ATandT iPhone App Asks Customers Where It Hurts
The overwhelmingly successful Apple iPhone has been blamed for poor service experiences on the AT&T network
- according to the carrier, its smartphone network traffic has
increased 5,000 percent over the past three years. Now, however,
AT&T is putting the iPhone to work, with an app that enables
customers to instantly note where and when a performance issue has
occurred.
On Dec. 7 AT&T made its AT&T Mark the Spot app available for
free in the iTunes App Store. When an issue, such as a dropped call, is
experienced, users can offer feedback "with as little as two button
clicks," AT&T said in a statement, choosing whether to simply
report the problem or expand on the details, and the app automatically
sends AT&T a report with the location, time stamp and device used.
In the coming months, AT&T will make the app available for additional smartphones as well.
"With AT&T Mark the Spot, we're applying the power of crowdsourcing
to our ongoing efforts to enhance and expand our network," said John
Donovan, AT&T chief technology officer, in the statement.
"Feedback from customers via AT&T Mark the Spot, combined with data
from more than 964,000 miles of drive testing conducted by an
independent third-party source, will enable us to most quickly and
effectively identify trends and maximize the impact of our ongoing
network investment," Donovan continued. "We encourage all customers to
download and use the app."
According to AT&T, an independent research firm's driving tests
showed that AT&T had reduced its 3G dropped-call rate by 12 percent
over the past year. The carrier says this is the result of its
considerable investments - as is the new app, the metrics of which will
help AT&T decide where to apply the billions of dollars it has
allocated for improving its wireless network.
Other network-enhancement plans, per AT&T, include doubling the
amount of wireless spectrum serving its 3G customers in hundreds of
markets, using 850MHz spectrum. Over the course of 2009, it reportedly
added 2,000 new cell sites as well as 100,000 backhaul connections.
It's also rolling out HSPA 7.2 technology, with hopes of reaching six
markets by the end of the year, and planning to begin launching LTE
wireless networks - a 4G technology - in 2011.
Coverage has been a sore spot for AT&T lately. The carrier recently dropped a lawsuit against rival carrier Verizon Wireless, which portrayed AT&T's 3G wireless coverage areas in a series of new ads that AT&T called "misleading."
Since ads began airing, AT&T has taken steps to ensure that consumers understand the full extent of its services, as well as launched a few ads of its own, emphasizing its title as the nation's fastest 3G network.
