Patent Publication Number: US-7904354-B2

Title: Web based auto bill analysis method

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Field of the Invention 
     This invention is related to business methods and systems for automatically analyzing in real time a customer&#39;s bill, such as a customer&#39;s cell phone bill, for errors and utilization of the services or products from the billing company, and providing a report back in real-time to the customer and/or billing company by a third-party providing the corrective actions necessary. The invention is achieved by the billing company, such as a cell phone provider, sending out and/or providing a bill in electronic format to the customer and the customer sending the bill in electronic format to a third-party for the third-party to analyze the customer&#39;s bill for errors and utilization of billing received by the customer relative to the billing company&#39;s published billing plan previously stored on the third-party&#39;s website system. 
     The analysis of the customer&#39;s bill is conducted on the third-party&#39;s website system in real-time for errors in the billing and for utilization of the services or products. The analyzed results are prepared into a report to display the results. The customer is advised electronically by displaying in real-time an indication that a report is ready which then allows the customer to enter payment information and/or view promotional materials provided by the third-party and elect to view the promotional materials prior to viewing their report of their analyzed bill for errors and utilization. After reviewing the report of the analyzed bill for errors and utilization, the customer and/or third-party forwards the results of the report to the billing company, such as the cell phone company, for corrective action on the customer&#39;s account. After forwarding the report, the third-party destroys the bill received from the customer in electronic format, but collects a summary from all reports generated by category and type of error and utilization by a billing company, but not by individual customer, such as a cell phone user, and stores the collection of summaries for a predetermined time period showing the collective errors and utilization by category for a particular billing company, who can be advised of its collection of errors and utilization. This invention further provides all of the error analysis and utilization analysis of the customer&#39;s bill from a billing company by the third-party in real-time, while the customer is online at the third-party&#39;s website system. The third-party&#39;s summary report generated for the customer is in a format that the customer can forward directly to the billing company for corrective action by the billing company on the customer&#39;s account. 
     2. Description of Related Art 
     The present invention may be useful in any situation where there are companies, such as cell phone companies, which issue bills to their customer&#39;s in large volumes based on published rate plans or services. The prior art required customer&#39;s to have significant knowledge about how the industry and/or billing company computed their bills against the rate plans on which the customer&#39;s bill was based to even make sense of their bills. Most customer&#39;s do not have the knowledge or the data to make such an analysis of their bills against the published rate plan of the billing company, nor do they have the time to do so. Also billing companies, such as cell phone companies, who send out large volumes of bills, have no commercial interest in analyzing the individual bills it sends to its customer&#39;s, because it would take too much time and money and it would probably cut into their profit margins. 
     Because companies bill in mass to a large body of customer&#39;s, whose individual bills are relatively small, there is a complete mismatch of interest in the billings and utilization between the customer&#39;s billed by the billing companies and the billing companies. This mismatch of interest in the billing errors and utilization errors between the billing companies and the customer&#39;s billed, is because there has not been a way to electronically analyze billing errors and utilization in real-time and provide the summary report data individually to the customer&#39;s and collectively to the individual billing companies, such as cell phone companies, in a cost effective manner. 
     While many third-party companies in the prior art have attempted various methods of utilizing and analyzing paper invoices, or credit memorandum or electronic invoices or optical character reader conversions to convert bills into electronic formats for comparison, most have been associated with the building of a baseline template, which analyzes the customer&#39;s account in historical time to create a template baseline report. From this historical data, comparisons were made against various billing companies&#39; plans or against the customer&#39;s plan. The results were time delayed, however, and were a complicated analysis of the errors and reporting the utilization to the billed customer. These reports were as confusing as the billing company&#39;s bill to the customer and did not provide to the customer its analysis in real-time, nor did it provide the analysis to the billing company, such as a cell phone company, for corrective action, which was easy to submit. 
     Further, because the prior art used historical records, it meant that records were kept over time on the customer which created a security problem both for the customer and for their billing company. The customer&#39;s security problem was that it was exposed to potential hacking into the database on which their historical baseline was being kept and the billing company was exposed to liability for loss of the customer&#39;s personal data and billing information. 
     Also most of the prior art was related to customer&#39;s being billed by billing companies, not for individual customer&#39;s but companies who had many individual users within the company. Therefore the lone customer receiving their individual bill from mass billing company mailings did not have access to a program which could be accessed over the web to assist him in analyzing errors in billing or utilization. Therefore these programs were too expensive, except for companies with many users who could justify the cost of billing analysis for billing errors and utilization reports. 
     The prior art was also concerned with the generation of payment electronically and otherwise, after the bills had been analyzed and compared against historical billing. In this prior art, after an analysis was completed, it was then passed to an accounts payable system which was needed to pay an invoice or recognize a credit. Clearly, such systems were helpful to companies, but not of much use for individuals. 
     Also the prior art devised complicated systems and methods, as related to wireless telecommunication data, to receive billing information based on a current rate plan utilizing a transceiver specially configured to store billing information in a processor and process the subscribers billing information to produce organized data on a calling profile record for each telecommunication service being used by the subscriber and then determine the best rate plan which would be most cost-effective based on the historical data generated. Again this approach was useful for companies with many subscribers, but did not have application to individual users. 
     As the prior art was basically configured for use by companies and organizations, it was by design expensive and would not have application to individual customer&#39;s bills, such as individual cell phone customer&#39;s. 
     Further, the prior art systems and methods did not look for a business method which would support some or all of the costs required to support servicing an individually billed customer, and still leave a viable business model for third-party company to operate. 
     Much of the prior art makes attempts at providing solutions to billing analysis were inefficient and did not provide real-time internet or web analysis to a customer regarding its bill and then provide him real-time solutions to correct its bill with the billing company. 
     Clearly, the prior art did not address the issue of providing collective summaries of types of errors and utilization by individual billing company through the collection of summary reports for all companies by billing company for a pre-determined time to create a corrective report for a given company, such as a cell phone company, to allow the company to initiate corrective action based on the blind reports by its error and utilization summaries. Nor did the prior art look for outside revenue sources to be used in their business models and methods to help support and create an income stream for a third-party provider based on providing blind summary reports for companies by billing company. 
     Also the prior art was totally focused on the billing company and the billed customer in its analysis for the correction of billing errors and utilization reporting, and did not look for outside revenue sources to be used in their business models and methods to help support and create an income stream from a third-party based on promotional revenues to help support some of the costs to the billed customer, for making the service affordable to the billed customer. 
     OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION 
     It is the object of this invention to overcome the deficiencies and short comings of the prior art and provide a method and system which provides rapid real-time and simplified bill analysis to customer&#39;s of mass billing companies, such as cell phone providers, whose bills are based on published rate plans or services, without the customer having significant knowledge of how the industry and/or billing company computes their bills against the rate plan on which the customer bill is based. 
     It is also an object of this invention to provide methods and systems which would allow a third-party to analyze a customer&#39;s bill of relatively low dollar value, which have been mass billed, for billing errors and utilization in real-time and further provide a blind collective summary report to the individual billing company, such as a cell phone company, based on the type billing errors and utilization errors for a particular billing company over a predetermined time. 
     A further object of this invention is eliminating the need for the creation of a template baseline report based on a customer&#39;s historical account data and without using paper invoices, credit memorandum or relying upon any historical customer data to generate a report showing the errors of billing and errors of utilization which were billed to the customer by the billing company. 
     Yet another object is to create a simple format that the customer can understand, and have it submitted in real-time while they are online at the third-party&#39;s website system. 
     Yet a further object of this invention is to eliminate any historical record keeping of the customer&#39;s bill from the billing company to provide security to the customer and to the billing company from exposure to potential database computer hackers, because the individual customer data is deleted at the time the report is generated and no historical data is kept about the customer&#39;s bill. 
     It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for analyzing errors in billing and utilization errors for individual customer&#39;s of mass billing companies, such as cell phones providers, without the individual customer having to have access to a program resident on his computer but who can access a third-party website system network to analyze the customer&#39;s billing and error utilization at a reasonable cost per report analysis. However, it is also an object to provide billing error analysis and utilization analysis for customer&#39;s, who are companies of mass billing clients such as cell phone companies, to allow them the same economical bill error analysis and utilization analysis, at a reasonable price without them having a program resident on their company computers. 
     Also an object of this invention is to provide a simple payment procedure for the customer to pay for his billing error and utilization error analysis report, at the time he receives the report in real-time over the website server system of a third-party. 
     A still a further object of this invention is to provide a method and system for using promotional and advertising material from a third-party provider to generate income for the third-party company providing the bill analysis and utilization analysis reports and which provides a benefit to the customer whose bill is being analyzed for errors and utilization and economic benefit to a third-party, which keep costs to customer low. 
     Still a further object of this invention is to provide a means for providing collective summaries of the types of error and utilization found for an individual billing company through the collection of summary reports taken from the individual customer&#39;s reports of billing error and utilization error over a pre-determined time for the creation of a corrective report for a given company, such as a cell phone company. These corrective reports allow the company to initiate corrective action based on the blind summary reports of billing errors and utilization errors and economic benefit to a third-party, which keep costs to customer low. 
     Other objects, features, advantages, and applications of the present intention will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment of the invention when viewed in conjunction with the drawings and the appended claims, even though reference is made to the invention&#39;s use in a cell phone industry environment. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       These and other features, objects, advantages, and applications of the present invention will become more readily apparent from the following detailed description, which should be read in the broadest context with the accompanying drawings, which are listed as follows: 
         FIG. 1  is a diagrammatic general representation of basic steps of this invention as it applies to generic businesses where billing from that business can be obtained by its customer in electronic format and the billing company has a published plan which can be stored on a third-party computer system. 
         FIG. 2  is a diagrammatic general representation of the up loading steps of  FIG. 1  of a customer&#39;s electronic bill to a third-party&#39;s website system to begin the process for error and utilization validation. 
         FIG. 3  is a diagrammatic general representation of the analysis steps of  FIG. 1  of a customer&#39;s electronic bill by a third-party for errors and utilization validation and reporting in preparation for reporting back the results and providing security for the customer and billing company. 
         FIG. 4  is another diagrammatic general representation of at least one concept of providing the report of results of the analysis of billing company&#39;s bill to the customer by the third-party from  FIG. 1 . 
         FIG. 5  is a diagrammatic general representation of displaying promotional materials to the customer from  FIG. 1 . 
         FIG. 6  is a diagrammatic general representation of sending the reports of errors and utilization of  FIG. 1  to the billing company by either third-party or customer and follow up procedures. 
         FIG. 7  represents one embodiment for a specific application for cell phone customer and cell phone provider billing. 
         FIG. 8  represents a continuation of  FIG. 7  showing billing error reporting and promotional materials generation. 
         FIG. 9  represents a continuation of  FIG. 7  showing utilization reporting and the type data which can be generated for utilization reporting. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     The following embodiments are described by way of a general applications, which could be used for many such applications in various types of industries where electronic bills are available and where the industries have published billing plans available to the public, but also a specific embodiment is shown for cell phone customer&#39;s and cell phone provider billings based on the cell phone published rate plans. This invention is not limited to cell phone industry only, rather to all such applications where we&#39;re electronic bills can be made available and the billing company publishes a rate plan which is available to the public. Those skilled in this art will recognize and understand that these disclosed methods and systems could be readily adaptable for broader applications without departing from the concept of this invention. 
     In the simplest form, one of the preferred embodiments of this invention, as shown in  FIG. 1 , would have the first step  100  of a customer having a bill in an electronic format which it obtained from his billing company, who has a published rate which is available to the public and against which it bills its customer&#39;s. The customer would go to a third-party&#39;s website system, which is available to analyze bills for errors and utilization, and upload the bill in electronic format to the third-party&#39;s website system. Once the bill has been uploaded to the third-party website system, the third-party&#39;s website system performs an analysis of the customer&#39;s bill for errors and utilization relative to the billing company&#39;s published right plan, which the third-party has previously stored on its system for the purpose of analyzing customer&#39;s bills. Then the third-party utilizing its website system performs the second step  200  of analyzing the customer&#39;s bill for errors and utilization of the customer&#39;s billing relative to the billing company&#39;s billing plan, which is publicly available and previously stored in the third-party on its website system. After the analysis of errors and utilization have occurred, the third step  300  of displaying the reports of the analyzed company&#39;s bill to the customer who submitted the bill to the third-party company is performed, or at least an indication is given to the customer that the report is ready to be viewed. The customer is then provided the report in real-time after the customer pays the third-party for the error report and utilization report and/or the step  400  of displaying promotional material is performed. Step  400  of displaying promotional material to the customer may be in the form of an option which allows the customer to option in and option out of viewing promotional materials. In some applications of this invention they treat the customer&#39;s opting in to view the promotional materials as payment, and the customer is presented with the error report and utilization report after opting in. After the report has been presented to the customer, the final step of sending the report to the billing company for corrective action on the customer&#39;s account step  500  is performed. As will be further explained below, step  500  may be accomplished by the customer sending the report to the billing company or the third-party may send the report directly to be billing company, depending on the industry custom and practice of whether they will accept reports from third parties. 
     Referring to  FIG. 2 , the first step  100  of  FIG. 1  may have the further expanded step  110  by the customer first going to the third-party&#39;s website system through their computer to the public access point on the third-party&#39;s website system, which step  120  provides customer an account for formation and the entry of ID, password, and creating a space to receive the customer&#39;s bill in electronic format. Once the customer has set up their ID and password, the next step  130  is for the transmitting of their bill in electronic format to the third-party&#39;s website system for analysis and the step  140  of loading the bill to the customer&#39;s account at the third-party website system. 
     The analyzing of the customer&#39;s bill from step  200  of  FIG. 1 . is further expanded by referring to  FIG. 3  and referring to step  210  of reading the fields of data on the electronically formatted bill supplied by the customer to their account on the third-party website system. Once the fields of data are electronically formatted, step  220  of arranging the fields of electronic data for comparison against the stored billing plans of the billing companies, is performed. The step  230  is performed for analysis of the errors and utilization of the customer&#39;s bill against his billing companies plan can be achieved which allows step  240  of generating a report of the errors and utilization of the customer&#39;s bill against the previously stored plan of his billing company to be performed. Also running in the background on the website system of the third-party, is step  250  Of collecting summary from the generated reports by categories and type errors by a billing company and then the website system proceeds to step  260  of storing the collected summaries for a pre-determined time. It should be appreciated by those skilled in the art, that the steps of collecting a summary  250  and storing the collected summary  260  would be blind data not reflecting individual customer&#39;s, but only categories of errors and utilization for each individual billing company against its published billing plan and utilization. This data may be used by the third-party website system operator to provide general corrective information to billing companies about the type errors and utilization that are occurring with that particular billing company and it may also be used by the third-party as an income stream to support the business model of this invention of keeping the costs low to the individual customer submitting their bills for analysis of errors and utilization. Finally, the step  280  of the destroying the electronic bill received in electronic format from the customer is taken for providing security to the customer and his billing company, by not having any of the customer&#39;s bill being stored for online access by hackers into the third-party website system. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that this means there is no historical data stored by the third-party system about a customer and his bill which provides great security for the customer and their billing company. 
     After generating a report of errors and utilization of customer&#39;s bill step  240 , a customer who is online and on the third-party&#39;s website system, is in substantially real-time advised that their report has been generated. Then referring to  FIG. 4  he is offered the step  310  upon paying the third-party company for the generated reports of errors and utilizations and he receives step  320  generated report for the errors and utilization of their bill from the billing company. 
     Further the business model of this invention for keeping the cost low to the customer&#39;s wanting correction of their bills for errors and utilization and still provides a reasonable business model for the third-party company, step  400  of  FIG. 1 , further provides step  410  of  FIG. 5  of displaying an option for promotional materials to the customer to receive the promotional materials. Not shown is the path if the customer opts not to view the promotional materials, as he simply skips to step  500 , which will be discussed later. This promotional material can be varied from general to targeted and as such is valuable to the third-party and the advertiser, which helps support the business model of keeping the cost low to customer&#39;s seeking analysis of their billing errors and utilization. If a customer decides to option in, step  420 , to view the promotional material, he is given the choice of having the promotional message delivered from a group of audio, video, email, mobile devices, and/or on screen immediately for receiving the promotional material. The customer further is asked if they accepts the terms and conditions of use, step  430 , before proceeding to selecting the type media to view the promotional materials, step  440 , which leads to viewing the promotional materials, step  450 . As part of the third party&#39;s business model for generating income but keeping the cost low to the customer for their error valuation and utilization, the next two steps provide advertisers with positive confirmation that the customer has in fact viewed the promotional material, because these steps are receiving the promotional code, step  460 , and entering the promotional code of the customer to receive the promotional benefit, step  470 . This means that an advertiser supplying promotion materials has positive confirmation that the customer has viewed advertisers promotional material. 
     Finally referring to  FIG. 6  which further expands step  500  shown in  FIG. 1 , an option is given the customer of either, step  510 , having the third-party company submit their errors and utilization report to billing company for correction of the bill based in the customer&#39;s name and account number or, step  520 , the customer submits the validation optimization report to the billing company for correction. However in either case  510  or  520 , the third-party company sending the follow up email to customer reminds the customer to confirm that the corrections submitted have been made to the customer&#39;s account, step  530 . Depending on whether  510  or  520  was selected for response, then steps  540  and  550  are followed which respectively are submitting follow up emails either by third-party company to the billing company for correction in the customer&#39;s name and account number, or by submitting follow up emails by the third-party company to the customer for the customer to send for corrections to the billing company. 
       FIG. 7  contains a more detailed explanation of one embodiment of this invention as it relates to an embodiment for a specific application for cell phone customer&#39;s and cell phone provider billing in which the wireless user  10  obtains a phone bill in electronic format from their cell phone service provider, not shown. The wireless user  10 , once they have obtained the cell phone bill in electronic format, will go to third-party website, homepage  11 . The third-party website inquires, “Is this the users first time visiting the website?”  12 . Depending on the cell phone customer&#39;s response of “Yes” or “No” he would either proceed to “User must create an account”  13  if their answer was “Yes”, and would then be led to “store information in database”  14 , where the cell phone customer/user would enter their cell phone number, password, and their cell phone bill. If the cell phone customer/user answered “No” to the inquiry at  12 , then they would be directed to the option  15  which asks: “Does the user want to validate their bill or get a utilization report”. If the cell phone customer/user elects “Go to utilization page” report option  16 , he would be referred to Link C,  FIG. 9 , which will be further discussed below. If the cell phone customer/user elects validate their bill at option  15 , then they would select “User must sign in”  17 . It will be understood by those skilled in the art that there may be multiple steps associated with a sign in procedure  17 , such as validation of ID, username, and various sub-routines to assist the cell phone customer/user in their sign-on procedure, not shown. Then cell phone customer/users is asked, “User must choose a bill to upload”  18  and after choosing a bill to upload proceeds to “User clicks validate bill button to upload bill for validation”  19  to upload the bill they chose in step  18 . All the foregoing steps are examples of one embodiment which could be generally referred to as obtaining a cell phone bill by customer in electronic format and uploading the cell phone bill to third-party&#39;s website system, but as those skilled in the art would recognize other specific steps might be used to achieve the general steps of obtaining a cell phone bill and uploading it to the third-party website system. 
     Before a bill uploaded by step  19  can be fully achieved, processes  20 , “Is the file an HTM or PDF file” and  21  “Is the bill from an approved wireless carrier?” are run to determine if the third-party&#39;s software will be able to perform the step of analyzing the cell phone customer/users cell phone bill. If the answer to steps  20  and  21  is “No” then the user must choose a new bill to upload step  18  and try again. If the answer to  20  and  21  is “Yes” the bill is passed for analysis and validation. While there may be many ways to go about the analysis process, as those skilled in the art would be aware, the analysis process for at least one embodiment herein described is achieved initially with step  22  “Validate users name against name stored in database”; step  23  “Validate users mobile number” and step  24  “Verify users wireless carrier”. In this embodiment and throughout the analyzing process fields of data are read on the electronically formatted bill and the data fields are arranged in a pattern which can be compared against previously stored billing plan data of a cell phone provider, which in this embodiment being described would be the cell phone customer/users wireless carrier verified at step  24 . Once step  24  is completed in the analysis, the process continues by, “Extract wireless plan and standard features set then identify any errors” step  25 . Another subset of analyzing the arranged fields of data is to compare and asked the question, “Does a bill containing partial month charges?” step  26 . If the answer is “Yes” any analysis of data fields proceeds to “extract prorate charges and validate the charges” step  27  so that the charges will be prorated and not deviate the data being analyzed or give a false comparison, then the process proceeds to step  28 . If the answer to step  26  was “No” then analysis process moved to “Calculate minutes of use by extracting call information” step  28  and to “Extract taxes and surcharges and calculate taxes and surcharges and validate them” step  29 , and then to “Identify any late charge fees” step  30  and to “Identify data features” step  31 , after which “Were errors found?” step  32 . If no errors were found, at least in this embodiment, a screen displays “Show thumbs-up page” step  33  to indicate to the cell phone customer/user that their phone bill is correct and he would be referred to Link B,  FIG. 8 , which will be further discussed below. If errors were found or the answer was “Yes” in response to the query of step  32 , then the analysis proceeds to “Store error information in database by cell phone carrier to be used to report to carrier” step  34 , and then the process proceeds “Delete users bill from server” step  36 . It should be further explained that this stored information in step  34  is not individual information about the cell phone customer&#39;s/user, rather it is generic data error which is collected by type error and by cell phone provider and is blind information relative to the cell phone customer/user. Therefore, this stored error data allows the third-party to “Provide reports to carrier for a fee” step  35 , and maintain the cell phone customer/users privacy and data by error type and particular cell phone provider of the accumulated data. The third-party may sell this data to a cell phone provider to help support the business model of keeping the cost low to the cell phone customer&#39;s/user for their error information and still provide a successful business model for the third-party provider. 
     If errors were found in the cell phone customer/users cell phone bill and after running steps  34  and  36  and indication is displayed that an errors have been found in the cell phone customer/users cell phone bill, by displaying on the screen, “Thumbs down results page” step  37 . After displaying step  37 , the cell phone customer/user is provided the option of asking, “Does the user want to purchase the error report?” step  38 . If the answer is “No” the cell phone customer/user is returned to the third-party website homepage  11 . If the answer is “Yes”, they would be referred to Link A,  FIG. 8 , where the cell phone customer/user will be ask, “Display credit card/address page” step  39  for the entry of credit card information to affect payment for the error report. If they answer “No” they are fed to Link B and are fed back to a process which asks, “Does the user want to purchase the utilization charts?” step  48 . If the answer is “No,” the cell phone customer/user is directed back to third-party website homepage  11 . If the answer is “Yes” he is directed process step  39  to begin the credit card processing steps to purchase the utilization report and processed along the same lines as the error report. The next procedure is validation of credit card information, “Is the information entered valid?” step  40 . If the answer is “No” the cell phone customer/user is routed back to step  39  for re-entry of credit card data. If the answer to step  40  is “Yes” the cell phone customer/user has displayed an option to view promotional materials. 
     The option to view promotional materials is offered to the cell phone customer/user to view a promotional marketing message “Does the user want to opt in for a video marketing message via email, mobile or on screen?” step  41 . If the answer is “Yes” the cell phone customer/user will be asked “Does the user accept the terms and conditions?” step  42 , under which the promotional offer will be made, and if excepting the cell phone customer/user is requested “User selects type of message and third-party sends message with promo code” step  43  to be used in the next step where, “Customer views message and receives promo code and then returns to the site and enters promo code and completes transaction” step  44  for the cell phone customer/user to receive the benefit from having viewed promotional message. The benefit can be anything from discounts on products, free products, and are anything an advertiser is willing to give as valuable benefit. The third-party company derives additional income from advertisers to support its business model of providing reasonable cost for cell phone customer/users to have their bills analyzed for correction. It is important to understand that the more reasonable the cost are to the cell phone customer/user to have their bills corrected, the more volume a third-party generates with their business model which generates more advertising and is a self upward spiraling generator of this business model. Further, the advertisers know their promotional materials are being viewed because in step  44  the customer uses the message and receives an additional promo code which he must enter to complete the transaction. This positive confirmation of having viewed this promotional material makes it exceptionally valuable to advertisers. 
     After the cell phone customer/user leaves step  44  he is offered the option “Is the user purchasing the charts or an error report and the chart?” step  45 . If the cell phone customer/user opts for reports and charts he is passed to “Show error report and utilization charts. To save copy or print for resolution” step  46 , is performed. If at step  45  the cell phone customer/users had opted to see only the utilization charts, then they would have been passed to the process “Generate and show the utilization charts” step  47  would be performed before passing the cell phone customer/easier to step  11  directing the cell phone customer/user to the third-party website homepage. 
     If the cell phone customer/user elects above to, “Go to utilization page” report option  16 , they would have been referred to Link C,  FIG. 9 , which will be described now. In this procedure, the user must follow the procedure “User must sign in” step  50  and “User uploads their bill” the step  51 , which substantially follows the steps in  FIG. 7  at reference numerals  17 ,  18 , and  19 . Then, not shown, analysis occurs similar to that in  FIG. 7 , but the results are different in that the analysis extraction process, at least in this embodiment, extracts “Peak minutes from bills” step  52 , “mobile to mobile minutes from bills” step  53 , “Peak in calling minutes from bills” step  54 , “Night/weekend minutes from bills” step  55 , “text message totals from bills” step  56 , and “Geographic calling information” step  57 . Then user must enter credit card information step  58  and go through similar procedures from  FIG. 7  steps  39 , steps  40 . While the promotional materials process steps are not shown, those skilled in the art would know how to extract the similar procedures for providing promotional option in and option out of promotion materials as discussed above. The third-party&#39;s website server system would “Show the graphs to the user” at step  59 , and “User can download graphs” step  60 . The graphs by general discussion, not limitation are shown as “Calls per day graph”  61 , “Calls per our grass”  62 , “My money graph billed items”  63 , including such items as plan costs, surcharge, taxes etc., “Monthly utilization grant”  64  including text message sent, text message received, peak minutes, mobile-to-mobile minutes etc., “Current bill percentage graphs”  65 , and “Geographic calling area graph”  66 . 
     From the foregoing preferred embodiments of this invention which have been described in specific details with references to specific disclosures and embodiments, it will be understood that there are many variations and modifications which may be used and still be within the spirit and scope of this invention as described in the attached claims.