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Survey Says…Cable Sucks

Source: gigaom.com

Cable providers rate poorly on both customer service and pricing, but thanks to their speedy broadband service, they have so far managed to score more customers than the phone companies, according to a survey out today from research firm CFI Group. The survey, which quizzed 1,318 households online at the end of June, measured consumer satisfaction with telecommunications providers.

The research showed that while cable providers were getting more customers for the time being, telecommunications firms have a chance to win subscribers back as they roll out faster broadband services, IPTV and even wireless bundles. The research also underlined the demise of landlines (1.6 million gone for AT&T and Verizon in the last year), and customer dissatisfaction with slower DSL offerings from telecommunications carriers (nearly 70 percent of net broadband additions went to cable in the second quarter of 2008).

The phone guys even lose out on bundled services. Of the 60 percent of users surveyed who had a bundled service plan (usually a combination of voice, video and data), only 31 percent purchased their bundles from a telecommunications firm. The remaining 69 percent bought their bundles from a cable provider, but that doesn’t mean they like it; twice as many consumers would actually prefer to bundle communications services with a phone company as with a cable company.

This could be a case of the grass being greener, but I do think IP services built on faster fiber-to-the-home networks like Verizon’s FiOS service, could beat cable. I’m less convinced that AT&T’s fiber-to-the-node strategy will be as compelling, since the speeds are more comparable to today’s cable speeds.

source: CFI Group

Cablevision VoIP Hits Milestone

Source: www.voip-news.com

Cablevision has a success story in its award-winning Optimum Voice digital voice-over-cable service. The VoIP service has just passed the 2 million phone line in service mark. More than one-third of homes where Cablevision’s fiber optic network is available have the service.

“The response by residential and small business customers alike to the value, reliability and advanced features of Optimum Voice has been extraordinary,” said Joe Varello, Cablevision’s vice president of digital voice product management. “We want to thank our customers for helping us achieve this latest milestone – more than two million phone lines in operation across our service area – as Optimum Voice continues to win high praise and accolades, redefining expectations of how good a voice service can be.”

The service requires no contracts and allows up to four lines for residential customers. Businesses — small and medium — can have up to 12 lines.

Published on August 4th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

Is Cable Voice Getting a Sore Throat?

Source: gigaom.com

The economic downturn, in particular the housing market slump, that has been pressuring U.S. telecom operators now seems to be extending to cable operators as well. After enjoying nearly eight quarters of solid growth, it looks like the U.S. cable telephony business is slowing down.

The proverbial canary in the coal mine sounded the alarm yesterday. ARRIS, which makes hardware for cable operators, lowered its second-quarter forecast for both profits and revenues. Management blamed maturing cable telephony deployments and a slow housing market on the reduced demand for cable telephony services.

I think both are valid points. First, cable voice has become pervasive. You can now call your cable operator and get a fixed line connection without worrying if they actually offer voice service in your market. (Whether you’re happy with them, however, is a different story altogether.) So it’s hardly a surprise that the demand for equipment would slow down.

As we’ve previously noted, cable VoIP has been on a tear. At the end of the first quarter, Comcast had 5.1 million customers, while Time Warner Cable had 3.17 million, followed by Cox’s 2.46 million, Cablevision’s 1.68 million and Charter’s 1.08 million. Many of these subscribers came at the expense of telephone companies. Telegeography estimated that there were about 16.3 million VoIP households at the end of the first quarter of this year.

The cable companies benefited from the previous surge in new housing starts, which led to spectacular growth in their broadband and voice telephony businesses and in turn, made it easier for people to switch away from telephone companies. A slowdown in this business is only natural. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if large cable companies saw a sharp slowdown in broadband growth as well.

The real question is, just how big will the slowdown be? With the second-quarter earnings season just getting underway, it won’t take long to find out.

Published on July 9th, 2008 under , , , , , , , ,

Thanks to Cable, VoIP in the U.S. Is Booming

Source: gigaom.com

Despite all the troubles with VoIP service providers such as SunRocket and Vonage, VoIP as a technology seems to be doing quite well in the U.S., according to data from Telegeography. As of the end of March, there were 16.3 million consumer VoIP lines, or about 13.8 percent of U.S. households, and 27 percent of households with broadband lines installed.

It’s hardly a surprise, as a lot new additions are coming from people buying triple-play services from cable companies. As of the end of the first quarter of 2008, here’s how the cable VoIP data broke down:

* Comcast: 5.1 million
* TimeWarner: 3.17 million
* Cox: 2.46 million
* Cablevision: 1.68 million
* Charter: 1.08 million

Cynthia Brumfield puts the total VoIP lines shared by the top nine cable providers at just over 14 million. The cable guys added about 1.3 million new subscribers. Most of them are refugees of phone companies who are losing customers by the day, as we have previously noted on more than one occasion.

The guys at Telegeography say that since the start of 2007, the three regional Bell Rperating Companies (RBOCs) — AT&T, Verizon and Qwest — have lost 17.3 million residential telephone lines, while VoIP service providers have gained 14.4 million new customers. Nearly 80 percent have come from cable companies.

Published on May 19th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , ,

VOIP Service providers ranked

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

ISP planets Alex Goldman has released a ranked list of VOIP providers based of subscribers for 3rd quarter 2006. From the list, It seems mostly Cable companies are beating the rest of the providers, except Vonage, Skype, and Sunrocket. This is from a list of 12 providers whose data is publicly available. The report also mentions that many providers are left out due to unavailability of data.
Here are the first five from the list; follow the link below to get the rest and read the report.

1 Vonage 2,000 [as of September 30, 2006]
2 Skype 1,800 (paid VoIP only, worldwide, date of this number unknown)
3 Time Warner Digital Phone* 1,649 [November 1, 2006]
4 Comcast Digital Phone* 1,348 [October 26, 2006]
5 CableVision 1,101 [November 8, 2006]

ISP Planet have done this ranking since 2004. The history of ranking is also available.

Links;
VOIP Service providers ranked
VOIP ranking History

Vonage leads US VOIP Market 3rd Q 2006

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

According to another report by Telegeography, US VOIP subscriptions have gained 18% to 8.2 Million users in the third quarter of 2006. But it also reports that the rate of growth has slowed down from the previous years.
VoIP revenues for the second quarter were up about two and a half times – $732 million across the United States, compared with a year-ago level of $298 million.
TeleGeography predicted the market would grow by roughly 1.5 million subscribers in the fourth quarter to end the year with 9.7 million, or about 8.7 percent of the nation’s households. Revenues are expected to approach $2.6 billion for the year, or more than 2.5 times the 2005 total of just over $1 billion.

Current Standings on VOIP Market;

Vonage Holdings Corp. 1.95 million subscribers.
Time Warner Inc.’s cable TV 1.64 million.
Comcast Corp. 1.35 million.
Cablevision Systems Corp. 1.10 million.

Certainly good news for VOIP suppliers, be it phones, services or minutes. VOIP is gaining the space, slowly but surely.

Links;
Telegeography

Published on December 9th, 2006 under , , , , ,

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