Saturday, November 24, 2007

Phone Tech Study

Millions of us have attended training classes to learn how to build better spreadsheets and killer PowerPoint presentations since the dawn of the personal computer age. Now, as cell phones and other mobile gadgets become increasingly complex and loaded with features, entrepreneurs are finding similar opportunities in the mobile field.

New Zealand’s Mobile Mentor provides hour long one on one sessions as well as group training on how to use the rising number of features bundled with mobile devices. Plus, it conducts courses for phone industry sales personnel on how to explain a mobile gadget’s advantages to customers.

While some consumers are naturally adept at dealing with a device’s interface, menus and options, others greatly benefit from a bit of outside help. One of Mobile Mentor’s first customers explains: “All it would take is for someone to sit down with me for 1 hour. I’ve tried myself, got instructions from Vodafone, but it’s too hard.”

Case studies on Mobile Mentor’s website illustrate how mastering a phone’s features can reap impressive productivity gains. In one example, a real estate agent learned how to use her phone to record appointments. In another, a doctor learned how to better use email and other mobile device features while protecting patient privacy.

Mobile Mentor claims to have trained over 20,000 people, but the potential market is many times larger. Entire organizations are going wireless, communicating and accessing the internet via smartphones instead of laptops and landlines. To get the most from their investment, those organizations will insist their employees know how to use the full range of a device’s features.

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