AT&T Blames Poor Wireless Service On Network Upgrade

August 31, 2009
Glenn Lurie is AT&Ts president looking after the carriers relationship with Apple

Glenn Lurie (right) is AT&T's president looking after the carrier's relationship with Apple

What’s the point of having an innovative mobile device like the iPhone, when the cellular network just… sucks!

Well according to AT&T, this might be coming sooner rather than later, as the mobile carrier revamps its wireless network in Silicon Valley with “an 850 overlay”, causing even more service disruptions.

But in the meantime, the now centre of the mobile word – being the birthplace of the iPhone –  will have to do with more poor quality calls or worse, dropped calls!

“We’re going to spend $5.5 billion in our mobility networks alone. We’re the biggest spendor of CAPEX in the U.S. of any company… We’re getting massive growth in data usage, not just because of the iPhone, but netbooks, laptops… we’re seeing high level of usage that no other carrier in the world is seeing at this particular time,” said AT&T president Glenn Lurie, who’s also in charge of the carrier’s “relationship” with Apple.

In other words, be patient and it’s going to get a lot better… Just like us, you probably heard that before!

iPhone exclusivity drives innovation

Asked about AT&T’s exclusivity of the iPhone in the U.S., Lurie argued that this was the only way to spur some technology innovation (like the iPhone visual voicemail) in what became the world’s leading mobile market, ahead of Asia and Europe.

“Now guess who’s coming to see us,” jokes Lurie.


Why Pick A Telecom Guy To Run A Car Company

June 15, 2009

If my very future depended upon selecting a single person to sink just one basketball shot, I’m picking Michael Jordan.  If my life hung in the balance, and one individual from our history had to present an oration that would determine my survival, I would beg Martin Luther King to speak on my behalf.

So, why in the moment of its greatest trial would General Motors — described by now-CEO Fritz Henderson as desperately needing to succeed in two areas: product and customers — turn in its time of crisis to someone with 43 years experience at the phone company?  Don’t get me wrong. Edward Whitacre, Jr. changed the landscape of that great American institution, AT&T, re-shaping it from a monopolistic giant into a diversified, competitive enterprise.  He took the smallest of the so-called Baby Bells — SBC — and created a global powerhouse.

The problem is that what Whitacre foresaw for his company then — colossal technological change and rapid consolidation — is not the immediate future of the automotive industry.  It was never the case that customers didn’t want to buy a phone; instead it is that we wanted more of the communication services they had to offer in new and exciting ways.  On the other hand, few of us are thrilled by what we have to endure to purchase an automobile.  GM has become so disconnected from its customers, that we will do just about anything to avoid interaction with them.

AT&T grew because of the technological advances in their industry, not because it was so customer-centric that it took existing market share from competitors.  Which, of course, is the very task that GM needs to execute to survive.

When it comes to AT&T Wireless, for example — does anyone doubt that whatever degree of success they’ve had lately was more dependent upon Steve Jobs than the system that Ed Whitacre established?  Apple’s iPhone — and the entire customer experience created by Apple Stores — has driven almost all of the advancements of AT&T Wireless.  If the AT&T stores were regarded as customer focused, why did the vast majority of us go instead to Apple to buy our phones, and only reluctantly endure the AT&T experience?

It is a bit odd that in this time where the Administration is stressing fiscal discipline and reduction in executive compensation that the pick for GM’s Chairman is a man who, according to “Corporate Library,” left his previous position with a retirement package valued at $158.5 million.

That’s why the fundamental reason for Whitacre’s selection should be painfully obvious — GM is more focused upon a chairman who can work with governmental overseers than inspire dealers and create products that connect with customers.  For all of CEO Henderson’s posturing of the past several days — and he’s done a pretty good job at it — it speaks volumes that the selection of GM’s chairman is someone from another industry that, like the car business, was formerly bloated beyond description.

If the Administration really believed what their hand-picked CEO was saying — that products and customers make the difference — why not be really distinct in the selection of Chairman?  Why not ask Steve Jobs to lead GM instead of returning to Apple at the end of the month?  It would be interesting to challenge him in a similar manner to the provocation he issued to John Scully all those years ago.  Howard Schultz at Starbucks knows a thing or two about the customer experience.  Alan Lafley is retiring as CEO of Procter & Gamble and he excelled at retailing, manufacturing, customer relationships, and organizational change.

This post was written by Scott McKain, the Vice Chairman of Obsidian Enterprises, the co-founder of The Value Added Institute and the author of Collapse of Distinction – Stand Out and Move Up While Your Competition Fails.


BillShrink: It’s Worth Switching From iPhone To Palm Pre

June 4, 2009
Palm Pre offers a cheaper monthly plan than the iPhone... plus a keyboard!

For the Palm Pre, Sprint offers a cheaper unlimited everything monthly plan than AT&T for the iPhone... plus a free keyboard!

2 weeks ago we wrote that iPhone users could save up to $1,200 over 2-years by switching to Sprint’s wireless plan and the Palm Pre.

Today, BillShrink – the free online personal savings advisor that helps people find the right phone at the best price – confirmed this with its own analysis of the true cost of the Palm Pre vs. the iPhone.

BillShrink calculates the “true” cost of the Palm Pre vs. Apple iPhone

So, to help determine if the switch is the right financial move, as well as the right move based on unique usage habits, the folks at BillShrink put together this apples to apples comparison feature available here.

At first glance, it looks indeed that Sprint offers a better overall value than AT&T for their respective unlimited plans. However their 450 minutes plan (including unlimited data) cost the same, at $70/month.

Palm Pre (Sprint) Cost

  1. $199: cost of phone with $100 rebate
  2. $100/month: Sprint Unlimited data + voice
  3. $69.99/month: 450 voice minutes and unlimited data
  4. $89.99/month: 900 voice minutes
  5. $129.99/month: Family plan for 2 Pre phones ($19.99 for additional lines to family plan)
  6. $169.99: 3000 minutes shared plan
  7. $189.99: Unlimited family plan ($89.99 for additional lines to unlimited everything family plan)

iPhone (AT&T) Cost

  1. $199+: cost of phone
  2. $150/month: AT&T unlimited data + voice (this includes unlimited texting, without unlimited texting it is $129.99)
  3. $69.99/month: 450 voice minutes and unlimited data
  4. $109.99/month: 900 voice minutes+ unlimited messaging (without messaging that number is $89.99)
  5. $129.99 (for 700min and unlimited everything else) Family plan for 2 iPhones ($39.99 for additional lines to family plan)
  6. $209.99 3000 minutes shared plan
  7. $259.99 Unlimited Family plan ($129.99 for additional lines to unlimited everything family plan)

Palm Pre Coming June 8th For $200; But Sprint Unlimited Plan Is $1,200 Less Than AT&T’s

May 19, 2009
Sprint unlimited plan can save you more than $1,200 over the 2-year contract

Sprint's unlimited plan can save you more than $1,200 over the 2-year contract vs. AT&T's

It’s now official, Sprint will launch the much-anticipated Palm Pre on June 8th – in 20 days – for $200, with a two-year service agreement and after a $100 mail-in rebate (I hate those!).

The Palm Pre will be available nationwide in Sprint stores, Best Buy, Radio Shack, in some Wal-Mart stores and online at Sprint.com.

Palm Pre is $1 more expensive than Apple iPhone, but Sprint’s unlimited plan is $50/month cheaper than AT&T’s!

At $200, the Sunnyvale, Calif.-company latest smartphone is a tat more expensive ($1!) than Apple’s 8GB iPhone 3G.

However, if you look at the monthly phone bill – the most important expense over the contract agreement – Sprint’s Simply Everything plan (unlimited voice and data) is $50 per month cheaper than the equivalent plan at AT&T or a $1,200 savings over two years!

Can’t beat that.

Bottom line, if you’re a heavy phone user, and don’t have an iPhone yet or looking to stop being a cash cow for AT&T, the Palm Pre/Sprint combination is an attractive alternative.


Tables Turning In Telecom With Video Trumping Voice

March 20, 2009

It used to be telecommunications carriers made a living connecting phone calls.

But this year could be the first where the new video services offered by AT&T and Verizon grow faster than the telephone services cable companies are selling to their customers.

This year could be the first where new video customers at top telcos exceed new cable voice customers

This year could be the first where new video customers at top telcos exceed new cable voice customers

This analysis comes from the Wall Street firm of Stifel Nicholaus.

Up to now, the cables have made inroads into the teleco’s home turf, stealing voice customers faster than AT&T and Verizon could attract customers to their new fiber-optic networks, over which they deliver high-speed Internet connections and TV programming.

In 2008, for instance, two Baby Bells added 1.8 million video customers while the top four cable companies, such as Comcast, signed up nearly 4.8 million voice subscribers.

But the video programming has been popular with consumers, and both telecommunications carriers have received high marks for customer service.
In addition, voice signups at the cable companies have slowed, with new subscribers falling from 1.2 million in the third quarter of 2008 to 870,000 in the fourth quarter, says Stifel Nicolaus.

“We view telcos as the likely market-share winners over the course of the next couple of years, as cable’s core video product will continue to be stripped away by competitive telco offerings,” the firm said.


iPhone 3G: Inventory Clearance In UK, Germany, Japan, Austria; U.S.?

March 13, 2009
Carriers are clearing out their iPhone 3G inventory in expectation of a new device this Summer

Carriers are clearing out their iPhone 3G inventory in expectation of a new device this Summer

The entry-level iPhone 3G (with 8 GB memory) has been steadily dropping in price around the world with carriers clearing their inventory, ahead of a new device expected this Summer.

As reported earlier, O2 was giving away the iPhone 8 GB for free to its U.K. customers for a mere $63 per month plan, when AT&T in the U.S. is asking $199 for the same phone and a minimum of $80 per month.

The iPhone is now free in Austria, Japan and in the U.K. and 1 euro in Germany!

Now O2 is reported to lower the bar again next month, with the same free iPhone deal but this time for just a $50 monthly bill.

In Japan, Softbank has just started offering about the same deal than O2. Ditto in Austria, through T-Mobile.

In Germany, the iPhone is a bit more expensive, at 1 euro!

No doubt, that the latest price drops are related to the imminent launch of the third generation iPhone.

Now will it be a “nano” iPhone as rumors seem to point to? What do you think?


Market For IPTV Bucks The Recession And Grows

March 11, 2009

Television delivered over the Internet – known as IPTV – is breaking ranks with the sour markets of the global downturn and growing despite the tough times.

And it has begun taking it out of the hide of cable and satellite TV services.

Subscribers to IPTV doubled in the past year to 23 million

Subscribers to IPTV doubled in the past year to 23 million

Vendors of IPTC, including Verizon and AT&T, added 3.2 million customers in the fourth quarter. That brings total subscribers to 23 million, double the figure from a year earlier, says Dell’Oro Group.

The region encompassing Europe, the Middle East and Africa remains the largest market place. But the fourth-quarter growth was due to rapid adoption in the North America, where AT&T and Verizon aggressively marketed the service.

Despite price declines, the market for IPTV set-top boxes is seeing growth, but the market for set-top boxes supporting cable and satellite services is shrinking, says Dell’Oro Vice President Greg Collins.

These dynamics are setting up an interesting tussle between Cisco Systems and Motorola, the top box makers. Cisco is gaining share in cable while Motorola is gaining share in IPTV, says Dell’Oro. With a new generation of high-definition box filtering into the market, well, let the games begin!


Comcast Unleashes 50Mbps Broadband In Silicon Valley

March 5, 2009

Comcast said it is rolling out new higher speed Internet connections starting in the Silicon Valley-San Francisco area and nearby Monterey County.

Cable giants faster broadband battles fiber optics from Verizon and AT&T

Cable giant's faster broadband battles fiber optics from Verizon and AT&T

The two new tiers of service will increase downstream speeds to 50 megabits a second – an effort by the cable giant to compete against the fiber-optic service Verizon and AT&T are delivering to regions of the country.

Comcast said its Extreme 50 will offer up to 50 Mbps of downstream speed and up to 10 Mbps of upstream speed at $139.95/month. The Ultra service will provide up to 22 Mbps of downstream speed and up to 5 Mbps of upstream speed for $62.95/month.

The company claims with Extreme 50,  customer will be able to download a standard-definition movie in five minutes.


Report Says Verizon Is Preparing To Carry The IPhone

February 23, 2009

AT&T’s exclusive deal for the iPhone in the U.S. could be coming to a close.

The Web posting is not the first to speculate about a Verizon-friendly iPhone

The Web posting is not the first to speculate about a Verizon-friendly iPhone

Verizon Wireless will soon announce a deal to distribute Apple’s iPhone in America, according to the ITExaminer.com Web site.

Apple has been seeking EVDO and CDMA engineers for months, suggesting it could be developing a version of the phone for the Verizon networks, the Web sites says.

The speculation isn’t the first to claim a Verizon-friendly version of the iPhone is on the way. Last September, Engadget said it too had received wind of such as device.

Verizon has said it has two dozen new devices scheduled for launch in the first half of the year.


Sprint Nextel Lost $2.8 Billion, Shed 4.5 Million Subscribers In 2008

February 19, 2009
Sprint's $20 billion debt could endanger the company's survival

Sprint's $21.6 billion debt is a concern for the company's long term survival

It’s getting much worse for Sprint before it could get a little better.

For the first time since its acquisition of Nextel in 2005, the number of Sprint subscribers fell below the 50 million mark to 49.3 million; after losing an additional 1.3 million last quarter, including 1.1 million “postpaid” customers who pay a monthly bill and are considered the most valuable.

At the end of the fourth quarter, Sprint served 36.7 million post-paid subscribers, 3.6 million prepaid subscribers and 9.0 million wholesale and affiliate subscribers, which includes Amazon’s Kindle customers.

Sprint has a massive debt load

For the full year 2008, Sprint Nextel lost nearly $3 billion on declining revenues of $35 billion. By comparison, the Kansas company generated $40.1 billion in revenues and lost $29.3 billion – including a $29 billion write-down of its Nextel acquisition – in the same period a year ago.

Nextel’s total value has been entirely wrote off Sprint’s books; another impressive destruction of value. Cisco’s CEO, John Chambers, is again correct in saying that huge acquisitions just do not work.

More worrisome in this credit crunched economy is Sprint’s heavy debt load totaling $21.6 billion, and making Sprint the financially weaker wireless carrier of the U.S. “big four” (AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile).

Is a bankruptcy or sale looming ahead? That’s definitely not a case to be discarded, unless of course if Palm’s Pre can generate the same kind of profits for Sprint than Apple’s iPhone did for AT&T and its other wireless partners.


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