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Making wireline work for the mobile generation

The Bleeding Edge By Daniel Briere and Patrick Hurley , Network World , 11/11/2003
D. Briere

While mobile phones are just about ubiquitous throughout society - reaching across all age and economic groups - they are particularly popular among younger consumers in their 20s and 30s. In fact, many telcos are finding that customers in this age group are particularly likely to take advantage of the attractive mobile bundles that are available and drop their wireline connections entirely. Many of these younger customers, who may be students, in the military, or starting their careers, often find it more convenient to just maintain a mobile phone and avoid dealing with roommates, re-establishing service after apartment moves, and the like.

For telcos already facing decreased (or even negative) line growth as customers drop second lines for modem and fax lines, this possibility is a major threat to the financial bottom line - even if these customers move to mobile carriers owned by the wireline telco.

Telcos who want to retain these “mobile generation” customers need to find some compelling service to keep them on the network. Verizon’s Verizon Avenue subsidiary - which provides voice and data services to the residential multi-dwelling unit (MDU) market - has recently begun a trial deployment of a new service designed expressly for this market, called Verizon ONE.

Verizon ONE, currently being deployed in the Chicago area (with plans for a rollout throughout Verizon Avenue’s service area), offers MDU dwellers a single number/single bill integrated voice service for both landline and mobile calls. Using a cordless/mobile combo phone, Verizon ONE customers can make calls over their landline connection when within a few hundred yards of their base station, and via the mobile network from other locations. Customers will have a single phone number, a single voicemail box and a single bill, which includes bundles of local, long-distance and mobile minutes. As Verizon ONE expands, we expect that it will also include data services, such as dialup or DSL, and Wi-Fi access in MDU commons areas.

The system supporting the wireline/mobile integration is BayPackets’ Agility platform. The Agility system provides a platform for call routing, voice applications (like text-to-speech and speech-to-text) and billing mediation. BayPackets also provides a Web browser interface for customers, providing them with the ability to manage their account and set up “rules” for call behavior so customers can, for example, tell the system times when calls should always be routed to the home or to the mobile, or even to work locations.

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