The History of 900 Numbers
In little more than a decade, 900 number service has undergone
considerable evolution...beginning as a simple polling
mechanism...to an information and entertainment vehicle...and
finally, to the powerful, interactive marketing tool it is
today.
Actually, the first use of information by phone began long
before the introduction of 900 service. New Jersey Bell, in
1927, and New York Telephone, in 1928, created a recorded time
of day service to alleviate the burden of such requests made
to its operators. These services were the nation's first 976
numbers. Operation of day to avoid the constant propositions
they heard from interested men. Years later, in the 1950's,
recorded technology was developed, and the phone companies
added weather, horoscopes, sports, and off-track betting
information for their customers.
AT&T was initially
asked to develop the 900 number for use by television networks
as a way to conduct instant polls of viewers on matters of
current interest. ABC's Nightline used a 900 number first
during the 1980 presidential debate, when it polled viewers on
who they believed had won the Reagan-Carter debate. Cost of
the call was 50 cents. There were so many calls that phone
likes jammed around the country. By a tally of 469,412 to
227,017, viewers picked the Californian, and both a new
presidency and phone concept were launched.
As a spoof, those zanies at Saturday Night
Live tried their own version of the 900 polling
technology. Viewers were asked to call in to vote whether or
not Eddie Murphy should boil Larry the Lobster or let him live
and give him valuable prizes. In a close vote, Larry was
granted clemency, but Murphy boiled him anyway. So much for
democracy. And so much for our nation, which cash as many
votes on the fate of Larry as on the fate of Jimmy and Ronald
a few months earlier. Well, that's show biz.
Despite such high profile programs, the 900 industry was
originally limited to only 44 simultaneous programs. Thus, the
service was used sporadically for polling and supplying
various non-interactive (where the same message is heard by
all callers) information.
In 1981, during the divestiture proceedings of AT&T,
the Justice Department ruled that the Bell Operating Companies
could no longer provide information by telephone themselves.
This decision opened the door for companies and entrepreneurs
to enter the pay per call business by providing the
informational; the telephone companies, meanwhile, continued
to provide the networks, transport, billing, and collections t
hat are common to the industry today.
The information feature came about that same year when NASA asked AT&T for a 900
number to enable reporters and space buffs to hear
conversations between mission control and astronauts on space
shuttles. After the first two flights, the number was made
available to the public. Thousands dialed it during the
Challenger disaster.
Until the spring of 1985, nobody leasing a 900 number
received revenue from the calls. AT&T received 50 cents
for the first minute and 35 cents for each subsequent minute.
As a result, 900 numbers were primarily used by corporations
as promotion or information tools. Johnson & Johnson, for
example, used AT&T's Dial-It 900 Service to release
consumer information during the Tylenol tampering scare.
In April of 1985, however, AT&T began giving 900
providers up to five cents from each call. For the first time,
companies of all kinds were able to use 900 numbers to make
money. Demand for the numbers increased significantly.
In January 1987, the 900 business changed dramatically.
AT&T stopped paying commissions to program sponsors and
introduced premium rate billing, a contract offering that
permitted proprietors of 900 programs (information providers,
or IPs) to set a price they want charge for the value of the
information or service they are providing. AT&T's Dial-It
network allowed companies to charge up to $2.00 for the first
minute of a call, permitting the information provider to keep
$1.35 (AT&T pocketed the toll from extra minutes). The
system had its limitations. It was passive (non-interactive)
only and had limited ability to offer numerous programs at the
same time.
During the same year, the now bankrupt Telesphere
International began the nation's first interactive 900
service. First offered in Chicago, the small interexchange
carrier (IXC-a long distance company like AT&T, MCI, and
Sprint) soon expanded service to include New York City and
later the nation in 1989. Telesphere enjoyed early dominance
in the 900 field. The introduction of pay per call was a major
hit with the small interexchange carrier. Its revenues more
than doubled from 1987 to 1988. Half of its $36 million
revenues in the first quarter of 1988 came from 900 service.
Today, what's left of Telesphere is involved in a class action
suit by disgruntled information providers were stiffed or
thousands of dollars when the upstart telco went Chapter 11 in
1991.
By now, information providers could charge up to $50 flat
rate per call. This enormous profit potential spawned hundreds
of less than legitimate applications, including children's
programs, credit card scams, and adult entertainment. The
carriers were helpless in preventing pornographers from
entering the business, as the Freedom of Information Act
prevented a carrier from controlling the kind of information
available on its network. It wasn’t until the carriers were to
show their high uncollectible rates on pornographic programs
that they were allowed to remove them. Today, the 900 industry
still suffers from the black eye it received in the early days
of the 900 business from these less valuable applications.
What the carriers did not count on was the rapid
proliferation of adult message lines, said Lou Delery, general
manager of AT&T MultiQuest 900 service. "Suddenly we were
in the middle of a storm of complaints from consumers,
legislators, and attorneys general. We were spending so much
time managing complaints that the service almost didn’t seem
worth it. We decided drastic changes were needed."
National 900 services were implemented at break-neck speed
by the carriers. In February 1989, AT&T joined MCI and Sprint in offering its own
expanded 900 service by introducing MultiQuest-a package of
several interactive 900 options. The term MultiQuest implied
the vast range of information sources available through the
telephone to serve people in their quest for information and
entertainment. Corporate America began to embrace the 900
number. Chrysler and Paine Webber began allowing shareholders
to listen in on their meetings via 900 number. President
George Bush even touted the merits of the industry by
appearing in a television commercial that encouraged viewers
to call a 900 number in support of the USO.
Interest was at the fever pitch in 1989. Stories in the New
York Times said that 900 "could greatly expand consumer
services over the telephone." Many other articles talked about
a new future for billing and collection that "could some day
replace credit cards."
Prominent media such as the major television networks
regularly began using 900 service. USA Today offered sports,
weather, and stock quotes. ABC's daytime soap opera magazine
Episodes used a 900 number to launch sales of its publication.
Two million soap fanatics responded and ordered a
subscription.
ABC also brought 900 into the homes of prime time America
with its regular use of the service as a vote line during
halftime of its Monday Night Football telecasts. On the
initial night, service bureau Call Interactive handled over
8,000 simultaneous calls as 51% of callers chose Tony
Dorsett's rushing play as the most spectacular in the 20-year
history of Monday Night Football. (Just for the record, O.J.
Simpson got 19%; Bo Jackson, 16%; Earl Campbell, 8%; and
Refrigerator Perry, 6%)
In December 1989, in a rare act of unification among the
Big Three networks, each agreed to run a two minute commercial
after popular prime time shows to promote a 900 number for
Prime Time to End Hunger. This major media event was deigned
to provide a data base of volunteers for the organization. The
commercials ran on the Cosby Show, Golden Girls, and Cheers
(NBC), Murder She Wrote, Jake and the Fatman, and Designing
Women (CBS), and thirtysomething and Head of the Class
(ABC).
Another famous 1989 promotion was a contest to win one of
36 vintage Corvettes, one for each year from 1953 to 1989,
sponsored by MTV. More than 1.1 million people entered the
contest during its two-month run. A whopping 87% or all
entries came from a $2 900 call, while other contestants used
the free alternative mail-in entry method. This program was
later contested by a civil suit on the grounds of illegal
gambling, but the program was upheld as legal by a federal
judge.
America's most popular game show, Wheel of Fortune, racked
up an amazing 4.7 million calls during a three-week promotion
that allowed callers to play along with Pat Sajak and Vanna
White. The game promotion ran for three weeks to increase
ratings. The over $6 million invested in advertising included
full page ads in People, Readers Digest, TV Guide and 25 daily
newspapers. The cost of the call was $2 per minute. Callers
got a coupon for a personal pan pizza from Pizza Hut just for
playing. Each night randomly selected winners received $1,000
prizes or Caribbean cruises. A portion of the proceeds went to
Toys for Tots. Over $1 million was raised for this very
worthwhile charity.
The preceeding History of 900 Numbers is taken from Bob
Bentz's book "Opportunity is Calling: How to Start Your Own
900 Number." Opportunity is Calling
is available for sale for $29.95 from Advanced Telecom
Services or on Amazon.com.
900 Numbers Facts & Information
900
Number Business Opportunities
900
Numbers Today
Start Your Own 900
Number
900 Numbers
Information
900 Numbers History
900
Numbers Quiz
USA Available Prefixes
For 900 Numbers
900 Numbers In Canada
To start your own 900 number, contact an ATS representative
today by email.
|