Verizon Wireless may
want to rethink its desire for an Apple iPhone of its own.
According to a new study from Copenhagen-based Stand Consult, carriers that
have paid considerable subsidies in order to offer consumers iPhones have not
benefited by their rights to the exclusive and highly sought-after smartphone,
Reuters reported on Aug. 17. In some instances, the carriers are worse off for
it.
“According to the research we have conducted on the operators, not one of these
has increased their market share, revenue or their earnings as a result of
introducing the iPhone,” Strand Consult writes in the report. “On the contrary,
some operators have sent out profit warnings because of the iPhone.”
AT&T, the exclusive provider of the iPhone in the United
States, called the on-sale date of the
iPhone 3GS its “best sales day ever,” for both its retail and online stores. For
the second quarter of 2009, it reported 2.4 million iPhone activations, but
fiscally its results for the quarter were flat.
Reuters reports that SingTel, Southeast Asia’s largest
carrier, has reported a profit loss of 3 to 4 percentage points due to the
iPhone. TeliaSonera, the top Nordic operator, reports that the iPhone hasn’t
help to boost market share or lift revenue, despite a healthy marketing
campaign. Sweden’s
TeliaSonera, likewise, has reportedly lost a percentage point of market share
over two years.
“It does seem a bit counterintuitive,” Ken Hyers, a senior analyst with
Technology Business Research, told eWEEK. “Certainly AT&T has benefited, in
terms of new subscribers signing up, and signing up for more expensive data
plans. The typical iPhone plan costs twice what other subscriber data plans
are.”
Hyers says situations likely vary from operator to operator and depend on the
portion of marketing, for one, that falls to Apple versus the operator.
“But what it comes down to, is could AT&T have acquired those subscribers
without the iPhone?” said Hyers. “Its ability to compete with Verizon would
definitely have been impacted.”
Additionally, when a new iPhone comes out, AT&T has not only signed up
millions of new subscribers, but enjoyed its current subscribers updating their
devices.
“As a retention tool, the iPhone is working very well. Plus, they’re the
subscribers who are willing to pay the most,” said Hyers. “And of course the
data plan is where the most revenue is coming from.”
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