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Tag: mobile provider

  • Wireless Plans With More Data Offered by Boost Mobile

    As more of the web becomes mobile-friendly, wireless subscribers are now using mobile apps more than ever. This, combined with the fact that there are now few brand-new mobile customers in the U.S. has significantly increased competition among American mobile providers.

    While the largest U.S. wireless providers are still capping their expensive plans at low data levels, runners-up like Sprint and T-Mobile are now pushing unlimited options in an effort to convert subscribers. Even prepaid carriers are being caught up in the competition, increasing data caps and lower their prices.

    Boost Mobile this week announced new mobile plans with more data at lower price points. The plans, dubbed “Data Boost Plans,” will offer up to 10GB of 4G data at prices lower than those offered by postpaid wireless plans and lower than Boost’s previous offerings.

    The Data Boost Plans come in three different tiers, all of which include unlimited voice calling and texting. The lowest tier provides 1GB of data for $35 per month, though Boost’s fine print states that it “may” throttle video streaming to just 3G speeds for customers at that tier. The middle tier provides 5GB of data for $45 per month and the highest tier provides 10GB of data for $55 per month. Each of these tiers is $5 less than the price of Boost’s $40, $50, and $60 “Monthly Unlimited Select” plan tiers.

    Oddly, Boost has stated that the new Data Boost Plans will only be offered from now until November 3, meaning that they could be a limited-time offer only.

    Even so, Boost used the announcement to brag about how the Data Boost Plans position it in the prepaid wireless market. The company claims that it is the only prepaid U.S. carrier to offer 1GB of data for $35 per month and that it is the only prepaid U.S. carrier to offer a tiered prepaid plan with 10GB of data. Boost also pointed out that its $45 Data Boost Plan offers twice as much data as $50 plans from MetroPCS and Cricket, as well as 2GB of data more than Straight Talk’s $45 offering.

    “This is way more data at a better price,” said Dow Draper, president of prepaid at Sprint. “We are making the choice easy for consumers. Boost has been a disrupter before and will do it again with the launch of these new lower-priced plans that include double the data. Consumers are data hungry and always want more at the lowest price possible. Data Boost Plans satisfy what consumers crave.”

  • Best Data Plans Challenged by New Sprint Offering

    Best Data Plans Challenged by New Sprint Offering

    AT&T and Verizon are sitting content at the top of the U.S. mobile industry, but other carriers are continuing to bring competitive prices and services to the sector. The new moves are an attempt by both Sprint and T-Mobile to pilfer customers from other carriers now that there are few potential first-time mobile customers left in the U.S.

    Sprint recently announced a new “Unlimited Plan” that costs only $60 per month. The plan offers customers unlimited voice, texting, and data on Sprint’s LTE network. This is in keeping with the “unlimited” marketing message that Sprint has held to for more than one year now.

    The new deal is aimed directly at competing with T-Mobile, Sprint’s closest competitor in the mobile arena. In its announcement, Sprint pointed out that the new Unlimited Plan is $20 less expensive than T-Mobile’s lowest-priced plan with unlimited data. Sprint also emphasized that neither Verizon nor AT&T offer plans with unlimited data.

    “People know Sprint for Unlimited,” said Marcelo Claure, Sprint CEO. “We have long been the leader in offering customers unlimited data and that leadership continues today with our new $60 unlimited plan. Unlimited talk, text, and data for $60 is the best unlimited postpaid plan available. And, we’ve listened to our loyal customers; we’re making the Sprint $60 Unlimited Plan available to both new and existing customers.”

    Sprint’s focus on competing with T-Mobile might seem odd, since rumors are still swirling that a merger between Sprint and T-Mobile could come sometime this year. However, T-Mobile is trying just as hard to claw its way out of fourth place in the U.S. mobile market, potentially increasing its value for those acquisition talks. T-Mobile has been rolling out its LTE network throughout the U.S. over the past year and can now offer LTE data to over 230 million Americans.

    T-Mobile today announced that it is lowering its price for extra data on its “Simple Starter” plans. Customers who currently get 500MB of data along with unlimited voice and texting for $40 will be able to raise their data cap to 2GB for $5 more per month starting on September 3.

  • Verizon Announces New “MORE Everything” Deal

    Verizon today announced a new pricing initiative that could provide subscribers with significant savings.

    The new pricing scheme will bring lower “MORE Everything” pricing to its month-to-month customers. Starting on April 17 Verizon customers on a month-to-month contract will be able to join a MORE Everything plan and see an immediate discount for their device fee.

    Customers who take Verizon up on this offer can sigh up for a MORE Everything plan with a data cap of 8GB or below and pay only $30 per month to add a smartphone to the plan. This is $10 less than the $40 Verizon charges month-to-month customers to use a smartphone on their plan. Verizon customers who sign up for a Verizon Edge plan and purchase a new smartphone from Verizon will also receive the lower monthly access price.

    The deal should provide a slight discount for Verizon subscribers who have already paid off their smartphone device. The device will, of course, have to be compatible with Verizon’s network.

    Verizon’s announcement is yet another significant change that has come to the U.S. mobile market over the past year. Since last year T-Mobile, the fourth-largest mobile provider in the U.S., has been announcing a series of initiatives meant to increase subscriber numbers. T-Mobile’s offers have created significant competition in the mobile space, forcing larger carriers such as Verizon to announce plans such as the MORE Everything.

    In the midst of this change, U.S. mobile providers are gearing up for more intense competition in the coming years. Market watchers are now seeing the U.S. smartphone segment begin to saturate as consumers upgrade to smartphones. This has led to an ever-shrinking pool of potential new customers – the engine that mobile providers have been running on for years. With so few new customers to gain, mobile providers are now battling for customer retention while developing new monetization schemes (some of them very shady).

  • T-Mobile Eliminates Overage Fees

    T-Mobile Eliminates Overage Fees

    For over one year now T-Mobile has been shifting the mobile landscape in the U.S. The competition the company has brought with its “JUMP!” service plans, early termination fee pay-offs, and more has benefited mobile consumers at every major carrier.

    Today T-Mobile revealed the third of three planned “Uncarrier” announcements over the past week. The previous two announcements brought the mobile provider a new lowest-priced service plan and a new 4G tablet pricing initiative.

    With this latest announcement T-Mobile has officially eliminated all of its overage fees. Calling the practice of overage fees “one of the most reviled wireless industry practices,” T-Mobile now says that all customers on any of its plans can talk, text, and use data without fear of being charged extra.

    “Charging overage fees is a greedy, predatory practice that needs to go,” said John Legere, CEO of T-Mobile. “Starting in May for bills arriving in June – regardless of whether you’re on Simple Choice, Simple Starter, or an older plan, we’re abolishing overages for good. Period.”

    As has become customary for T-Mobile announcements, Legere used the occasion to lash out at the three other major U.S. mobile providers. In this case, Legere is challenging those providers to follow T-Mobile’s lead and eliminate their overage fees. Legere has even posted a petition to change.org calling on the carriers to do just that.

    “Today I’m laying down a challenge to AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint to join T-Mobile in ending these outrageous overage penalties for all consumers – because it’s the right thing to do,” said Legere. “Overage fees are flat out wrong. Agree with me? Join me in putting this challenge to all the major national carriers by signing my petition on Change.org. Right here. Take one minute to be a part of this consumer movement.”

    T-Mobile estimates that combined overage charges at Verizon, AT&T, and Sprint total $1 billion each year. The company also states that 20 million U.S. mobile subscribers with hit with these charges last year.

    Image via T-Mobile

  • T-Mobile Announces New 4G Tablet Deal

    T-Mobile Announces New 4G Tablet Deal

    Though 4G tablets have been heavily marketed over the past two years, the devices still make up a relatively small portion of the overall tablet market. This is largely due to U.S. wireless carriers, which charge consumers extra device and subscription fees for adding a tablet onto data plans they already pay for.

    Today T-Mobile announced new tablet policies geared toward getting more tablets onto its network.

    The new initiative, dubbed “Operation Tablet Freedom” will allow customers to purchase 4G-capable tablets at the price point of less-expensive Wi-Fi-only tablets. For example, T-Mobile will allow customers to pay a total of $499 for a 16GB iPad Air with 4G instead of the $630 the device would normally cost.

    Of course, this isn’t simply charity on T-Mobile’s part. Customers will have to sign up for a T-Mobile data plan to use the tablet on. Also, that plan will have to be at least the 1GB data tier that the company offers.

    In addition to the new 4G tablet prices, T-Mobile has also announced a $10 off deal for its data plans through the end of the year. Starting on April 12 existing and new customers that sign up for a new T-Mobile data plan will receive the discount until the end of 2014.

    “With this announcement, T-Mobile’s launching a full-on assault against the restrictions and pain points that keep tablet owners from experiencing life beyond the Wi-Fi zone,” said John Legere, CEO of T-Mobile. “The Un-carrier is all about solving pain points, and today we’re eliminating every reason to be stuck on an unconnected Wi-Fi-only tablet. There’s no longer any need to limit the use of your tablet because you’re intimidated by Big Blue, Bad Red, or Bumbling Yellow.”

    T-Mobile’s tablet announcement comes just one day after the company announced a new lowest-priced plan that comes with unlimited voice and text, but a hard 500MB data cap. The company will reveal a third initiative tomorrow that it says is part of its ongoing “uncarrier” initiative.

    Image via T-Mobile

  • T-Mobile Rolls Out Low-Priced “Simple Starter” Plan

    T-Mobile Rolls Out Low-Priced “Simple Starter” Plan

    For the past year now T-Mobile has been rolling out offers that have forced the U.S. wireless industry into competition. Starting with its “JUMP!” plans and more recently with its offer to pay subscribers’ early termination fees, T-Mobile has led larger carriers to offer lower prices and better terms.

    T-Mobile this week announced yet another initiative meant to aggressively compete with its larger rivals. The company will now offer a less expensive “Simple Starter” plan for new customers.

    The Simple Starter plan starts at $40 per month. For that price customers will get unlimited talk and text and 500GB of 4G LTE data access per month.

    This new plan comes just one month after T-Mobile announced that it was raising data caps for its Simple Choice plans. The lowest-priced Simple Choice plan is now $50 per month and offers 1GB of 4G LTE data.

    “Un-carrier is a movement, not a marketing strategy,” said John Legere, CEO of T-Mobile. “We are freeing consumers from the predatory practices of traditional U.S. wireless companies and that includes these plans that start with a low price and a low data limit, but then hit you with insane fees if you send one too many emails. It’s wrong! And I personally want to drive those ridiculous schemes out of this industry. We will continue to be relentless and bring this forced march of change to the market every day so consumers can be creative with and enjoy the true benefits of wireless. I know we have it right and when we all are done reporting results from the first quarter – I think you’ll share my conviction.”

    In addition to the Simple Starter plan’s lower price, T-Mobile is touting the plan’s lack of overage fees, which mirrors the policy of its other, more expensive, plans. However, with the Simple Starter plan there is a big difference in how data overages are handled.

    For T-Mobile’s Simple Choice plans, customers who reach their data cap are simply throttled down to the company’s very slow EDGE network. According to a BGR report T-Mobile’s new Simple Starter plan will cut customers off from T-Mobile’s data networks entirely once they reach their monthly allotment. Customers may purchase a one-day, 500MB chunk of data for $5 or a one-week, 1GB pass for $10. While this situation does mean the new Simple Starter plan does not offer truly unlimited data, it does still differentiate itself from other carriers by not automatically charging customers who reach their data caps.

  • T-Mobile Promises Fast 4G Expansion This Year

    T-Mobile Promises Fast 4G Expansion This Year

    T-Mobile has shifted the mobile landscape significantly in the past year, doing away with device subsidies and forcing a small price war among the largest mobile providers in the U.S. One area T-Mobile still struggles to compete in, however, is the overall quality of its network. Neither T-Mobile nor Sprint have the data coverage reach across rural America that AT&T and Verizon have bought over the past decade.

    To rectify this, T-Mobile is, of course, making big promises. The carrier today announced a new program to aggressively roll out 4G LTE data access to areas that currently only have access to its EDGE network. The company will also deploy 4G LTE over the 700 MHz A-Block spectrum that it purchased from Verizon early this year.

    T-Mobile expects around half of this major initiative to be complete by the end of 2014 and has predicted that the program will be “substantially complete” by mid-2015.

    “Through this major new network upgrade program, and other initiatives already underway, we’re driving hard toward our multi-billion dollar strategy to further improve what is already an amazing network experience for our customers,” said Neville Ray, CTO at T-Mobile. “Our 4G LTE is going to reach 230 million people across the U.S. by mid-year. By year’s end, we’re going to be delivering wicked-fast 4G LTE to more than 250 million people. That’s how the Un-carrier rolls out 4G LTE.

    In addition to the infrastructure upgrades, T-Mobile today also announced that it has “taken legal action” against Verizon, demanding that the company cease and desist its network coverage map ads. T-Mobile believes that the ads, which depict only 4G LTE networks, are unfair because the leave out T-Mobile’s HSPA+ network, which it also considers to be 4G.

    “Verizon’s ink blots massively understate our coverage and don’t begin to represent the actual customer experience on T-Mobile’s network,” said John Legere, CEO of T-Mobile. “So we’re setting the record straight – both by demanding an end to the misinformation, and by going straight to the people with the truth.”

    As it is unlikely Verizon will stop comparing its 4G LTE network with other carriers, T-Mobile has released a new ad touting T-Mobile’s total coverage (not just 4G):

  • AT&T Drops Price For Individual Mobile Plans

    The Sprint/T-Mobile merger talk is dying down, and with good reason: competition in the U.S. mobile space is now benefiting consumers immensely. Led by T-Mobile, U.S. mobile providers are now dropping prices and introducing new pricing schemes with an eye toward sweeping up those last few prospective American smartphone users while increasingly going after other carriers’ subscribers.

    T-Mobile this weekend announced that it has upped its data caps for its Simple Choice plans and now AT&T has also announced a price drop for its individual smartphone plans.

    AT&T customers who sign up for a one-device line will now pay only $65 for unlimited talk and text as well as a capped 2GB of data. This price is down from the $80 per month the service cost just days ago. The cost for the same service for two devices costs $90. This price reduction follows AT&T’s announcement last month that it has cut prices for its family and business plans.

    “We’re continuing the trend of offering more value to our new and existing customers.,” said David Christopher, CMO at AT&T Mobility. “Not only are families and small businesses able to save more on their monthly data plans, we’re now delivering that same great value to individual customers on the nation’s most reliable 4G LTE network.”

    AT&T’s new offering is a nice windfall for AT&T customers, but it doesn’t quite match the prices T-Mobile recently announced. For customers with a single line at T-Mobile, 3GB of data costs only $60. What’s more, hitting that limit at T-Mobile results only in significant data throttling – not the high overage fees charged by AT&T.

    AT&T’s broader network coverage in the U.S. will likely help make up for this price discrepancy, though the company will no doubt have to endure further insults from T-Mobile CEO John Legere over pricing and data caps.

  • T-Mobile Raises Data Caps For Simple Choice Plans

    T-Mobile Raises Data Caps For Simple Choice Plans

    For the past year T-Mobile has been putting pressure on its mobile competitors through low prices and a variety of innovative pricing schemes and service offerings. More recently the largest mobile carriers in the U.S. have begun to respond directly to this competition, with AT&T lowering prices for its family plans and Verizon raising its data caps a bit.

    Now it’s T-Mobile responding to market pressures, as the carrier has now announced its own data caps will soon rise. The company will be raising the 4G data available on its Simple Choice plans.

    The most basic Simple Choice plan currently offers unlimited text, talk, and 4G LTE data for $50 per month. The plan technically does provide unlimited mobile data the 4G data speeds are capped at 500MB. Customers can raise their data cap to 2.5GB for $10 more or pay $20 more for a 5GB cap. T-Mobile does not charge overage fees for reaching these limits and instead throttles data speeds significantly.

    Under the new plans, basic Simple Choice customers will have a data cap of of 1GB with the option to pay $10 extra per month for a 3GB data cap. The prices for these tiers will remain the same, as will the 5GB cap under the extra $20 option. The price has been raised, however, for T-Mobile’s “unlimited 4G LTE” offering which, for $30 a month now, will offer 5GB of data and the option to officially tether their device using T-Mobile’s software.

    “In the mobile age, wireless data caps and overage fees are just this side of extortion,” said John Legere, CEO of T-Mobile. “Take the basic plans from the Big Two with ridiculously low data limits that hit you with fat overages each month. It’s like getting your data from the neighborhood loan shark and paying 100 percent interest when the bill comes due. It’s the classic shakedown.”

    According to T-Mobile, the company’s subscribers are using 50% more 4G data than they were one year ago. Of course, one year ago was before T-Mobile began adding millions of customers each quarter.

  • AT&T to Offer Unlimited International Texting

    The march toward change in the U.S. mobile industry is continuing, with larger mobile providers now reacting to T-Mobile’s unlimited international data offering and the rise of mobile messaging apps.

    AT&T today announced that it will be offering unlimited international texting on some of its plans. Starting this Friday, February 28, AT&T customers with a Mobile Share Value or Mobile Share plan will have unlimited international texting added to their plans.

    The new offering will no doubt be useful for many AT&T customers, but the mobile provider is being strict about what type of messaging are covered under the plan. First, only SMS or MMS messages are covered under the plan. Second, the messages must be sent from the U.S. to other countries – the reverse is not subject to the unlimited messaging. Third, the messages must be received by a mobile phone of some sort, meaning that messages sent to tablets or PCs of any time don’t count. The SMS part of the plan counts for more than 190 countries around the world, while unlimited MMS messages can be sent to more than 120 countries.

    In any case, none of this may matter since AT&T has reserved the right to restrict or terminate the offer if it finds “tethered messaging, excessive international messaging, or misuse.”

    In addition to the messaging offer, AT&T also announced a new international calling package. The World Connect Value package offers $0.01 per minute voice calling to Canada, Mexico, and 35 other countries, including a majority of Latin American and Caribbean countries.

  • Verizon Raises Data Caps, Lowers Prices a Bit

    For months now T-Mobile has been bringing significant changes to the U.S. mobile market. The company was the first to introduce the now-standard device subscription pricing model with its “JUMP” program and also has made its unlimited international data offering a point of pride. Most recently T-Mobile announced that it will pay customers’ early termination fees when switching to T-Mobile from one of the other big mobile providers.

    T-Mobile’s target throughout all of this has been AT&T, as T-Mobile CEO John Legere has made clear with his unceasing snipes at the company. This has largely allowed Verizon to stand above the fray, keeping its premium prices and large subscriber base solid. But no more.

    Verizon today announced that it will be entering into the new mobile price war. The provider is launching “MORE Everything” mobile plans that offer more data at lower prices.

    The biggest change coming with the new plan is that the data caps will be raised for its 500MB, 1GB, and 2GB price tiers. The new limits will be 1GB, 2GB, and 3GB. The MORE Everything plans also come with 25GB of cloud storage for each line on the plan.

    Verizon will still be offering its “Edge” program for faster device upgrades. Customers who use Edge on top of a MORE Everything plan will get $10 off their monthly data costs for plans offering up to 8GB and $20 off monthly data costs for plans over 10GB.

    This new pricing announcement coming from a market leader shows just what real competition can bring to a market. The failed merger between AT&T and T-Mobile probably would have prevented mobile competition on this scale in the U.S., as would the proposed Sprint and T-Mobile merger. This is in contrast to, say, the cable industry, which is set to see even more consolidation in a market where regional monopolies are already the norm.

  • AT&T Offers $100 For Adding Devices to Plans

    AT&T’s recent quarterly earnings were solid, but it’s clear that the mobile provider is shaken by recent competitive moves from T-Mobile.

    AT&T last year was forced to adopt service plan offerings similar to T-Mobile’s “JUMP!” program. More recently AT&T tried to get out ahead of T-Mobile’s plan to pay early termination fees for mobile customers who switch to T-Mobile, though AT&T’s offering is smaller and limited to only T-Mobile customers. In response, T-Mobile is treating AT&T’s offer as a ticket to a free try-before-you-buy period with T-Mobile’s network.

    These pressures haven’t affected AT&T’s bottom line yet, but subscriber numbers are growing at an ever-slowing rate in the increasingly saturated U.S. mobile market. AT&T is now searching for new revenue opportunities, including abandoning any pretense of net neutrality by charging content providers for data customers may have already paid for. Also, to get more revenue from the customers it currently has, AT&T is now encouraging them to add more devices to their existing service plans.

    AT&T today announced that customers will receive $100 in bill credit for each new device they add to an AT&T plan. The offering includes smartphones, tablets, feature phones, mobile hotspots, and wireless home phones added by either new or existing AT&T customers. The offer is currently available both online and in AT&T stores, though the company is describing it as a “limited tome offer.”

    Obviously, the cost of most mobile devices would eclipse the initial $100 rebate. Add to that the fact that mobile providers charge monthly for data for each device on a plan, rather than for a shared pool of data, and the offer begins to make real sense for AT&T. Still, for customers who are already looking to add a tablet to their AT&T mobile plan the extra $100 off their next bill could make their decision an easier one.

    Image via AT&T

  • AT&T Now Allows Current Subscribers to Upgrade to “Next”

    AT&T Now Allows Current Subscribers to Upgrade to “Next”

    AT&T today announced that it has eased up on the requirements for its Next plans. The carrier will now allow current AT&T subscribers to enjoy the same Next plans that new subscribers do. The new policy applies to all AT&T subscribers on a two-year service agreement who have been on their plans for at least six months.

    Last summer AT&T rolled out its “AT&T Next” service plans, allowing customers to pay off devices over the course of two years and upgrade those devices on a yearly basis. Next was AT&T’s answer to T-Mobile’s “JUMP!” service plans, which have now transformed how U.S. mobile subscribers pay for their mobile devices.

    Since that time, T-Mobile has continued to pressure AT&T in an effort to lure subscribers away. T-Mobile’s most direct attack yet came at this year’s CES, where CEO John Legere announced that T-Mobile will now pay the early termination fees for subscribers who switch to T-Mobile from AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint.

    Though AT&T had tried to stave off T-Mobile’s assault with a similar, but smaller, plan to pay T-Mobile subscribers (and only T-Mobile subscribers) to switch, it’s now clear that AT&T is reacting to the changing U.S. mobile landscape.

    “We want our customers to have the best smartphones on a high quality, blazing fast, and reliable network, all at a great value,” said David Christopher, CMO for AT&T Mobility. “It’s a win-win – customers get the latest devices with $0 down on the nation’s most reliable 4G LTE network with significant savings on their monthly bill when they sign-up for our Mobile Share Value plans.”

    It’s unclear who that second win in “win-win” is for, though Christopher could mean that AT&T’s announcement is a double-win for AT&T subscribers previously stuck on a two-year contract while new customers were enjoying the new Next terms.

  • Verizon Earnings & Subscriber Numbers Up in 2013

    Verizon today released its fourth quarter 2013 and full-year 2013 financial results, showing that the company has made a significant turnaround from its disappointing fourth quarter 2012 numbers.

    Verizon’s fourth quarter earnings per share hit $1.76 in 2013, a significant increase over its $1.48 earnings per share loss during the fourth quarter of 2012. The company blames part of its 2012 fourth quarter earnings report on the impact that Superstorm Sandy had on its infrastructure in the Northeast.

    Total Verizon earnings for the fourth quarter 2013 hit $5.07 billion on revenue of $31.1 billion, up 3.4% over fourth quarter 2012 revenue.

    Verizon’s total-year 2013 earnings hit $32 billion, an over 21% increase over the company’s 2012 earnings. Verizon was also able to increase its cash flow to $38.8 billion during 2013 – more than double its cash flow during 2012.

    Verizon’s wireless division continued to lead its earnings, generating $21.1 billion of the company’s revenues during the fourth quarter 2013. While the the mobile market in the U.S. is beginning to saturate and run out of new subscribers for mobile operators to attract, Verizon managed to add 1.6 million subscribers during the fourth quarter. This makes up a sizable portion of the 4.1 million subscribers that Verizon added during the year 2013. The mobile provider now boasts nearly 97 million subscribers.

    Verizon’s FiOS internet service also continued its growth throughout 2013, adding 126,000 new internet connections. The service now has over 6.1 million internet customers, a nearly 12% increase over numbers at the year-end 2012.

    “Verizon delivered a total return of 18.6 percent to our shareholders in 2013, while attracting more customers than our competitors and improving our financial performance,” said Lowell McAdam, CEO and chairman of Verizon. “This included more than 20 percent year-over-year increases in operating cash flow and EPS. In 2014, we look forward to acquiring sole ownership of Verizon Wireless, the best asset in the global wireless industry, and leveraging all our assets to deliver innovative products to customers and more value to shareholders.”

  • Sprint’s “One Up” Program is Now “Easy Pay”

    Sprint’s “One Up” Program is Now “Easy Pay”

    When T-Mobile announced its “JUMP!” pricing and upgrade program last year, U.S. mobile providers scrambled to implement similar deals. Sprint was the last major carrier to roll out its plan, which was dubbed “One Up.” The plan allowed customers to purchase devices with monthly payments over the course of two years and upgrade those devices at a faster rate.

    When Sprint rolled out its “Framily” plans earlier this month, the carrier quietly cancelled its One Up program. Now the program has been re-branded and re-worked into a “limited time” offer.

    Sprint this week unveiled its “Easy Pay” program, which is very similar to One Up. Easy Pay will allow customers to purchase devices and pay them off over the course of two years. Customers will also be able to upgrade their phone at will under the plan, though they will have to pay off the full balance of their current device when doing so.

    In addition to the requirement of paying off their device when upgrading, there are other ways in which Sprint’s plan differs from those of other carriers. Customers will also be subject to a down payment on their new device at the time of purchase, as well as a $36 “activation or upgrade fee” for smartphones purchased through the program. The Easy Pay program also requires that customers sign up for a 12-month Framily plan, complete with a $20 per month “Unlimited Data and Annual Upgrade add-on.”

  • Mobile Data Revenue Hit New Highs in 2013

    Mobile Data Revenue Hit New Highs in 2013

    Smartphone manufacturers may be seeing their sales growth slow in established western markets, but the companies providing mobile data access on the those devices are still seeing their revenues soar.

    Market research firm ABI Research today released a report estimating that mobile internet service revenue rose over 23% worldwide in 2013, up to nearly $300 billion. Smartphones are becoming more ubiquitous, making up 27.5% of consumer mobile data subscriptions last year – a 6.6% increase from that seen in 2012. Overall, mobile data broadband subscriptions rose nearly 29% in 2013.

    “The region that will contribute the most to the increase in mobile Internet service revenue is North America, despite the maturity of the North American market and that only 5.5% of global cellular subscriptions are based there,” said Ying Kang Tan, a research associate at ABI. “Higher smartphone penetration and increased mobile data consumption have helped the region to buck the declining ARPU trend. We expect ARPU in the region to rise in 2014 before declining again due to competition and lower revenue generating connections subscribing to mobile broadband.”

    As potential new mobile customers begin to dry up in the U.S., mobile providers in the country are now scrambling to find new sources of revenue growth. T-Mobile is hoping to buy customers away from other carriers with its consumer-friendly “Uncarrier” initiatives. AT&T will soon begin charging consumers and content providers for data flowing on its 4G network through its “Sponsored Data” program, but only if the company manages to placate the FCC and net neutrality advocates.

  • Sprint’s “One Up” Plans No Longer Available

    Less than four months ago, Sprint announced its “One Up” pricing program. The offering was a reaction to T-Mobile’s “Jump!” announcement, which allowed T-Mobile subscribers to Pay for their smartphones through monthly payment plans while using T-Mobile service through a no-contract monthly agreement. The system allowed for customers to upgrade their devices yearly, with no extra down payments.

    Sprint’s One Up pricing was very similar to T-Mobile’s Jump, allowing customers to pay off their devices over the course of two years. Sprint was the last of the four major U.S. mobile providers to launch a competing service of this type, and now it is the first and only one to have abandoned its program.

    A trip to the One Up page on Sprint’s website will now redirect visitors to an FAQ page. The page reveals that the One Up offering was pulled on January 9.

    Customers that signed up for Sprint service under the One Up program are still on the hook for their monthly payments, though they will be eligible for a $15 monthly service discount for Sprint’s Unlimited, My Way, and My All-in plans. The discount will eliminated for One Up customers at their next upgrade or when they switch plans.

    The date of the One Up program’s end was just one day before the rollout of Sprint’s new “Framily” offering. Through the Framily plan, up to 10 customers are able to subscribe to Sprint under the same plan, with each of them billed separately. Some aspects of “One Up” seem to have made it into the Framily scheme, including the ability for customers to upgrade their devices on a yearly basis.

    via BGR

  • AT&T’s Sponsored Data Raises Big Concerns For Consumers and Content Providers

    AT&T’s Sponsored Data Raises Big Concerns For Consumers and Content Providers

    Though it was easy to miss among the flood of CES coverage this week, AT&T has announced a plan to capture new revenue from its data network. Called “Sponsored Data,” the plan would see AT&T charging mobile content providers for AT&T subscribers’ data usage. In other words, Netflix or Facebook could pay AT&T for its customers to access their mobile services without it counting against their monthly data caps.

    How would Sponsored Data influence your mobile habits? Tell us in the comments.

    On a surface level the plan seems like a win for customers, and that’s certainly how AT&T has tried to spin its announcement. Customers who pay high prices for small amounts of data would be offered a break on many of the mobile services that they use the most.

    However, actually looking at what the plan means for AT&T’s data network and the mobile industry as a whole uncovers a range of concerns for consumers, content providers, and the future of mobile access.

    In its original announcement of Sponsored Data, AT&T characterized its new plan as a way for content providers to better reach consumers on AT&T’s network.

    “The Sponsored Data model is just one way we’re helping companies tap into our network to offer differentiated experiences and transform the way they do business,” said Andy Geisse, CEO of AT&T Business Solutions.

    Though the plan certainly would help content creators reach AT&T customers, these same companies already have essentially equal access to those customers as it stands. Sponsored Data could also help customers stay under their bandwidth limits, but AT&T will not be refunding subscribers for unused data. This means that AT&T will essentially be charging twice for the same data – once for customers and again for content providers (that, it must be pointed out, already pay their own bandwidth costs.)

    So, Sponsored Data is essentially a plan for AT&T to charge more for the same data passing over its network. While this may be perfect for AT&T and larger content providers, the plan immediately raised red flags for net neutrality advocates who believe network operators should not function as gatekeepers between customers and content.

    Do you think AT&T’s Sponsored Data violates net neutrality principles? Post your stance in the comments.

    The plan was quickly criticized by Congresswoman Anna Eshoo, who represents most of Silicon Valley. Eshoo released a statement saying that Sponsored Data would put AT&T “in the business of picking winners and losers on the internet, threatening the open internet, competition, and consumer choice.”

    The fear is that customers who hit their data limits would not be able to access non-sponsored content without fear of being charged more by AT&T. In this way, AT&T could potentially manipulate the content flowing through its network, extracting higher revenue from both consumers and content providers.

    Sponsored Data may also set up a system in which companies have to pay AT&T to access its customers in a meaningful way. While big content providers such as Netflix, Google, and Facebook can undoubtedly afford to pay AT&T’s sponsor fees, smaller content companies and the startups that have made the internet as competitive as it is today could be shut out as customers choose not to risk their data on the unknown.

    AT&T would argue that it isn’t specifically picking winners and losers using its network. However, it will be providing its customers with a false choice: AT&T sponsored content for free or other content at the cost of their precious data. For most customers the choice between free and not free isn’t much of a choice. By giving its customers this illusory choice AT&T can claim that it won’t be directly choosing what its customers can access, though it will be very much influencing its network’s winners and losers.

    Though AT&T may have found a way to technically skirt net neutrality concerns while exerting influence over its network’s content, the Sponsored Data plan might just be enough to draw out government regulators.

    Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Tom Wheeler weighed in on the topic this week, telling the Wall Street Journal that the FCC will be taking a wait-and-see approach to AT&T’s new program. Wheeler made it clear that the FCC is well aware of the concerns surrounding Sponsored Data, and that the organization is “ready to intervene” if the program is deemed anticompetitive or interferes with customers’ internet access.

    Should the FCC curb AT&T’s Sponsored Data ambitions? Let us know in the comments.

    Underlying all of the net neutrality debate is a fact that has largely gone unmentioned. By offering to provide sponsored content to consumers without any potential limit on data use, AT&T is tacitly admitting that its data caps are not in place to better manage its network. AT&T and other mobile providers in the past have characterized data caps as necessary to create stable networks for all of their subscribers, but it now appears that the incredibly high per-GB prices on its data caps represent nothing more than a price gouge on consumers.

    This is precisely why the language in AT&T’s Sponsored Data announcement sounds so disingenuous. AT&T could provide customers with a truly unlimited data plan, allowing them to peruse all the apps and streaming content they please without fear of extra charges. This would also enable content providers to give customers as much content as they can in a truly competitive marketplace without having to pay for AT&T’s Sponsored Data. Instead, AT&T is creating a new tier of content provider access to its network that will be prioritized by customers due to AT&T’s expensive and unneeded bandwidth caps.

  • T-Mobile Claims It Now Has The Fastest 4G Speeds

    T-Mobile Claims It Now Has The Fastest 4G Speeds

    Today at its Consumer Electronics Show (CES) presentation T-Mobile laid down the gauntlet for other mobile providers, promising to pay customers’ early termination fees if they trade-in their devices.

    Even paying $650 for a customer to switch won’t be enough, though, if T-Mobile’s network isn’t up to the standard of what customers are used to. So, along with the termination fee announcement T-Mobile CEO John Legere announced what has become somewhat of a cliche in the mobile industry: that T-Mobile now believes it has the fastest 4G speeds of the top four U.S. mobile providers.

    T-Mobile is backing up this statement through an analysis of user data collected from the Ookla Speedtest mobile app. The carrier claims that it has the highest average 4G LTE network speeds in the U.S., with an average of 17.8 Mbps last month. According to T-Mobile, AT&T’s average in December is the next fastest at 14.7 Mbps, then Verizon at 14.3 Mbps. Sprint follows as a distant fourth with average speeds of only 7.9 Mbps last month.

    The image at the top of the article depicts Speedtest averages from January 8, the day of T-Mobile’s press conference.

    “Finally we agree with AT&T on something: faster is better,” said Legere. “I warned the competition this day would come, and millions of speed tests from real people using their own phones prove it: T-Mobile’s nationwide 4G LTE network is the fastest network in the nation – bar none.”

    Legere claimed that T-Mobile will be sending a cease & desist letter to AT&T, asking them to alter their marketing materials that claim the AT&T network is fastest.

    Whether or not T-Mobile can truly be called the fastest mobile provider in the U.S., the company certainly does not have the breadth of coverage that AT&T has throughout the U.S., especially in smaller communities. To move up from fourth place, T-Mobile will need more spectrum deals like the one they struck with Verizon last week.

  • T-Mobile to Pay Other Carriers’ Early Termination Fees

    T-Mobile to Pay Other Carriers’ Early Termination Fees

    Late last week AT&T announced a plan to pay T-Mobile subscribers up to $450 to switch to AT&T. T-Mobile CEO John Legere’s criticisms aside, it now seems that AT&T was getting out ahead of a new T-Mobile plan that was announced at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) today.

    During the T-Mobile CES presentation today Legere announced a plan to pay off other carriers’ mobile subscribers’ early termination fees. The service begins tomorrow, when AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint customers can switch to T-Mobile and receive up to $350 toward their early termination fees, as well as up to $300 for their traded-in phone.

    As the plan stands, new T-Mobile customers will have to hand over their “eligible devices” from their previous carrier. This will net them up to $300 in credit for each device, depending on how T-Mobile values their particular phones. Customers will then have to purchase a new device through T-Mobile (which is now paid off over 24 months) as well as sign up for a “Simple Choice” plan. Finally, customers will have to either mail or upload a copy of their final bill from the carrier they just left and T-Mobile will pay the early termination fees listed on the bill, up to $350 for each line terminated. In short, T-Mobile will pay up to $650 for each of five line and devices switched in this way.

    “We’re giving families a ‘Get Out of Jail Free Card,’ said John Legere, president and chief executive officer of T-Mobile. “Carriers have counted on staggered contract end dates and hefty early termination fees to keep people bound to them forever. But now families can switch to T-Mobile without paying a single red cent to leave them behind.”

  • Sprint Announces New “Framily” Service Plans

    While AT&T and T-Mobile have been dealing with their own issues during this week’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES), Sprint has used the venue as the debut of a new mobile service plan it is calling “Framily.”

    Though Sprint is calling the new plan “revolutionary,” the realities of the plan are a bit more mundane than that. Under a Framily plan, customers will be able to add up to 10 phone lines to their wireless plan, regardless of whether the people using those phones are really family. Each person on the plan can be billed separately.

    The first line on the plan will cost $55, with each additional line costing $5 less and $25 being the minimum (for the 7th through 10th lines on a plan). Each line comes with unlimited talk and text, but only 1GB of data per month – not the unlimited data that Sprint is known for it its marketing materials. Unlimited data will cost $20 per line and comes with yearly device upgrade program seen in its “One Up” offering.

    “The Sprint Framily Plan redefines the way we think of family plans and gives our customers the power to decide who will be a part of their group and gain greater savings as more members are added,” said Dan Hesse, Sprint CEO. “Sprint continues to be a leader in offering customers choice, flexibility and value. The Sprint Framily Plan makes Sprint the best choice for families and friends.”

    That Sprint can tout what is essentially a 10-person family plan as a redefining moment for family plans just how far the carrier has slipped during the past year. Sprint was the last major U.S. carrier to unveil its T-Mobile-inspired unsubsidized pricing plan and the company was seen losing millions of subscribers as it shut down the Nextel platform last year.

    The Framily pricing plan will be available starting January 10.