OPINION
AUGUST 19, 2009

Why AT&T Killed Google Voice


By ANDY KESSLER

Earlier this month, Apple rejected an application for the iPhone called Google 
Voice. The uproar
set off a chain of events—Google's CEO Eric Schmidt resigning from Apple's 
board, and the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) investigating wireless open access and 
handset
exclusivity—that may finally end the 135-year-old Alexander Graham Bell era. 
It's about time.

With Google Voice, you have one Google phone number that callers use to reach 
you, and you pick
up whichever phone—office, home or cellular—rings. You can screen calls, listen 
in before
answering, record calls, read transcripts of your voicemails, and do free 
conference calls.
Domestic calls and texting are free, and international calls to Europe are two 
cents a minute.
In other words, a unified voice system, something a real phone company should 
have offered years
ago.

Apple has an exclusive deal with AT&T in the U.S., stirring up rumors that AT&T 
was the one
behind Apple rejecting Google Voice. How could AT&T not object? AT&T clings to 
the old business
of charging for voice calls in minutes. It takes not much more than 10 kilobits 
per second of
data to handle voice. In a world of megabit per-second connections, that's 
nothing—hence
Google's proposal to offer voice calls for no cost and heap on features galore.

What this episode really uncovers is that AT&T is dying. AT&T is dragging down 
the rest of us by
overcharging us for voice calls and stifling innovation in a mobile data market 
critical to the
U.S. economy.

For the latest quarter, AT&T reported local voice revenue down 12%, long 
distance down 15%. With
customers unplugging home phones and using flat-rate Internet services for 
long-distance calls
(again, voice is just data), AT&T's wireline operating income is down 36%. Even 
in the wireless
segment, which grew 10% overall, per-customer voice revenue is down 7%.

Wireless data service is AT&T's only bright spot, up a whopping 26% per 
customer. How so? As any
parent of teenagers knows, text messages are 20 cents each, or $5,000 per 
megabyte. After the
first month and a $320 bill, we all pony up $10 a month for unlimited texting 
plans. Same for
Internet access. With my iPhone, I pay $30 a month for unlimited data service 
(actually, one
gigabyte per month). Is it worth that? The à la carte price for other 
not-so-smart phones is $5
per megabyte (one-thousandth of a gigabyte) per month. So we buy monthly plans. 
Margins in
AT&T's Wireless segment are an embarrassingly high 25%.

The trick in any communications and media business is to own a pipe between you 
and your
customers so you can charge what you like. Cellphone companies don't have wired 
pipes, but by
owning spectrum they do have a pipe and pricing power...

<snip>


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB20001424052970204683204574358552882901262.html


—Mr. Kessler, a former hedge-fund manager, is the author of "How We Got Here" 
(Collins, 2005).
Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A15

Copyright 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved


*************************************************************************
**  List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy  **
**  policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/  **
*************************************************************************

Reply via email to