Archive for the ‘Issah’ Category

Stand by What you Say – The Youth Opinion

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

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We asked SMS Text News youth correspondent Issah to go out and ask the youth their opinion on SpinVox’s new Stand by What you Say campaign. You know the one, we’ve done a brief overview of it here. SpinVox launched Stand by What you Say in conjunction with MTV to get people talking about sex.

Here’s what Issah found out:

Jane Shorter: I love the idea, but who would use it. I wouldn’t.

Perry Lancure: I’d use it. But I’ve never heard about it before.

Matthew Leeson: It’s silly who does that like seriously.

Reshuni Desai: Why are people being encouraged to have and talk about sex?

Saif Janab: It sounds good, raising awareness and all that but how are
you going to let people know about it?

Clifford Jones: I don’t want to tell everyone about my sex life!
Private stuff. But the idea is good.

Jason Smith: Fantastic idea. I haven’t heard of it yet though.

Michelle Reiner: This would be very helpful for young people with
uncertainties concerning sex. I like.

Joe Agbunde: From what I understand this could develop into something
bigger than just talking about sex.

Ben Prior: Sounds great! I’m sure I’ll use it.

Tommy Home: Really good, but I’m not sure it’s the most effective way
to go about spreading awareness.

Vivian Diep: I think it’s an unusual idea yet really interesting.

Kieran Wells: Amazing idea, I absolutely love the innovation though I
think it could be marketed a lot better. Blog format is very
attractive and the little people are pretty amusing.

Thanks Issah!

The Youth of London handle the iPhone

Monday, May 12th, 2008

I’m sure you all know SMS Text News Youth Correspondent Isaah. He’s done a few things for us on how the youth of the nation view phones, providers and the mobile industry in general. This time we put an iPhone in his hand as a follow up to his youth opinion piece he did late last year. We wanted to see what London’s youth thought of it when they could actually hold one in their hand. The results follow…

Mahammed Abdillahi, 15: “Brilliant phone. 10/10.”

Dillan Campbell, 15: “That phone is sexy.”

Wahidur Rahman, 15: “It’s a crap phone just to show off with. It’s just not good. The camera’s only like 2.0 megapixels. It’s like buying an expensive car with no engine.”

Nhung Vu, 15: “It’s really good I said if it was about £100 cheaper I’d buy it and if I didn’t have a phone at the moment I’d do just that.”

Osman Abdul-Moomin, 12: “It looks really high tech. But it’s not really for kids.”

Sean O’Shea, 17: “Nice, but it looks like it will go out of fashion really quickly because of its retro design.”

Joana Yelibora, 21: “It’s good so far it has internet.”

Claire Opel, 16: “I don’t like it, I just don’t like touch screen.”

Jasmine Dong, 19: “I’ve now got an N95 and I stick by what I said last time: just no need for an iPhone.”

Kris Shukla, 15: “The iPhone is well suited to media and photography use but is sometimes brittle and frustrating to use at times. It takes some time getting used to.”

Fawziyah Rahman, 15: “I don’t really like the idea of no buttons; it makes the phone seem almost ‘unreal’, because the buttons are not actually there. It is like they’re behind the screen.”

Bobjinder Singh, 17: “Well yeah it’s good, good internet stuff going on with an mp3 thing. Alternatively you could get a normal phone and an iPod stick them together and bingo you’ve got an iPhone.”

Charlie Smith, 11: “It is wicked, my mum’s got one and I’m getting the new one soon.”

Charles Joshua, 14: “I think that the iPhone is very stylish and innovative.”

Thomas Fenn, 18: “What a waste, they could have put so much more into the phone. It doesn’t even have a video camera does it?”

Nasir Mahmood: “It looks sick and it’s easy to use.”

Leevean Blackwood: “Great, cool and totally convenient. Sexy too.”

Aisha Moosa, 15: “I don’t like it because it’s too fragile and I heard the calls are most likely to get bugged. It’s too fragile for me but it’s a decent phone. I hadn’t handled the phone before that’s why I said it was useless without a stylus.”

Fascinating stuff! Thanks Isaah!

Mobile operator shops dismissing their young customers?

Monday, April 21st, 2008

A little while I asked Issah, the SMS Text News Youth Reporter, aged 15 and from East London, to check out some of the UK mobile operators here. Whenever I walk into a shop, I am generally treated pretty well. I wondered if this was the same when it comes to teenagers who are poised to become extremely high mobile spenders in a short few years.

Here’s what happened when Issah headed down to Oxford Street, centre of Her Majesty’s Empire (London) and popped into one global vendor’s shop.

Over to Issah:

- – -

Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Issah Abdul-Moomin, I’m 15 years old and I am the SMS Text News Youth Reporter.

I was out with my Dad last week and as we passed a plethora of mobile phone shops we got into a discussion about the mobile industry and its importance. As we passed a Vodafone store I and my Dad thought we’d have a look at some of the phones on offer.

I made straight for the pay monthly handset display at the back of the shop, I wasn’t really impressed. Their selection of phones was just not wide enough for me. I then walked to the pre-pay phones display and felt a similar dissatisfaction.

My Dad who is not very familiar with mobile phones in general, wanted to find out more so he grabbed a bored-looking shop assistant and started asking questions.

This is where the real annoyances started.

I first asked if they stocked the LG Viewty – a silly question, as I had already seen the display, but I think you will agree the response was even sillier.

The sales person simply handed me a catalogue to look through.

Couldn’t he answer my simple question? He couldn’t be bothered to even say the word ‘yes’.

Maybe I’m being silly, I don’t know. I believe as an employee you should have at least basic knowledge of the establishment you are working for. Surely, in this case the mobile phones on offer come under these criteria.

Anyway, slightly disgruntled I resumed listening quietly like a good little boy. I observed how he wasn’t making any attempts to engage my Dad at all, and that really annoyed me. I then asked him about the internet mobile offers available and was redirected back to my catalogue. I’d had enough.

I sought another assistant whilst my Dad continued his consultancy. I approached the next available sales person and asked another mobile-related question of which I cannot remember. I was again directed towards the ‘best assistant’ in the whole damn shop: The March edition of the Vodafone in store catalogue!

The same assistant (human) was then approached by an adult customer that asked a similar question and was treated with a lot more care than I was. I was pretty livid at this point and with minimal difficulty got my Dad and left (he wasn’t too impressed with the monthly tariffs as opposed to Flext on T-Mobile) I related to him the consultancy farce I had just experienced and he told me he wasn’t too impressed either.

I want to draw attention to my treatment at the hands of assistant number 2. Was I blown off like this because I’m a kid? Was he having a bad day? I don’t know but I do know that neither qualifies as an excuse. I am sure that this service isn’t true for most Vodafone branches – but one can ruin it for all.

I think that employees in mobile phone shops need to be either educated or just apply common sense when dealing with young customers. We need to be treated with more care and thought than the average customer.

I finish with this; shop assistants should assist me with my purchase and make it an enjoyable experience. I want to be able to leave the store content that my choice has been well-educated, not the result of some lazy worker’s attempt to get me out of the shop with a phone as quickly as possible.

My Rating: 2/10.

- – -

So it could just have been a bad day down at the Vodafone shop on Oxford Street. I certainly understand that when a teenager arrives in the shop, there’s little a sales assistant can do than sell them pay as you go credit, since teenagers can’t sign up for contracts.

But their parents can. I wonder how much business is lost (and won) on this front. Anyway, thanks for this Issah. Shortly we’ll be putting an iPhone into Issah’s pocket and asking him to walk around his school and see how folk react to it. (Remember we did a research piece with quotes from Issah’s colleagues about the iPhone launch here.)

If you’ve any ideas for products and services we should stick in front of some teenagers to see what they make of it, let me know.

Issah, is, by the way, looking for work experience for a few weeks in the summer time. He’s on the hunt for mobile industry related experience in or near London (as he’s living in East London). If you’ve any suggestions, let me know by email please.

Won’t somebody PLEASE think about the young people

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Issah, our intrepid 15-year old reporter, has a wicked piece coming about how mobile phone shops treat their young customers. Nothing short of ridiculous.

However today I’m on the hunt for ideas for what we could get Issah to test out. Phones, products, services – what do you think needs a 15 year old’s perspective?

I’m going to give him a JCB ToughPhone and see if he and his friends at school can break it (in, er, as safe a manner as possible, maybe in a science or woodwork style lesson). I’m going to give him an iPhone and see what the youngsters make of it (particularly after the rather stimulating piece he brought us about how UK teenagers reacted to the iPhone launch.)

I’m thinking of talking to 3UK and seeing if they’d drop Issah over a few new handsets to have a play with and see how the teens react to them. Or Vodafone (whilst their forum intervention team is shit hot, I don’t think their consumer PR would be that interested.)

Any ideas? Let me know.


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