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U.S. Cellular's Marketing Conundrum

Posted In: Advertising & Marketing | US Cellular | FirstNews

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U.S. Cellular won accolades for customer satisfaction in a Consumer Reports survey last month and its loyal customers know the value it provides. The problem, as U.S. Cellular sees it, is the customers of other carriers do not know about its dependability as a carrier.

That's according to TDS President and CEO Ted Carlson, who spoke at the Citi 2012 Entertainment, Media and Telecommunications Conference in San Francisco on Wednesday. TDS is the majority owner of U.S. Cellular.

Carlson talked up U.S. Cellular's handset line-up for 2012, especially the devices – leading with a tablet – that will work on its LTE network when that's live before the end of the first quarter. He said U.S. Cellular offers handsets that are just as good as any iPhone model out there today, but customers who belong to its competitors don't know that.

Typically, when it's time to renew a contract, a consumer will shop only two operators' stores. Once people come into the door of a U.C. Cellular store, the close ratio of a sale is higher than the national average, so the problem is getting them through the doors, not what happens once they're in the store.

Building out its LTE network and attracting more customers are part of U.S. Cellular's priorities for 2012, he said. U.S. Cellular has managed to attract 2.8 million customers to its Belief Project, which has helped lower its churn rate. The Belief plans reward customers for doing simple things like paying their wireless bills on time or referring friends. Points can be used to replace phones faster and other perks.

U.S. Cellular doesn't want to be the leader in technology or the low-price space, but in customer service. The Consumer Reports list last month put U.S. Cellular at the top of its satisfaction survey, outranking top national providers.

The main issue is persuading customers of other carriers to consider U.S. Cellular when they're deciding on their next carrier. "We're starting to get the message through," Carlson said, but it takes time.

Carlson also fielded questions about the ramifications of AT&T backing off its plan to acquire T-Mobile USA. If the acquisition had gone through, U.S. Cellular would have been interested in some markets up for divestitures, he said, and now it's going to need to find other ways to get more spectrum. He's not optimistic that the FCC will be able to release any spectrum this year.

As for LTE, U.S. Cellular plans to roll it out in about 24 markets this year, or about 25 percent of its total customer base. The company expects to roll out five to seven, roughly speaking, LTE devices this year, including handsets and a hotspot. The first device will be a tablet.

This year, it also will start rolling out a new billing system provided by Amdocs and start distribution in big box retail outlets. 

Asked how the company will grow its wireless business if it's unable to add subscribers, Carlson said the company didn't grow subs in 2011 but still managed to increase its revenue by increased ARPU due to the rapid adoption of data plans. Only about a quarter of U.S. Cellular's customers have smartphones now, and that number could go "north of 80 percent" at some point, he said, so there's still room for growth. It's also growing roaming revenue.

Asked how the company can possibly fight the battle of brands with dollars – going up against big brands like Apple, Carlson said he disagrees that it's a losing proposition. "Brands come and go," he said, noting Nokia's rise and fall in popularity and RIM's challenges.

Carlson said he couldn't get into the details of discussions the company had with Apple, but as U.S. Cellular President and CEO Mary Dillon said during the third-quarter conference call, the risks of offering an iPhone outweighed the reward. Basically, U.S. Cellular didn't like the terms and conditions that Apple was offering, so like T-Mobile, it's without an iPhone in its smartphone line-up for now.


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4 Comments

  • I stand corrected regarding US Cellular's comment thanks to @unplugged's clarification of my Friday statement's factual error (with a link to the HuffPost article)--thank you for correcting my mistake.

    Regardless, it is well-known that users of smartphone-types of devices generally use more data than those who do not have such a device, and recent information confirms this (as in the Washington Post article to which I linked). One could easily think that delaying to get a device might have to be due to a network not having enough capacity to handle a lot of data traffic due to a large number of data-using devices being on a network at once, regardless of what is said by a company as to why such a device is not yet being sold to run on said network; if said network has a lot of capacity for such a device, I would think that would be a LARGE positive selling point for said company to promote instead of merely relying on good customer service in said promotions.

  • @Unplugged: It's merely putting two and two together to get four, as other carriers have few issues with subsidizing the cost over a contract term (or they would not do so).

    Here is a case in point about more data use with Apple's latest device:

    "Apple’s Siri uses three times more data than earlier iPhones"
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/apples-siri-uses-three-times-more-data-than-earlier-iphones/2012/01/06/gIQAi9YpfP_story.html

    Worth noting from the article:
    "Siri, the sultry-voiced do-it-all software assistant for the iPhone 4S, might be responsible for a flood of traffic hitting wireless networks. That could pose problems for consumers constrained by monthly data limits and wireless carriers trying to prevent dropped calls and sluggish service under the weight of smartphones and tablets. Apple’s latest iPhone 4S is using three times as much data as the previous version, according to a study by networking software firm Arieso. Users of other devices such as the HTC Desire and Samsung Galaxy are also accessing the Internet more often to watch videos, browse sites and stream music."

  • Jon slanders U.S. Cellular when he claims that U.S. Cellular stated it cannot handle the additional data traffic brought about by the iPhone.

    "U.S. Cellular CEO Mary Dillon told analysts on an earnings conference call Friday that "the terms were unacceptable from a risk and profitability standpoint." She didn't provide any details, but said the added load the iPhone could have placed on its data network was not a big consideration." http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/04/us-cellular-iphone_n_1076828.html (Why U.S. Cellular turned down the iPhone)

    It is a myth propagated by AT&T that iPhone users use more data than other smartphone users. (AT&T tried to blame the iPhone for its network failure.) Surveys show that SMARTPHONE users use more data, but there is little to no difference between, for instance, iPhone and Android users.

  • So--if your network cannot handle the extra data traffic generated by Apple's iPhone (per their own saying in the press recently when asked why they -chose- to NOT carry the iPhone in their phone lineup), focus on "customer service" so people will not defect to carriers selling the phone the customers seem to REALLY want instead. This article is merely spinning the truth to the benefit of US Cellular.

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