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RedButton to change the local WiFi landscape

Waira_2008Jan_Martinboro3.jpgA visit to a Starbucks coffee shop in Europe usually means free access to the Internet in addition to great coffee. In South Africa, hotspot visitors usually have to pay to surf, and while some hotspots offer free access, the service is often erratic because they have to find ways to manage the high bandwidth cost.

RedButton, a local WiFi service provider, has devised a model which enables coffee shops and other WiFi hotspots to offer sustainable, stable and free wireless access without compromising their bottom line.

According to Barry Steyn, finance and operations director at RedButton, this is made possible due to the support from the Bandwidth Barn and the Cape Information Technology Initiative’s (CITi) VeloCITI programme.

RedButton’s solution enables a hotspot to control when and how WiFi is given away for free. For example, a hotspot may choose to only offer free WiFi in quiet times as a way to entice further customers. Alternatively, a hotspot may choose to cap a user’s access in peak times – once they reach that limit they are prompted to switch to a prepaid solution.

“This gives the hotspot the ability to offer free access without putting their entire business at risk,” says Steyn. “It protects them from customers who buy one cup of coffee and chew up all the bandwidth by downloading a lot of data. It also gives the hotspot additional marketing tools to attract customers in slow times.”

According to Steyn, South Africa’s telecommunications climate calls for businesses to find innovative solutions to offer a global standard of service without compromising their profitability.

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