Friday, September 20, 2024

Skype Is Getting Very Interesting

A few weeks ago, I joined the Skype beta testing program for their planned voice messaging service. It is good.

In case you haven’t heard of Skype yet, in a nutshell it’s an internet phone service that enables you to speak with other Skype users anywhere in the world for free, and optionally call normal phones at costs that are significantly less than using your normal phone. You download the free Skype software – there are versions for Windows, Pocket PC, Mac and Linux – set up your account and you’re ready to go.

I’ve been using Skype since last July, and nothing beats it in my experience. Indeed, I now use it for all phone calls I make to numbers outside The Netherlands and I’ve seen my regular phone bill consistently decrease month after month. It just saves you money. It’s a no brainer!

Now, to the interesting developments:

1. Skype voice messaging service

If Skype does launch this after the testing period is done, I’d say they will have a winner from their business point of view, and Skype users will have an excellent additional service.

In effect, the voice messaging service is your internet answering service. It means that another Skype user can call you when you’re offline and leave you a voicemail. You can set it up so that if someone calls you when you’re already on a call, the new call diverts to your voicemail, just as you might do now with, say, your mobile phone. Not only that, you can directly send someone a voice message (ie, you don’t have to call them), similar in concept to sending a text message.

This service adds a rich dimension to the Skype offering and will make it broader in appeal – not only can you call people but you’ll also be able to leave or send messages. And they will be able to do the same with you.

When will it be available and how much will it cost? No news from Skype yet on either of those questions. My guess is that if the service is rolled out, it will likely be sometime in Q2. And it will be a pay-for service. While I do believe it will be highly appealing to users, much will depend on price.

2. Text messaging to/from mobile phones

Stuart Henshall has detailed information on setting up your Skype account and your mobile phone to be able to use your mobile phone to send SMS text messages to other Skype users, via a third-party service. Why would you want to do that? Well, imagine you’re out and need to contact a Skype user. Without your computer, you can’t make a call. But now you can send an SMS to that person and, for instance, ask them to call you. Just another way to keep in contact.

Just to be clear, the service is a third-party offering, not from Skype.

And from Bill Campbell, I learned about a way in which you can send SMS messages via Skype’s instant messaging function to a GSM mobile phone, at a cost significantly less than the typical rates mobile operators charge for text messaging.

Again, as a third-party offering (from a company called Connectotel), all it requires is that you add an SMS gateway as a Skype contact and send your text messages from Skype via that (leave a comment in this post with your email address if you’d like details).

The cost is 5 cents US per message. That’s about 4 eurocents. This looks like another no brainer when you compare costs for SMS messaging with your mobile operator’s tariff. For instance, I use Vodafone in The Netherlands; their cheapest rate for sending text messages is 9 eurocents (about 12 cents US). And that’s the price within this country – it goes up substantially for messages sent to foreign numbers.

When you combine third-party offerings such as these with what Skype itself is doing, it makes the overall Skype offering very interesting indeed. If I were a telco, I’d be getting quite concerned by now. Or more interested, perhaps, as Skype might make a nice strategic acquisition for one of the cash-rich phone companies looking to lead a break-out from the rest of the pack.

Neville Hobson is the author of the popular NevilleHobson.com blog which focuses on business communication and technology.

Neville is currentlly the VP of New Marketing at Crayon. Visit Neville Hobson’s blog: NevilleHobson.com.

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