no no 100 clients each with 10,000 minutes/day that's 1 million minutes/day or 30M minutes/month billed at .04 for starters.
Places like Geico do around 150,000 toll free minutes/day.
Banks, like Chase, BOA, do 300,000 toll free minutes/day
I was downplaying it by saying 10,000 because I'm assuming GOIG with 10% market share.
The reality is the toll free arena is roughly $20B/year in the U.S. in total, at about .04/minute. So, this means there are roughly 500 billion toll free minutes used in the U.S. each year or roughly 1.4 billion minutes/day total for all businesses.
In Europe its a $25B/year with the same rates and in Canada its about $2B.
Asia has little data, but obviously one day will be bigger than all of the rest.
As of right now there is a total of about 3 billion toll free minutes billed each day between the U.S. Canada, and Europe.
If GOIG can get a 10% market share, thats 300 million minutes/day billed at xxx
300 million x .01= $3m/day revenue 300 million x .02= $6m/day revenue 300 million x .03= $9m/day revenue 300 million x .04= $12/day revenue
All of my info is public info, you can find what companies like Chase pay each quarter for toll free, just read the fins.
You can check the AT&T fins and see their revenue for toll free, you can check Sprint and Verizon too.
Plus, when you or I use our cell phone to call a toll free 800 number, it takes away from our minutes. If you use GO800 and recieve a call, you don't waste any minutes.
I'm tired, I'll come up with a DD package tomorrow.
If Asia gets added to the toll free mix you can basically double the figures I put above.
GOIG only needs 10% of the global toll free market to become a $15 billion dollar company or so.
Of course, at only 1% of the toll free, GOIG would still be worth $1.5 billion
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