Every week the Opus team picks a news story or topic or idea that is relevant to the entrepreneurs and businesses we partner with.

RSS Feed

Archives

‘Un-carrier’ Wars

Ajit Deshpande - - 0 Comments

Last week saw a couple of interesting announcements from T-Mobile, pertaining to the US carrier ecosystem. First, T-Mobile announced its preliminary Q4’13 quarterly results last week, which showed the carrier had added a staggering 1.6 million net new subscribers during Q4’13. Net new subscribers added over all of 2013 were 4.4 million. T-Mobile’s total year-end post-paid and pre-paid subscriber base for 2013 was just more than 37 million. Second, T-Mobile also announced that it would offer up to $650 in credits to folks that switched from other carriers to its own services (up to $350 in early termination fees for contract breakage + up to $300 in credit for trading in the user’s old phone).

Over the past year or so, T-Mobile has used some interesting tactics in trying to gain net new subscribers. In Q3’13, the company had announced that it would provide its services without a contract (but with still a pseudo-contract in the form of the user paying the cost of the subsidized phone over a two year period). While the other carriers have responded in kind to these tactics, clearly T-Mobile has succeeded so far. But how sustainable is this success for T-Mobile? T-Mobile currently lags the other three major carriers in wireless infrastructure build-out, spectrum capacity and cash-assets, which intuitively seem to together represent a vicious cycle that might result in increased customer churn and net subscriber losses in the medium term. On the flip side, maybe for a number of urban markets, T-Mobile’s coverage is ‘good enough’, in which case the company might see continued net new subscriber addition due to its seeming consumer-friendliness. Which of these two possibilities get realized will determine whether T-Mobile emerges stronger over the next year or so, or whether its performance relapses into mediocrity.

On a broader note, these un-carrier wars will likely bring other aspects into the spotlight: Should smartphones (iPhones included) really cost $600 each to the end-user? Is there really space for four major carriers in today’s capital-intensive wireless environment? Can small-cells and WiFi hotspots and WiFi calling help disrupt the carrier tiered-pricing model? Clearly, T-Mobile is stirring the pot, so we are in for interesting times ahead!

« Back to Blog
Also on the Opus Blog

Embedded images, from Getty

March 12, 2014
Ajit Deshpande - Last week, image licensing giant Getty Images announced that it was opening up more than 35 million of its images to be embedded into online content platforms such as Wordpress,...

The Digital Wallet Wars

March 26, 2013
Ajit Deshpande - Last week, global payments technology leader Visa announced it had added Overstock.com, its biggest online retailer partner yet, as a user of its V.me digital wallet. With over $1...

API Management is Hot!

April 24, 2013
Ajit Deshpande - Last week, Intel announced its acquisition of API enablement and management services player Mashery for $180 million. Since its establishment in 2006, Mashery has raised...

More acquisitions by Yahoo!

July 8, 2013
Ajit Deshpande - Yahoo announced three acquisitions last week, to go with 14 earlier acquisitions made by the company since Marissa Mayer took over as CEO in the second half of 2012. Last week’s...