T-Mobile customers dumping Blackberry devices in trade-in program - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

T-Mobile customers dumping Blackberry devices in trade-in program

Customers who trade in their BlackBerrys at T-Mobile will receive up to $250 in credit from the carrier.
Customers who trade in their BlackBerrys at T-Mobile will receive up to $250 in credit from the carrier.
(Graeme Roy / Associated Press)
Share via

After kicking off a trade-in program specifically for loyal BlackBerry users, T-Mobile said it has experienced 15 times the amount of device trade-ins that it normally receives.

But surprisingly, most of the customers are dumping their BlackBerry devices.

An internal memo sent within T-Mobile indicates that 94% of customers participating in the BlackBerry trade-in program have switched to other types of devices, according to a report by TmoNews.

VIDEO: Unboxing the Quirky Spotter multipurpose sensor

Advertisement

Those results are notable considering what led to T-Mobile launching the trade-in campaign in the first place.

Last month, loyal BlackBerry customers as well as BlackBerry CEO John Chen blasted T-Mobile through social media and on the Web after the Seattle carrier began messaging BlackBerry customers with an offer to switch to the Apple iPhone 5s for $0 down.

The complaints caused T-Mobile to launch the current campaign, which offers $200 credit when customers trade-in their old BlackBerry and upgrade to a new device. Customers who choose a BlackBerry Q10 or Z10 get an extra $50 discount.

Advertisement

Despite the loud complaints, it seems there were many BlackBerry customers who were ready to leave the struggling platform, according to the TmoNews report. T-Mobile has yet to confirm the accuracy of the memo in the report, but TmoNews has a track record full of accurate reports regarding T-Mobile news

Neither T-Mobile nor BlackBerry could be reached for comment.

ALSO:

1 in 10 Americans think HTML is an STD, study finds

Advertisement

Facebook reportedly in talks to buy drone company for $60 million

Roku announces $49.99 Streaming Stick, a Chromecast, Apple TV rival

Advertisement