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The 411 on directory assistance

Calling 411 from a cell phone can be maddeningly expensive, but increasingly, customers have access to free alternatives.

5 min read
Calling 411 for directory assistance can be maddeningly expensive. Carriers like Sprint and Verizon charge more than $1 and sometimes as much as $2 a call from a cell phone.

And much of that is profit. Directory assistance "truly is a cash cow," said Saroja Girishankar, a vice president at the Pelorus Group, a telecommunications market research firm based in Raritan, N.J. She and other industry analysts said that the carriers paid wholesalers--who actually provide the 411 service--from 25 cents to 50 cents a call.

Naturally, the wireless carriers and directory assistance companies want to keep the cash cow in their barn. But increasingly, customers have access to free alternatives to 411. And as cell phones become more sophisticated, the options for avoiding paid directory assistance are multiplying.

Already, two new services--800-FREE-411 and 800-411-METRO--offer directory assistance free of charge, though users have to listen to advertisements.

Other companies, including Google, offer free directory assistance via text message. Soon, voice-activated search engines may make it possible to bypass directory assistance entirely. One contender, the Maestro system, a voice-activated search engine being developed at Ben-Gurion University in Israel, will allow users to surf the Web just by speaking and listening.

To keep users calling their paid 411 services, the major wireless carriers have added features like horoscopes, sports scores and stock prices. As cellular bandwidth increases, those offerings will go from voice to text to multimedia, said Tom Moran, executive director of product management and development for Verizon LiveSource. (LiveSource, owned by Verizon Communications, handles about 1 billion 411 calls a year for customers not only of Verizon Wireless, but of T-Mobile, Cingular and Alltel.)

"Pretty soon, if you ask for the number of a movie theater, we'll send the movie trailer to your cell phone," Moran said.

Some new directory services will rely on Global Positioning System technology, which is mandatory on most new cell phones. "You may not know where you are, but we will, and we can give you the number of the nearest Italian restaurant," Moran said. (Under current law, the company would be able to track your location only with your permission.)

Sprint is already offering one location-based service: driving directions with your current location as the starting point. An operator will stay on the line until you reach your destination, said Bill Elliott, director of marketing, voice and integrated services at Sprint.

Elliott said that Sprint 411, at $1.40 a call, is a bargain because a caller can get up to three pieces of information, like a phone number, a sport score and directions.

Despite all the enhanced services, 95 percent of customers are simply looking for a phone number when they dial 411, Girishankar of the Pelorus Group and others said. So the phone companies are determined to make "ordinary" 411 calls appealing. That is why both Sprint and Verizon continue to use live operators. "When you call 411, you want to speak to a person," Moran said.

Since last year, both Verizon Wireless and Sprint have offered 411 callers the option of receiving a backup text message, generally for a small additional charge.

"You may not know where you are, but we will, and we can give you the number of the nearest Italian restaurant."
--Tom Moran, executive director, Verizon LiveSource

So far, despite the free alternatives, the number of 411 calls from cell phones has been "increasing by leaps and bounds," according to Paul Ciotta, a spokesman for Infonxx, a company based in Bethlehem, Pa., that handles about 500 million directory assistance calls each year. At the same time, the number of 411 calls from conventional telephones has been decreasing, several analysts said.

Fees for traditional directory assistance calls from wired phones vary from region to region and company to company. Some states require phone companies to provide a certain number of free information calls, but beyond that fees typically are about $1.50 a call.

If overall revenue from 411 calls (now about $8 billion a year) falters, cell phone companies may try to make up the difference with advertising revenue, following the lead of the free services.

If you ask for the number of a restaurant, "you might get a menu or a $10-off coupon sent to your phone," Moran said of a possible future service. The restaurant would pay the company a fee. That would alter the nature of directory assistance. But "the listing always has to be relevant to the customer's request," said James Albert Smith, a spokesman for Verizon LiveSource. "The search result should not be driven by ad dollars alone."

Testing free services
I normally pay $1.49 to call 411 from my Verizon Wireless phone (and 10 cents more if I request a backup text message). By contrast, when I called 800-411-METRO, operated by InFreeDA of Menlo Park, Calif., it cost me nothing. But if time is money, I did pay a small price.

First I heard, "This call is brought to you by Trend Micro. Protect your home or small-business PC from viruses and hackers." Then an operator picked up. I asked her for the number of Rice Thai Kitchen, in Brooklyn. "How do you spell the Thai?" she asked me. I told her, and then heard another ad for Golden Gate Cuisine and Pizza--"extra large, three toppings only $15.95."

I was then invited to press 1 to connect to the pizza restaurant, 3,000 miles away in San Francisco, or press 2 for the Brooklyn restaurant. (The connection, incidentally, is free, which means that on some calling plans you can save money by letting 411-METRO put you through even if you already know the number.)

I also tried 1-800-FREE-411, provided by Jingle Networks of Boston. Unfortunately, of about 10 calls I made to Jingle, half reached a recording saying "all circuits are busy." (George Garrick, chief executive of Jingle, said the service, which has been "overwhelmed with calls," is expanding its system.)

When the circuits weren't busy, the system worked well, and the ads were never more than 15 seconds long. When I asked for the number of Joe's Pizza, on Prospect Park West in Brooklyn, I heard an ad for Domino's Pizza--which was no coincidence, according to Garrick.

Looking to avoid ads altogether, I tried 1-877-Easy411, a service based in Burlington, Mass., which charges 65 cents (including call completion). Before I could use the service, I had to provide credit card information at the company's Web site (which took me about a minute). I entered the phone number on my cell phone's contact list as "411" (which means it appears right on top, above contacts that start with "A").

I also tried several free text message versions of 411. One is offered by Google (at the five-digit address 46645), another by UpSnap of Davidson, N.C. (at 27627) and a third by Synfonic of Berkeley, Calif. (at the harder-to-punch-in 1-650-430-718).

In each case, typing the word "rice" and the ZIP code 11215 was enough to get me the number of Rice Thai Kitchen, though the text messages also offered alternatives, like Paul Rice Architecture (from Google) or Nancy Rice M.D. (from Synfonic).