September 17, 2011

The Data Buffet Is Open (Grazing Welcome)
By RANDALL STROSS
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/18/technology/sprints-unlimited-data-plan-and-the-challenges-ahead.html


ALL the data you need on a smartphone, at full speed, for a single price 
— Sprint Nextel is the only major wireless carrier in the United States 
that still offers this with new cellphones.

Brave little Sprint, with about a 15 percent market share, is our best 
hope for keeping a piece of the mobile Internet free of meters. But if 
data gluttons are the only ones who partake of Sprint’s feast, unmetered 
service will be unsustainable.

“The simplicity and peace of mind from unlimited services at one 
consistent price must attract mainstream users, not just outliers,” says 
Will Souder, Sprint’s vice president for pricing.

Mr. Souder compares Sprint’s business to that of a pizzeria that offers 
an all-you-can-eat lunch. “If I come in and eat eight pieces, that needs 
to be balanced by my sister coming and eating at the salad bar,” he says.

Three years ago, Sprint introduced its “Simply Everything” plan for 
$99.99 — covering, within the United States, unlimited voice calls, data 
and text messages. “When we launched, we had a lot of trepidation,” Mr. 
Souder says, “but we were pleasantly surprised with the number of 
relatively light users who were willing to pay more for this plan.”

If Sprint Nextel’s financial results were showing a nicely profitable 
business, humming in the shadows of its much bigger rivals, Verizon 
Wireless and AT&T, customers who hate meters could rejoice.

Unfortunately, the company has not posted annual net profits since 2006. 
Mr. Souder says the unlimited plans have not contributed to the losses, 
saying Sprint has had four consecutive quarters of growth in average 
revenue per user and has reversed a trend of losing customers.

Sprint has been monitoring use patterns and costs, and in January it 
increased the price of “Everything” plans for newly activated 
smartphones by $10 a month. The move has helped the company keep its 
business on a healthy, sustainable foundation, Mr. Souder says.

Sprint is behaving more like some carriers across the Atlantic. Smaller 
operators in Europe “tend to be more aggressive in pricing strategies” 
and are using unlimited data plans to differentiate their offerings from 
larger rivals, says Thomas Tschentscher, a partner at the international 
law firm Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer who specializes in 
telecommunications.

In the United States, T-Mobile sells “unlimited” plans, too, but it 
throttles back the download speeds when data use passes a certain 
threshold each month.

Mr. Tschentscher says that in Europe, data throttling is all but absent. 
“Because of the interoperability of the handsets, customers in Europe 
can easily switch carriers,” he says. “So it would be a competitive 
disadvantage for a carrier to impose throttling down if the others don’t.”

Sprint says its network hasn’t been swamped by too many users wanting to 
watch movies or television shows on Android phones. “Long-form video on 
the handset today is still in its infancy,” Mr. Souder says. Of course, 
tablets are a different matter — and that’s why Sprint has never 
extended unlimited data plans to them.

Asked what happens when smartphone screens become larger and some tablet 
computers become smaller, blurring the boundaries between the two, Mr. 
Souder said Sprint would “constantly evaluate our pricing strategy.”

Sprint’s network has accommodated the arrival of Android phones. The 
iPhone may come to Sprint next month, if rumors on tech blogs prove 
accurate. Mr. Souder declined to respond to questions about how his 
network could absorb a sharp spike in data use if Sprint — speaking only 
hypothetically, of course — were to add an unnamed, but very, very 
popular smartphone.

Some independent analysts see nothing but difficulties ahead for Sprint. 
Craig E. Moffett, a vice president and senior analyst at Sanford C. 
Bernstein & Company, says scale is essential to this business and is the 
reason that the only profitable major carriers are AT&T and Verizon 
Wireless.

Mr. Moffett notes that Sprint has $4 billion in debt that will soon 
mature. It is also the majority owner of Clearwire, whose half-built 4G 
network covers only half the United States population. To have 4G cover 
the next 40 percent of the population, spread across a much wider area, 
it will have to build eight times as much infrastructure as required for 
the first phase, he says, adding: “It can’t afford to abandon Clearwire 
but it can’t afford to finish it either.”

If Sprint doesn’t complete the next-generation network, it won’t be able 
to keep unlimited data plans for long, Mr. Moffett says, because “the 
burden on the 3G network will be too great.”

There are no signs that Sprint will pull back from unlimited data, at 
least for now. In fact, the company seems to be staking its identity on 
the appeal of all-you-can-eat pricing. It may even expand the concept 
further.

Speaking at the Dive Into Mobile conference last December, Daniel R. 
Hesse, Sprint Nextel’s C.E.O., talked about the logical next step: 
including the phone, tablet, PC, e-reader and whatever in a single plan. 
The idea was mentioned merely as a possibility, and it was not clear 
whether it would be feasible to have unlimited data for multiple devices 
on one plan — the ultimate in simplicity.

Sprint’s unmetered wireless business needs more customers to reach 
scale. Salad eaters who like one worry-free, all-you-can-eat price are 
especially welcome at the table.

----------------------------------------
Randall Stross is an author based in Silicon Valley and a professor of 
business at San Jose State University.

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