“Digicel
is always looking to deliver value to our customers. With the launch of the Trade-in
programme, we are making it easier and more affordable for customers from all
networks to own a smartphone while helping to promote environmental
conservation and protection. In addition, customers who take advantage of the
programme, meaning nonDigicel customers can join the region's biggest family
on the fastest and most reliable network”
Digicel Group Chief
Commercial Officer, Claudio Hidalgo commenting on their Trade-In Loyalty Points
Programme
Telecom
Provider Digicel, it seems, has finally grown a conscience as it relates to the
pollution potential of old cellphones. I wish I could say the same about
Telecom Provider LIME.
In
a bid to make purchasing a smartphone much easier, they have begun a Trade-in
Loyalty Points Programme service where the truly Loyal Digicel Customer can
carry in their old cellphones, be they Digicel or LIME and exchange them for
points towards the purchase of a new smartphone.
So
says the Press Release by Digicel in the article “Digicel launches TradeIn Programme”,
28 May 2015 by Digicel, Go-Jamaica.
Their
aim is to make it easier for aficionados of Digicel to acquire a smartphone and
keep up with the latest in smartphones, as not everyone has JA$10,000 to splash
on a DL800 of DL900 smartphone as explained in my blog article
entitled “JA$6,950
DL750 and JA$8,250 DL800 on Sale at Digicel – Alcatel One Touch Pop C1 as ZTE Force
Awakens and Alcatel’s Empire Strikes Back”.
Digicel’s Trade-in
Loyalty Points Programme – Plants vs Zombies upgrade that kills more Cellphone
Zombies
It
also falls in line with Digicel's “Go Green” Philosophy, which can be clearly
seen from their solar powered Headquarters on Ocean Boulevard. This is not the
first time that Digicel has done a Trade-In Program for old Cellphones.
Back
in June 2014, Digicel Foundation in collaboration with the Jamaica Association
on Intellectual Disabilities had collected old cellphones in exchange for
Tablets, Keyboard cases and Mouse as reported in my blog article
entitled “Digicel
Foundation swap cellphones for Tablets for Autistic Children - How Cellphone
Recycling makes money as we drown in Electronic Waste and Noise”.
And
when CLARO was in Jamaica back in 2009, they had also briefly introduced a
trade-in facility with the idea of customer getting an upgraded cellphone in
exchange for their working older cellphone.
The
difference here is that they’ve tied it to their Loyalty Points system, which
has also undergone some changes since February 2014 where they made changes to
the Loyalty Points system as noted in my Geezam
blog entitled “Digicel
Loyalty Points now expire on a yearly basis”.
Digicel's Trade-in
Loyalty Points Programme – Modern day Arabian Nights story about Aladdin and
the Magical Lamp
The
idea of swapping something old for something new has existed in human folklore
in stories such as the Arabian Nights story about Aladdin and the Magical Lamp.
The
story picks up after Aladdin had escaped from the hole in the middle of the
desert using the Magical genie in the lamp that he’d refused to give the evil
Sorcerer. The Sorcerer soon discovered that Aladdin, who was now living with
Princess Jasmine, had the magical lamp that he had failed to acquire from the
lad when he had sent him down in the hole in the desert in the first place.
So
the Sorcerer conceived a clever plan. He bought some old lamps and went thought
the city where Aladdin lived, crying, “Old Lamps for New”, gradually working
his way towards the Palace.
In
so doing, he was able to acquire the Lamp from Princess Jasmine, who was not
aware that Aladdin’s newfound wealth came from the Genii who live in that old
Lamp.
And
like the evil Sorcerer, Digicel stands to gain from the collection of old cell
phones, as these cell phones a lot more valuable than the Loyalty Points as
well as the smartphone you’ll get for your efforts.
Digicel's Trade-in
Loyalty Points Programme - How Digicel benefits from Trading Old Lamps for New
For
one, in order to return the cellphone, be it Digicel or LIME, the cellphone and
the charger has to be in fairly good working order. The customer is not given
money but instead given Loyalty points towards purchasing a smartphone.
This
suggests that you have to have been buying a lot of credit within the year in
order to have sufficient points accumulated to make up the total needed to buy
certain smartphones as their Loyalty Points now expire every year my Geezam blog entitled “Digicel
Loyalty Points now expire on a yearly basis”.
Digicel
had changed the points system back in February 2014 without much fanfare,
causing me to write a complaint blog article
entitled “Digicel
cancels their Caribbean ‘Roam Like You're Home’ and removes rollover of Digicel
Loyalty Points”.
Instead,
you are charged JA$1.00 to check your loyalty points using the following USSD
(Unstructured Supplementary Service Data) codes:
1.
*120*3#
2.
*131#
3.
Text “points” to 444-2402
Meanwhile
Digicel can now clean the cellphones and through a third-party company such as
Facey Commodity, they can sell these cellphones to companies that refurbish them.
These refurbished cellphones are then sold to Telecom Providers in other
countries where basic access to GSM (Global Systems Mobile) Communication is
just beginning to evolve.
If
the phone is severely damaged, it can still be recycled for its rare-Earth
Metals such as Tellerium, Ytterbium, Dyspropium, Copper, Gold and Lithium from
Batteries. This is much better than allowing these batteries in these discarded
smartphones staying in the Dump.
Within
the improperly supervised Dump, the Li-Ion Batteries would leech their toxic
Rare earth Metals into the soil whenever it rains, contaminating the
groundwater and polluting the air whenever the Riverton City Dump catches on
fire as argued in my blog article
entitled “NSWMA
e-Waste Collection Initiative – Telecom Providers, Jamaica's E-Waste Problem
and Starting Electronics Manufacturing Industry”.
So
albeit their methods appears sinister, Aladdin and the Magical Lamp style, this
is possibly the best development to be announced by Telecom Provider Digicel.
Despite the fact that they'll gain from it financially, at least the truly loyal
Digicel customer can use their accumulated points to buy a smartphone and in
the process save the Earth.
The
Ball is now in Telecom Provider LIME's court to do the same.
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