The greatest trick Steve Jobs ever pulled was getting us to use his phone as the benchmark for all phones. They make a good benchmark of course: best experience, best industrial design and best ecosystem. Best for developed nations (and the developed nation pockets that exist in the developing world) perhaps? But best for Africa? Well now, there’s a debate …

I’ve been extremely excited to see the explosion in cheap smartphones and African ecosystem plays that have occurred over the last year. Our continent is host to 1 billion Africans. Can you imagine how powerful we could be once we connect those billion people to a device that can pretty much replace a computer for most social and business-related tasks?

Into the fray hops one of the first “for Africa” mobile ecosystem plays that I’ve seen: Mi-Fone. Ignoring the hyphens and urban hip use of the F for now (SEO obviously isn’t important just yet), I wanted to share some thoughts after playing with their top-of-the-range device for a week.

The Mi-Fone A300 (also referred to as Mi-300 on the site) retails for about R1 400, putting it near the top of the “cheap smartphone” category. But give it a year or two and I think we’re going to be seeing similar devices in the R500 to R700 range. Mi-Fone already has two other models in the R800 range, but they’re not Android.

Some quick hits:

Cons

* The touchscreen is a little unresponsive, you really to give it a good swipe to get it going. This is probably a result of a slightly underpowered CPU (necessary when creating cheap smartphones). It’s not a massive detractor, you’ll get used to it, especially if you haven’t experienced premium touchscreens.

* It’s small. And small touch devices have small touch keyboards. Too small for my evidently chubby fingers. In portrait mode, the A300 was almost impossible to type consistently on. Again, I’m sure there’s an element of “getting used to it” – but I didn’t.

* Camera quality is crap. So what, I suppose …

* The Android Marketplace sucks. First of all, being an Android 2.2 device, there are already tons of applications that aren’t compatible. Secondly, that store is a mess. Do a search for Angry Birds (but of course!) and you’ll get 5 753 results. Yech.

* It charges really slowly. Like REALLY slowly.

* The aux jack on my unit didn’t seem to work. This may be because it wasn’t a standard aux jack (I didn’t plug in the earphones that came in the package). These days, if it ain’t standard, I ain’t using it. What happens when I want to replace the earphones and you don’t have a distribution outlet? On the other hand, it may just have been faulty. I’ll find out for you!

* Android is known to be data heavy, and it remains to be seen how prepaid markets react to this extra cost. BlackBerry kicks ass in South Africa simply because it’s the most cost-effective data solution.

Pros

* It’s vanilla Android! YES! No more clumsy Touch Wiz’s and Sense’s and other “we can only differentiate on the UX” attempts. Plain Android as Google intended it. And for all its teething pains, vanilla Android is awesome. I’m so glad Mi-Fone just left the interface alone and concentrated on other elements of the ecosystem.

* It comes preloaded with Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, an FM Radio, localised News, GPS, Google Talk, Gmail and more. Out the box, this is one super-connected device. Especially when you’re distributing into markets that aren’t familiar with the app store approach yet.

* It comes with a BlackBerry-style scroll pad, which is pretty cool if you’re porting over or just have some good ‘ol BBenvy.

* It feels really solid. Nice build quality. Love the brown colour. Most smartphones these days are black/gray with a button or two. The brown colour gives it some funk. I guess we have to remember that the old adage of “cheap Chinese products” isn’t true any more. The iPhone is produced in China after all!

Interesting stuff

And here’s where it gets really interesting. From what I can gather in the press releases, Mi-Fone hasn’t stopped with the device. Their intention is to own the entire stack (from device to content). In the African context, this makes a whole lot of sense. Considering how fragmented the mobile world is getting, localisation has never been more important.

The Mi-Fone A300 comes pre-packaged with a bunch of music (due to their partnership with Spinlet and some media houses / record labels). This bodes well for the future — as long as the range of tracks can be kept relevant.

They’re also launching an African App Store in the future. Ag nee, another App Store you may say … and I’d have to agree with you. MTN has one. Vodacom has one. Samsung has one. Other manufacturers and network providers are launching one. I think it’s getting to the stage where your App Store is most likely going to be directly linked to the device you have. Still, if they can give me 1000 African-relevant apps instead of 599 000 pieces of crap (the Apple App Store now has 600 000+ apps) … they’ll win.

Also preloaded on the device was some political satire. Rip-offs of Julius Malema’s “Kill the Boer” and a skit of Jacob Zuma. I don’t really know how to feel about this. Political satire is dangerous, but I guess if you’re going for the hip, urban African vibe, this might be a way to go. Might. Kudos for having the balls to do this …

The attempt to own all the verticals is in its early days, but the approach is spot on and exciting.

I really hope Mi-Fone pushes the boundaries past music, hip parties and aspirational lifestyle positioning. That stuff is important, but the target verticals for African domination go much further. Think: retail, eCommerce, mobile wallets, integrated banking, transaction facilitation (take what NFC can do for payments and make it work it a more practical sense), small business empowerment, bill payment etc.

Now we’re talking!

Competitors

I didn’t realise when I started playing with the A300 how quickly the $100 smartphone market has exploded. After chatting with my Twitter community it looks like the A300 is going to face some stiff competition from the likes of the Samsung Galaxy Y, HTC Wildfire and more importantly, the Huawei Ideos.

Bring it on. To put a device like this in the hands of 1 billion Africans for about R300-R500, I’ll put up with any number of quirks.

Author

  • Andy Hadfield is a digital native (can’t remember life without the Internet) and is fascinated with the impact it is having on our lives and businesses. An entertaining and compelling personality, Andy speaks with authority and insight about the new shape of life, work and play in the digital world. Importantly though, he’s not a “techie”! Andy understands the hard realities of business, and delivers pragmatic, realistic lessons from the future, which every business will find valuable. His intensive front-line experience underpins these viewpoints. He has played in every corner of the digital industry, launching his first startup at age 19 - getALife (gAL) was a social network before the word was even invented. The site was a political and community mouthpiece for South African students between 1997 and 2005 and was covered on every major media platform, including Time Magazine. It also has the dubious honour of being sued by Robert Mugabe. He then spent the next 7 years honing his strategic skills across a range of industries, including finance, professional services, construction and media. With The Virtual Works, this included building the digital platform that underpins “The Deloitte Way”, a real time strategic assessment, staff engagement and reward programme. He was also involved in creating Africa’s first monetised niche social network (www.designmind.co.za) which drives communication and collaboration across the construction industry. At First National Bank, Andy helped develop a team to manage digital strategy across the consumer banking segment. This included projects such as corporate crowdsourcing, the bank's first official FaceBook presence, a major overhaul of www.fnb.co.za and a world-class “Amazon-style” online sales system for financial products. Since 2010, he founded and operates www.OneBigWidget.com, a boutique strategic consultancy and stable of pioneering digital projects. You can find him on www.andyhadfield.com or tweeting his love for cricket, wine and the new style of business on www.twitter.com/andyhadfield.

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Andy Hadfield

Andy Hadfield is a digital native (can’t remember life without the Internet) and is fascinated with the impact it is having on our lives and businesses. An entertaining and compelling personality, Andy...

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