| Choosing the Best International Cell Phone Service for You |  |

New Page 4
Use the information in this article to
understand and choose which is the best strategy for you to get international
cell phone service.
Bottom line - there is no perfect solution. Not
today. This will improve, just the same way that domestic roaming improved in
the second half of the 1980s.
There are essentially four different options available to you for cell phone
service while traveling internationally.
Each has some pluses and minuses, and none of
them are a 'perfect' one size fits all solution for everyone.
This article summarizes the differences and then
helps you choose which is best for your needs.
Option 1: Using Your US GSM Service
If you have already have a GSM phone that you
use in the US (T-Mobile, Cingular, and some AT&T phones) and if the phone is a
'tri or quad-band' international phone, then you can probably use your current
phone internationally.
Often you will find that you may need to ask the
phone company to update your account to allow for international roaming, but
once you've done that, you can then use it in a foreign country as easily as in
the US.
This is probably the most costly option if you
use your phone much while traveling, but if you don't use it, then there is no
extra cost involved at all.
Option 2: Renting a Phone and Service
This is the most expensive of the four options,
because you're paying for another middle man as part of the process.
Renting a phone is a sensible option if you
travel very infrequently, and have no special 'power user' type needs. If all
you want is an 'emergency contact' type phone that probably you'll never
actually use, this is an easy solution.
If you expect to be renting a phone several
times over a couple of years, it is probably cheaper and better to purchase a
phone. Rental phones also tend to be under-featured; if you want the latest and
greatest options, you'll probably have to buy a phone rather than rely on a
rental phone.
People considering renting a phone should
consider the very low cost <$50
EarthWize Cellular
products as an alternative. They have many unlocked tri and quad-band GSM cell
phones starting below $50.
Option 3: Using an EarthWize Cellular Phone with Hop Abroad, Riiing or Mobal
service
If you travel internationally once a year or
more, and if you visit several different countries, while not staying in any
individual country for an extended period of time, and if you will use your
phone from time to time, then one of these options is probably your best choice,
and is the best trade-off between convenience and cost.
Because its per minute rates are usually lowest,
Riiing
is a better choice if you're doing a lot of calling. But
Mobal
is a better choice if your calls are very infrequent, because it has no minimum
annual fees.
Option 4: Buying a Phone and Individual SIMs
If you travel regularly to a particular country,
and/or if you are going to be staying in one country for an extended period of
time, then buying a pre-paid SIM that gives you local service for that specific
country is probably your best choice, and presents as definitely the lowest cost
per minute of airtime (often incoming calls might be free and outgoing local
calls may be less than 20c a minute).
Using individual SIMs for each country will also
probably enable you to use all the features of the local network such as data
services as well as simple voice services, but make sure that the phone you're
using is able to support these advanced services.
There is no reason why you can't buy half a
dozen different SIMs for half a dozen different countries and change SIMs every
time you change countries. The only disadvantage is that it makes it difficult
for people calling you to know which number to call you at, and you have to
remember many different
phone
numbers and be juggling many
different accounts, ensuring that none of them expire or run out of credit.
Decision Matrix
Here are a series of questions, the answers to
which help to suggest which would be your best strategy.
On a piece of paper, draw up four columns - one
for each of the four strategies. And then, for each of the questions below,
write the number of points into each column for your answer.
If the answer to a question is 'I don't know/I'm
not sure/I don't care' then just skip the question entirely.
When you've answered as many questions as you
can, add up the points in each column. The more points that each strategy column
obtains, the more likely it is to be the more sensible solution for you.
Finally, you should do what you're most
comfortable with. Use this to guide and influence your decision, but don't allow
it to over-rule your personal preference.
|
Question |
US Svc |
Rental |
Hop
Riiing |
Mobal |
Local SIM |
|
Do you already have
US
GSM service
and an international tri-band phone? |
|
If No, score |
|
4 |
4 |
5 |
4 |
|
Do you already have
an international GSM
cell phone
(but not US
GSM
service)? |
|
If Yes, score |
|
|
5 |
4 |
5 |
|
Do you travel
internationally at least once a year? |
|
If Yes, score |
1 |
|
2 |
1 |
2 |
|
If No, score |
|
4 |
|
5 |
|
|
Do you visit one
country or multiple countries? |
|
If multiple countries, score |
2 |
2 |
2 |
2 |
|
|
Importance of making
it easy for US callers to phone you inexpensively |
|
If important, score |
3 |
|
1 |
2 |
|
|
Importance of making
it easy for US callers to have only one number to remember to phone you
at |
|
If important, score |
2 |
|
2 |
2 |
|
|
Importance of making
it easy (inexpensive and a
local call)
for callers in the country you're visiting to phone you |
|
If important, score |
|
|
|
|
4 |
|
Which is more
important to you - a convenient solution or an inexpensive solution |
|
If convenience most important,
score |
4 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
|
|
If cost most important, score |
|
1 |
2 |
1 |
3 |
|
Will you be using
your telephone a lot while traveling |
|
If a lot, score |
|
1 |
2 |
|
3 |
|
If a little, score |
2 |
2 |
2 |
2 |
|
|
Are you planning one
visit or many to this/these country(-ies) |
|
If one visit, score |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
|
|
If many visits, score |
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
Will you have short
stays or long stays in the countries you visit |
|
If short stay(s), score |
1 |
1 |
2 |
2 |
|
|
If long stay(s), score |
|
|
1 |
|
2 |
|
Do you need extra
services such as data, internet access, etc |
|
If yes, score |
2 |
2 |
|
|
3 |
|
|
|
TOTALS |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Question |
US Svc |
Rental |
Hop
Riiing |
Mobal |
Local |
Summary and Recommendation
The above table is intended as a general guide
only. The relative scores we suggest for each feature may not match the
importance to you of each feature. For this reason, treat the final totals as
being very approximate, and feel free to rewrite the scoring to more closely
match your own needs.
Additionally, if there are any 'must have'
features or services that you require, you should carefully check to make sure
that your preferred option can provide these for you.
Even after you've completed this research and
made your choice, you're unlikely to have a 'perfect' solution. Sure, you've
hopefully identified the best-for-you solution from the four imperfect
alternatives, but whatever your choice, it is still going to be more expensive
than it should be.
This situation will likely improve over the next
few years; just the same way that domestic roaming has evolved in the US. In the
mid 1980s, if you traveled to another service provider's network, you often had
to set up a fresh new account, plus perhaps pay a daily roaming fee, and people
had to dial very complicated special numbers to find your phone, with these
numbers changing every time you moved to a different city or state. Now,
domestic roaming is automatic and 'invisible' - and also affordable. Let's hope
the same evolution occurs internationally, too.
Riiing the usual best choice
For most people with average requirements, and
the expectation of traveling abroad at least once every year or two, the
Riiing global roaming
solution is perhaps the best compromise. If you travel less frequently, then the
Mobal
product may be more cost effective, and if you travel regularly to a few
countries, or stay in selected countries for extended periods, and plan on
making extensive use of your phone, then buying local SIMs are the best
approach.
If you already have US GSM service, and a
tri-band phone, then simply using your present phone overseas is surely the
easiest answer of all. But it will quickly also become the most expensive
solution if you use your phone much, and so even if you already have US service,
you might want to
get your phone 'unlocked'
and then use a Riiing, Mobal or local SIM with your phone.
|