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New cell phone entrants taking market share and driving prices down.

rafterman

A sadder and a wiser man
Feb 15, 2004
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Good to see that the winds of competition are blowing into the cellphone arena. Interesting stat about landlines too. I would have thought the number without would have been higher.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...reless-entrants-on-the-attack/article1969134/

Newest wireless entrants on the attack
IAIN MARLOW
00:01 EST Monday, Apr 04, 2011

Canadians are flocking to lower-cost cellphone services and cutting their land-line cords as aggressive entrants quickly take market share in the increasingly competitive wireless industry.

New players such as Wind Mobile and Mobilicity are offering cellphone plan prices more than 60 per cent lower than the large incumbents, which have been forced to cut prices to defend their customer base.

“There’s material change in this country, and there’s a trend line,” says Brahm Eiley, a principal with Convergence Consulting Group Ltd., which has released a report on the telecommunications landscape.

At the end of 2010, new wireless companies – such as Wind, Mobilicity, Public Mobile and Quebecor Inc.’s Vidéotron Ltée – were responsible for 30 per cent of all net subscriber additions, up from almost nothing in 2009. By the end of 2011, that number will be close to 50 per cent and is expected to climb to 63 per cent in 2013, the report states.

The federal government allowed new competitors to bid for wireless licences in 2008, when wireless usage was only about 60 per 100 people. That number has climbed to 72.5 per cent, and is set to climb to 93 per cent by the end of 2014, the report says. (In several European countries, mobile use in effect exceeds 100 per cent because consumers use multiple SIM cards in one handset.)

The surge of new competitors has clearly had a big impact on price. Last week, Public Mobile, which offers a discount cellphone service in Ontario and Quebec, dropped prices further, offering an all-you-can talk plan for $15 a month. Such prices were unheard of when the market was controlled by BCE Inc., Telus Corp. and Rogers Communications Inc.

That affordability is enticing Canadians to snip their home phone lines. The report forecasts the number of wireless-only households will double to 22 per cent between the end of 2010 and 2013.

“We will see wireline replacement accelerate,” agrees Anthony Lacavera, the chairman of Globalive Communications Corp., which owns both the new entrant wireless provider Wind Mobile and the Yak brand of land-line VoIP phone service.

Like larger rivals BCE and Telus, both of which are bleeding land-line phone and long-distance revenues, Mr. Lacavera is planning to ramp up discounts for bundles of services, which help keep subscribers from cutting their lines by offering discounts if a household subscribes to multiple telecom services.

At the same time, Bell and Telus are both pushing out high-end Internet protocol TV (IPTV) products. These new TV services are making headway, and Mr. Eiley’s firm forecasts that 2011 will be the first year since 2003 that their cable company rivals will actually lose subscribers, though market share numbers for IPTV will remain relatively small at 8 per cent by the end of 2011.

“Telephone lines can no longer can be seen as the pivot for the telcos,” Mr. Eiley says. “But they have stepped up with the TV offering. It’s historic.”

Editor's note: This story contains clarified information from a previous online and print version regarding subscriber additions.
 

fuji

Banned
Jan 31, 2005
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I jumped to Mobilicity when they were offering their holiday deal. I had been a customer of one of the big3 for the past 10 years. I called up the retentions department and asked them if what they could do to keep me, and they just said they could do nothing.

Mobilicity's coverage is not great. They only really have towers in the city, and not nearly as many towers as the big3 do. As a result there are some indoor locations where I get weak or no signal, especially underground (like the PATH).

The trade-off is that my cell plan costs literally half what it used to while giving me unlimited everything: Unlimited US/Can long distance, unlimited data, unlimited minutes.

I am hoping that they will add some new towers in the next few months and resolve the indoor reception problems. In any case I get some considerable satisfaction out of being able to say "Fuck you" to rogers, bell, and telus.
 

Capoeira

New member
Oct 20, 2007
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If reception, service and range isn't a concern, then go for the new providers!

I have used both Wind and Mobilicity, and dumped them both after 3 months.
 

fuji

Banned
Jan 31, 2005
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Call quality on mobilicity has been the same or better than call quality on rogers in my experience. Service has also been great. Range is not an issue other than a cost issue--when you leave their coverage area you roam onto other networks and pay 25 cents/min for your calls. It comes down to a question of cost at that point--how often will you do that? I expect I will spend $5 or $10 a year on roaming charges, as I'm rarely going to be making calls outside the coverage area. Given h ow much cheaper mobilicity is than rogers that's obviously a win, but for someone who anticipates a lot of roaming it would be a big factor.

The ONLY issue I've found is the lack of indoor reception in underground locations, and that's traded off against doubling my phone bill.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts