Sprint Mobile Broadband on Demand Offers Easy Internet Connectivity
Sprint, with Telespree, is offering a Mobile Broadband on Demand solution to its wholesale partners, who can then offer customers easy connectivity in the airport, a rental car kiosk or hotel room. Prepaid solutions are proving essential to Sprint's improving financials.
Sprint, with self-service provider Telespree, introduced Mobile
Broadband on Demand on March 18, a prepaid way to offer mobile
broadband services to Sprint Wholesale partners - who can then pass the
service, branded however they'd like it, to their customers.
Mobile Broadband on Demand is offered as a standalone product or
packaged with back-office services, and it features over-the-air
activation, making it simple for enterprises such rental car companies,
airport kiosks and hotels to offer mobile connectivity to their
customers and charge by a time frame - a day, week, month -or
megabytes.
The end-user customer can purchase a branded data card, choose the data plan he or she would like and essentially connect.
"It's an offering that doesn't require the distribution partner to take
calls from customers," Bill deKay, Telespress chief executive officer,
told eWEEK. "Once it's plugged in I can get on, identify myself and
monitor my usage [via a data meter icon]."
When allotted time or megabytes are running low, customers can "top off" their balance, said deKay.
"We're very excited about this opportunity to build on the momentum
we're seeing in mobile data services. The growth curve continues to be
very steep," Ben Vos, vice president of service management for Sprint
Wholesale Solutions, told eWEEK, saying the solution enables Sprint to
reach a segment of users who have a short-term connectivity needs.
"We've got a lot of MVNO (mobile virtual network operator) customers
focused on pre-paid, and those segments are a natural opportunity for
us to extend a mobile broadband service that they can extend to their
users," Vos said.
On March 3, Sprint's prepaid wireless brand, Virgin Mobile, refreshed its Broadband2Go plans, which package Sprint 3G wireless Internet services into manageable packages, ranging from $10 for 100MB to $60 for 5GB.
On Feb. 10, Sprint held a quarterly financials call in which it
revealed that it had slowed the loss of subscribers that it experienced
in earlier quarters - an improvement largely attributed to its focus on pre-paid customers, including those from Virgin Mobile and Boost Mobile.
Sprint's Mobile Broadband on Demand solution is available as of today
and will be demonstrated at the CTIA Wireless 2010 show, March 23
through 25 in Las Vegas.









