out, ergonomic and affordable smartphone.

More Special Reports

On The Road Blog

Nokia halves smartphone portfolio

Nokia has reduced the number of smartphone models it intends to introduce in 2010 by half, according to reports. Quoted in an article on Reuters, the Finnish handset maker's new... More

1 comment

Can I have fries with that? (Consumer...

Licence policies of Tech company's have been for a long time both complicated and 'Dick Turpin-esque', people just click 'I agree' without reading the Agreement. I do the same, but... More

1 comment

Lenovo repurchases mobile phone arm

Lenovo has bought back the mobile phone arm that it sold to a private equity firm at the start of 2008, the company said on Friday. The manufacturer sold Lenovo Mobile to the Hony... More

Post a comment

Discussions

juicecultus juicecultus

The link provided is not working

Sunday 6 December 2009, 5:13 PM

1 comment
lezlow lezlow

when it comes with power supply you,ll...

Saturday 5 December 2009, 9:42 PM

3 comments
lezlow lezlow

yer

Saturday 5 December 2009, 9:40 PM

1 comment
lezlow lezlow

HP workers set dates for strikes

Saturday 5 December 2009, 9:39 PM

2 comments

Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters