Chatr

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Chatr Mobile
Formerly called
Chatr Wireless
Subsidiary
Industry Mobile virtual network operator
Founded July 28, 2010
Headquarters Toronto, Ontario
Key people
Garrick Tiplady, Senior Vice President
Products Android smartphone and feature phones
Services GSM, HSPA (including HSPA+), mobile broadband, SMS, telephony
Parent Rogers Communications
Website ChatrWireless.com

Chatr Mobile (stylized as chatr) is a Canadian mobile virtual network operator owned by Rogers Communications targeting entry-level customers.[1] It is one of four wireless brands owned by Rogers Communications, including Rogers Wireless, Fido Solutions, and Mobilicity (one of the brands Chatr was originally established to compete against). The provider launched in Toronto, Ottawa, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, Quebec and Montreal, later expanding to more markets. Chatr launched its service under the name Chatr Wireless on July 28, 2010.[2] It rebranded to its current name in 2015.

The carrier initially launched by limiting plan features to only specific regions of Rogers' network, dubbed "chatr zones". The company now refers to these as "local talk zones", which only applies to plans without long distance.[3]

Network

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The Chatr network includes several "local talk zones" (previously dubbed "chatr zones") where customers are offered unlimited usage that applies only within a certain coverage area. Until 2015, when a Chatr customer left their designated zone, services, such as voice minutes and outgoing texts, were available on a pay-per-use basis. Chatr provided only two ways for a customer to find out whether or not they were in a Chatr zone: to check the coverage map,[4] or to check their account balance after making a call. Mobilicity, Solo Mobile, and Wind Mobile, by contrast, offer more ways for customers to tell if they are in one of their carrier's zones.[5]

In 2015, following the nationwide launch of its competitor Public Mobile (acquired by rival Telus in 2013), Chatr eliminated its zone concept on all plans that feature provincial or Canadian long distance. "Chatr zones" are now referred to as "local talk zones", which only applies to plans without long distance calling (see Services, below).[3] It was also at this time that Chatr formally changed its name from "Chatr Wireless" to "Chatr Mobile".

Services

Chatr offers four monthly plans, purchasable either with prepaid credits, a credit card or a debit card. There is also an option for automatic credit card payments (auto-pay). Unlimited calling features can only be used when a phone call is placed in a "local talk zone", while SMS text messages and mobile broadband can be used throughout the Rogers network. Except for Chatr's customer service, additional charges apply for any call made or received outside of Chatr's coverage; there is no charge for calls and SMS messages received within a "local talk zone". There is also SMS short code support for messaging via the Facebook and Twitter services, which does not require or use mobile broadband.[6]

All Chatr plans include unlimited incoming texts and the Call display, Call waiting, Call forwarding and Group calling features. Features specific to each plan are listed below:

  • The base $20/month "Unlimited Local Talk" plan includes unlimited local calls.
  • The midrange $25/month "Unlimited Province-Wide Talk" plan adds unlimited province-wide calls and 100 sent SMS to Canada, the US, and internationally.
  • The high-end $35/month "Unlimited Canada-wide Talk & International Text" and $45/month "Unlimited Canada/US Talk & International Text" plans, add unlimited Canada-wide calling and unlimited sent SMS to Canada, the US, and internationally. The latter also includes unlimited US-wide calling compared to the previous plan.

Extra charges for additional features in each Chatr plan are as follows:

  • A 25¢ per minute voicemail retrieval charge is charged on the $20 plan, which is waived on other all higher plans.
  • Province-wide or Canada-wide calls cost 25¢ per minute on plans for which it is not included, and US calls cost 20¢ per minute on all except the $45 plan.
  • Outgoing SMS cost 25¢ per message on the $20 plan and for every message sent after the first 100 included in the $25 plan.
  • Mobile broadband can be added to the $25, $35 and $40 plans, in denominations of 500 MB for $10, 1GB for $15, and 2 GB for $25. (The 2 GB add-on is not available with the $25 plan.) Additional data usage cost 5¢ per MB.[6]

Products

Phones

When Chatr was launched, it initially only sold feature phones. It began introducing smartphones in conjunction with its launch of mobile broadband in 2011, although feature phones continue to make up a significant portion of the company's phone offerings. Additionally, Chatr SIM cards allow other GSM-based handsets to be used.

Currently available devices are made by LG, ZTE, Motorola, and Nokia.[7] Chatr formerly gave each phone a nickname (for example, "The Performer" or "The Steal") until its rebranding in 2015.

SIM cards

SIM cards from Chatr (available in Mini, Micro, and Nano sizes) are compatible with any GSM or HSPA+ device, such as those designed to be used with Rogers Wireless. This includes devices from Rogers itself, plus its mobile virtual network operators such as Fido and 7-Eleven Speak Out Wireless.

Controversy

Several controversies regarding Chatr received mainstream media coverage. The company received two accusations of breaching the Competition Act in Canada.

Fighter brand

Chatr has been accused of violating the Competition Act because it is a fighter brand created by Rogers.[8] Chatr's pricing policy closely reflects that of Mobilicity (later acquired by Rogers in 2015) and Wind Mobile. Mobilicity's chairman, John Bitove, said that "[Rogers is] leveraging the other parts of their business to kill the competition […] If they succeed in killing us off there's no question they'd kill the Chatr brand off".[9]

Advertising claims

Shortly after its launch, Chatr published many advertisements claiming that their network has “fewer dropped calls than new wireless carriers”. Following a complaint by wireless carriers Wind Mobile and Mobilicity, the Federal Competition Bureau has asked the Ontario Superior Court of Justice under the Misleading Advertising Provisions of the Competition Act to order Rogers to:

  1. Stop Chatr's advertising campaign
  2. Pay a 10-million dollar penalty
  3. Pay restitution to any customers affected by the misleading claim
  4. Send out a corrective notice to inform the public about the issue

The Bureau has accused Rogers of:

  1. using misleading advertising to promote its talk-and-text service Chatr..."
  2. having "...no evidence support[ing] Chatr's claim that their customers will experience fewer dropped calls than they would with new rival wireless carriers..."
  3. directly breaching Section 78 of Misleading Advertising Provisions relating to "False or Misleading Representations and Deceptive Marketing Practices"

According to the Court documents from the preceding, the bureau found that the on average there is no significant difference between the number of dropped calls on Chatr and new carriers. Furthermore, in the cases of Ottawa and Toronto, new carriers experienced slightly fewer dropped calls than did Chatr.[10]

On August 19, 2013 it was announced that the court confirmed that Chatr's advertising of fewer dropped calls, in connection with its 2010 launch, was fair and accurate.

Advertising

Chatr Wireless' slogan is "No worries, talk happy." During the Christmas and holiday season, the slogan used instead was "No worries, gift happy." Both resemble the name of the song Don't Worry, Be Happy, and a whistled version of this song is used in Chatr commercials. Since Chatr started offering mobile broadband, the "Now data happy" tagline accompanies any promotional material concerning such services.

The company also gives out various promotional merchandise, including pens, highlighters, mousepads, water bottles, planting seeds and Chatr-branded orange M&M's. Merchandise is given away both to customers and to non-customers as a way to spread the word about the operator.

Previously, Chatr claimed to have "fewer dropped calls than new wireless carriers." However, the company's parent, Rogers, was subject to controversy for this claim. To promote its network, provided by Rogers Wireless, Chatr now claims that they have "great coverage thanks to tons of network sites."

Retail presence

A sign of Rogers, Fido and Chatr at Shoppers Drug Mart.

Best Buy, Costco, London Drugs, Tbooth, Walmart, WirelessWave and Wireless Etc. sell Chatr prepaid products and top-up cards. Additionally, Chatr once ran its own self-branded retail stores, consisting of a network of kiosks from which customers could purchase phones, accessories, plans, top-ups, and more. Almost all of these have either closed or have been converted to WOW! mobile boutique stores which provide services for several carriers including Chatr. Earlier, all seven Chatr kiosks in Montreal were converted to Fido kiosks in May 2012. This did not affect third-party retail presence of Chatr in Montreal.[11]

While Shoppers Drug Mart carried only Rogers Wireless prepaid phones at one time, the stores temporarily partnered with the network operator to carry both prepaid and postpaid products and services for Rogers and its two other brands, Fido and Chatr. There was an in-store display, showcasing many of the phones available. As of March 2011, however, Shoppers stores ended their partnership. They only sell prepaid top-up vouchers for these providers.

See also

Other brands owned by Rogers

References

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  3. 3.0 3.1 chatr wireless - Coverage. Retrieved on August 27, 2010.
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  6. 6.0 6.1 Chatr voice plans
  7. Chatr phone offerings
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External links