One thing I never understood about the way mobile operators work is why texting (aka SMS) is so freaking expensive. I figure its something like what the drug dealer ‘Nick’ in New York Magazine’s recent feature on profit making said about maximizing profit:
Sell to many users in small quantities. “It’s like taking a pound of coffee and selling one grain at a time,” says Nick. “If you sell by scoops, you’ll make a couple thousand dollars, but if you break it down into quarter grams and work for a few days, you’ll make tens of thousands.” Most top dealers don’t actually do this, and lazily sell in bulk, as Nick did.
Sure, 10c a message doesn’t sound like a lot, but what do you get in return? A mind blowing 160 bytes of data transferred! So, that works out to…
(1048576/160 * $0.10) = $655.36 per MB of data tranferred by SMS!
Even if you have some sort of a package that lets you send, say, a 1000 messages for $10 a month (i.e. $0.01 per message), it still works out to $65.54 per MB of data transferred.
So, how does this compare with other forms of data transfer?
- Home Internet: Ok, so this may not be the fairest comparison – since we’re comparing against a fixed line with a sunk initial cost (for laying down fiber/cable), but I thought I’d make the comparison anyway. Most internet providers don’t have any fixed upload/download limits (atleast in the US), thought they’re often rumored to send nastigrams to users who transfer large amounts of data – like 200-500 GB per month. So, lets be conservative and assume that the download limit on a regular Comcast 6-12 Mbps line is 100 GB (or ~100000 MB) per month. For this privilage, I pay $45 per mo. with no discounts. So, that works out to…
($45/100000) = $0.00045 per MB of data transferred by Cable Internet
That’s right – around a million times cheaper than SMS! Dropping the bandwidth cap to 10 GB or even 1 GB changes the order of magnitude, but it’s still thousands of times cheaper.
- Mobile Internet: So, I have the el-cheapo GPRS/EDGE mobile Internet plan from t-mobile that I pay $5.99/mo for. The contract doesn’t state any caps other than a 1 MB file download limit – so, let’s assume that you get 100 MB/mo on this plan. This works out to…
($5.99/100) = $0.06 per MB of data transferred by GPRS/EDGE.
- Mobile Voice: Voice rates vary a lot, but I figured I’ll use the common $40/mo for 1000 mins T-Mobile plan for the comparison, since it doesn’t include unlimited nights or weekends. Wikipedia tells me that GSM transmits at 12.2 kbps with the GSM-EFR codec. 1000 minutes at 12.2 kbps is (60 * 12.2/8 = ) 87.26 MB. For $40, that’s
($40/87.26) = $0.46 per MB of (audio) data transferred by GSM.
So, the underlying medium used by texting is still waay cheaper than SMS by a factor of a 1000. And I thought SMS just used the unused bandwidth in GSM networks.
No wonder there’s an abundance of free texting websites like http://www.textmefree.com/ .
Good way to put things in perspective!
I think a few start-ups have got the money-hungry telcos in their sights.
I just got onto a beta test at http://www.yoober.com for a new mobile messaging program that lets me send about 52 text messages from my mobile for the same price as i pay for 1 SMS message (it uses data, but i dont have any included, im on PAYG, otherwise i guess it would be free).
But based on my calculations – if you have 1MB of data, that equates to about 7000 text messages (160 character equivalents of SMS messages)
Hi,
Nice article. Good way to explain just how expensive texting is (even though people seem to think differently).
By the way, TextMeFree.com is not a free texting site, exactly, but a *directory* of free texting sites! (Thanks for the mention, though! 😉 )
Steve
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/28/business/28digi.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss