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TeliaSonera joins Freemove Alliance

But is it enough to rescue the group?

A similar structure is available for data services including GPRS and BlackBerry (where available) and soon to include 3G. However, the alliance has yet to offer lower costs for users roaming on its networks, as Vodafone has for business travelers, nor has it come up with a consistent access and sign-on interface across all territories, as the Wi-Fi aggregators and Vodafone Passport offer.

This shows the problems of achieving political and technical harmony between many partners with different network approaches, although Freemove says the next step will be to extend fixed price or inclusive deals to voice and data calls and to smaller companies or even individuals. This can be expected in late 2006 provided the operators remain in agreement. The group also promotes its 'Virtual Home Environment', which enables customers to access to voicemail and customer service — through the same dialling procedure — when travelling to another country.

But the group really needs to reduce pricing rather than just simplify it. Based on public pricing, Vodafone has substantially cheaper data roaming tariffs than Freemove members Orange and T-Mobile. Vodafone charges £5.80 per megabyte for GPRS roaming on its German network, against a charge to Orange customers in Germany of £10 per megabyte and for TMobile UK, £7.50.

This year it plans to launch a 'dashboard' or graphical user interface, as Vodafone Passport has, to give IT managers visibility on cellular usage patterns and costs of employees travelling across all the Freemove networks – but again, it is lagging behind both the world’s largest cellco and Starmap in this respect.

Other alliances

A key question is how far members of the alliances will share services with which they have developed differentiation. In many cases, this will be a means to scale up such a service and attract larger partners, such as integrators. Orange UK’s Extended Connected Service, offered with EDS, is likely to be extended to other Freemove partners, for instance, though this could take two years.

Another potential advantage could be deals with the members’ fixed line parents or siblings, to support converged managed services and roaming. Equant, part of France Telecom, is examining possible involvement in Freemove. However, many of these developments, while interesting in terms of roaming services, are ill defined, will take one to two years to come to fruition, and are dependent on the politics of the operators.

And in the meantime, the alliance could fall apart. The members are slow to come to agreement and have not even integrated their billing systems yet, nor added Wi-Fi support. There are clear conflicts of interest in areas where a multinational customer might have a choice of two or more Freemove members as the primary provider (T-Mobile and Orange in the UK, for instance). And Freemove has been slow to sign up partners to provide roaming in key non-European territories, a situation made worse by the loss of Telefonica and the operator with the largest Latin American presence.

Talk that Asian giants like DoCoMo could join the group has come to nothing – and indeed, given its alliances with Starmap members like O2 through the licensing of its iMode content platform, that particular international giant might be more inclined to join the smaller operator grouping, and make it into a more realistic counterweight for Freemove and Vodafone (especially if Telefonica decides to join alongside its new O2 unit).

Meanwhile, T-Mobile has not fully incorporated roaming with its US arm into the Freemove mix, and Orange is pursuing its own US partnership with Cingular, which is not open to other Freemove members. With memories of the ill-fated Concert venture between BT and AT&T hard to erase, it is all too possible that Freemove members will realise that international telecoms ventures are hard to make work – and then find they can better pursue the desired corporate customers outside the group, with their own allies, and free from the politics of making common cause with one another's major rivals.

Copyright © 2006, Wireless Watch

Wireless Watch is published by Rethink Research, a London-based IT publishing and consulting firm. This weekly newsletter delivers in-depth analysis and market research of mobile and wireless for business. Subscription details are here.

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