Tag Archive | "Mobile Broadband"

190,100 prepay users quit Virgin Mobile

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Virgin Mobile’s quarterly revenues down, contract customers up, prepay customers down

Virgin Mobile’s revenues have fallen in Q2 despite increasing its number of customers compared with the same period last year.

Virgin Mobile posted revenues of £143.9 million for Q2, a fall of £2.4 million compared to Q2 2007.

Virgin Mobile claimed 55,900 net contract additions in the quarter, up from 52,800 last year. It had 491,600 contract customers at the end of Q2, showing growth of 64 per cent in the last year.

The company suffered 190,100 prepay disconnections, almost double the number in the same period last year. It put the fall down to not “engaging heavily in the low price handset end of the prepay market” during a time of market turmoil.

ARPU was stable at £10.65 and operational cash flow was up slightly at £35.5 million in the quarter.

Virgin Media chief executive Neil Berkett said: “We have successfully undertaken actions to improve Mobile prepay performance including selective price increases, better focused customer retention activity and efforts to reduce customer acquisition costs.”

Virgin Mobile has agreed new terms with its mobile network operator T-Mobile which will reduce the wholesale rates it pays for voice and data.

The MVNO is planning to launch a mobile broadband service in Q4 and claims it will be competitive as a result of the new agreement to give higher value to its customers.

SOURCE: Mobile News International

3 broadband booming

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It’s Dongle Central over at 3, according to Kevin Russell. The network’s UK chief executive says wireless modems (aka dongles) have been selling like the proverbial.


Speaking at a media round table, Russell claimed more than a million Brits would be using mobile internet via their laptops by the end of the year. He also revealed since 3 launched its mobile broadband offering late last year, data traffic on its 3G network has ballooned 14-fold.

That incredible leap shows the potential of mobile broadband, but also the risks.

Emeka Obiodu, European telecoms analyst at Global Insight, pointed out fixed-line broadband providers are already receiving negative press for stinging consumers with excess charges for unwittingly exceeding fair usage policies when they download TV shows via apps such as BBC’s iPlayer.

“Given the increasing acrimonious debate between ISPs and media outlets such as the BBC, network capacity will become an issue soon,” wrote Obiodu. “If fixed-line broadband providers with their ‘unlimited’ usage offers are complaining now, mobile operators will have more of a problem dealing with capacity issues later on, especially in their backhaul infrastructure.”

Russell’s figures also provided new evidence of the threat posed to fixed-line providers such as BT by mobile networks, as they roll out high speed 3G networks.

Wireless modems have proved popular with students, travelling businessmen and people with second homes.

“We have definitely seen some customers taking mobile broadband as an alternative to fixed-line,” added Russell.

Some customers in good coverage areas have reported surfing is a comparable experience to broadband, but Russell admitted the connection was not always as fast or reliable.

“I don’t believe mobile broadband is as good as fixed… I’m not going to bang a drum and say mobile will replace it,” he added, perhaps conscious the more people that sign up to wireless broadband, the slower the connections could be.

Nevertheless, more than a fifth of 3 UK’s new contract customers are purchasing dongles.

And more than 823,000 wireless modems have been sold across the 3 Group of companies, which spans the UK, Italy, Australia, Hong Kong, Denmark, and Sweden.

“While the technical abilities of mobile broadband will continue to lag behind fixed, continued refinement, better pricing and increased awareness will ensure mobile broadband will grow steadily across the world,” wrote Obiodu in a note.

Russell also sees opportunities for 3 to exploit mobile broadband to push services such as voice over IP (VoIP), email and instant messaging to give it a head start over its much larger rivals. “Email, VoIP, instant messaging – these are areas we will push hard,” said Russell. “[These are] communications services that go around the [traditional mobile voice and text] regime, so they are appropriate 3 targets.”

Whether the strategy will be enough to get 3 some true scale is another matter, unless it makes the business more attractive to a potential buyer.

Verwaayen steps down

Ben Verwaayen, described as the ‘father of broadband Britain’, is stepping down at BT, where he has been chief executive for more than six years.

His departure is not wholly unexpected, but the timing took many by surprise; the BT mouthpiece was indicating privately only recently that there were no such plans.

It’s the end of an era for the former phone monopoly, whose fortunes were transformed by the Dutchman, who most people in the City had never heard of when he was hired to sort out the mess at the company in 2002.

Back then, BT had no dividend and £30 billion of debt; now it has a meaty dividend and £10bn of debt. But, to Verwaayen’s irritation no doubt, the shares have lost the gains they enjoyed in 2006 and early 2007 and are back near the levels they languished at when he joined.

That is largely because investors are unsure the company can continue on the growth path Verwaayen had appeared to have put it back on, until the last two quarters of disappointing numbers.

Verwaayen’s replacement is Ian Livingston, currently chief executive of BT Retail, who becomes chief executive of the whole group on June 1. As former BT finance director he was by far the best qualified internally to succeed Verwaayen.

But he faces a huge challenge, especially as he and BT chairman Sir Michael Rake have vowed to continue with Verwaayen’s strategy. That means BT will not be buying a mobile network to replace Cellnet (now O2) – Livingston was quite clear on that subject.

However, he did express an interest in doing more with WiMax technology.

BT’s entry into new markets in recent years has been mixed at best. Its Fusion phone is no longer being marketed to consumers, while BT Vision is struggling to gain traction against Sky. And that’s before considering regulatory pressure on Openreach and the struggle of BT’s Global Services unit to hit Verwaayen’s challenging 15per cent margin target.

At least Verwaayen has left BT a happier place than it was, and staff with a sense of pride.

How long will it last, I wonder.

SOURCE: Mobile News International

RELATED SITES: 3mobilebroadband.com

Free laptops to promote mobile broadband

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Time for people looking for mobile broadband solutions to get the calculators out to decide whether the next round of free laptop deals that are on the way from 3 are worth taking.

MobileToday.co.uk reveals that in addition to 3 offering a free laptop in an offer starting in August 2008, Vodafone and Orange are not far behind also. There looks to be three price points on the 3 offer of £30, £35 and £40 with a usage allowance of 5GB. The different prices are down to the choice of three HP laptops which apparently includes the Pavilion DV6000. In terms of price per GB this is higher than fixed line broadband and carries a lengthy 24 month contract.

Mobile broadband with a free laptop as an incentive is not new, Carphone Warehouse and Phones4U have both ran schemes as retailers, but now we are seeing the network providers entering the game.

Mobile broadband is great if you are in an area that supports 3G or faster speeds, but our own experience on places like trains or as a passenger in a car is that GPRS speeds are an all too common experience. The biggest concern is what happens once you breach the 5GB allowance, if traditional per MegaByte pricing of £1/MB applies then exceeding your bundled allowance will quickly run up a heart stopping bill.

So while mobile broadband avoids the cost and hassle of obtaining a fixed line contract, for those looking to embrace the growing ability to watch TV shows over broadband or download films, a 5GB data allowance will soon vanish (a 60 minute TV show is around 0.5GB of data allowance). Similar issues occur with some of the cheaper fixed line broadband deals, so while many places are promising to save people £100’s a year by switching, be careful that any new deal will support your usage habits.

SOURCE: ThinkBroadband.com

RELATED SITES: 3mobilebroadband.com

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