Pay By The Day

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PHONES aha; ChE O UR ea Pay By The Day (NAPSA)—More and more young adults have a mobile phone and prefer to use it to a landline phone to stay connected. In fact, according to a recent T-Mobile study, young professionals use their phone mostly after work. Recent graduates whoare head- ing into the workplace instead of the classroom this fall are also facing the financial realities of adult- hood. According to a MonsterTRAK survey, more than half of college craduates plan to move out on their own this year, and many will begin spending their hard-earned, entry-level-position paychecks on rent, food and cell phonebills. While the commute home can be a great time to make happy- To save on felephonecalls: Match your plan fo your usage. Avoid long-term. Look for unlimited. Check the carrier's return policy. 2. Avoid long-term contracts and surprise bills witha prepaid plan: With no annual contract, no credit check and no monthly bill, prepaid plans are a simple, direct way to go mobile— and can be used with a broad range of mobile phones, including the popular T-Mobile Sidekick. 3. Rather type than talk? Look for unlimited texting or hour plans with college friends or bundles: T-Mobile offers unlim- advice, many mobile phone plans picture or video) for only about $15 a month.* Or if you can keep ask Mom or Dad for workplace limit free calling to weekends and late nights, which can make staying connected to family and friends inconvenient andcostly. But wireless carriers do offer solutions for young professionals and recent graduates that may save them moneyontheircell phonebill. T-Mobile offers these suggestions to cash-strapped college grads: 1. Match your plan to your usage: Before you purchase service, think carefully about when you make most of your calls and also whom you call the most. Chances are you can find a plan ited domestic messages (text, IM, an eye on your texting limits, a less-than-$15-a-month* bundle of 400 messages might suffice. You can add either of these features to any monthly plan from T-Mobile. 4. Keep it in the family: Par- ents can save kids a lot of money by letting them stay on a family plan and letting them pay them (instead of a wireless carrier) for the minutes and messages. Adding a line and a messaging bundle to an existing family plan can cost as little as $15 a month*. The other that lets you pay only for how you use your phone. For example, a solution is to establish your own “family” with roommates or friends. There’s no rule that says ited nationwide night calling start- sure youre choosing a wireless carrier with great service where great option is T-Mobile Prepaid with the new Pay By The Dayplan. For just $1 per day* you get unlim- ing at 7 p.m., along with unlimited calling to any T-Mobile number. And you pay only for the days the phoneis used. Or if youre like most people, % of your calls are to the families have to be related. 5. Coverage matters: Make you live, work and play. Check the carrier’s return policy and consider test-driving the service. T-Mobile even offers a Personal Coverage Check Web site where same five people, and if that’s the case, you might opt for a more inexpensive monthly plan and you can discover the signal strength at specific addresses that option to it, which features unlimited nationwide calling to the services, visit www.t-mobile.com/ shop/plans. add T-Mobile’s myFaves’ calling five people you call the most. matter to you. To learn more about T-Mobile * Plus taxes andfees.