Alltel: Difference between revisions
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On [[May 20]], [[2007]], Alltel announced an agreement to be sold to two private-equity firms: TPG Capital and GS Capital Partners. Under the deal, the two firms will pay $71.50 a share in cash, or 27.5 billion, a 10% premium over Alltel's May 18, 2007, closing price. |
On [[May 20]], [[2007]], Alltel announced an agreement to be sold to two private-equity firms: TPG Capital and GS Capital Partners. Under the deal, the two firms will pay $71.50 a share in cash, or 27.5 billion, a 10% premium over Alltel's May 18, 2007, closing price. <ref>[http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2003715329_btbriefs21.html Seattle Times] </ref> |
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==Network technology== |
==Network technology== |
Revision as of 05:17, 18 February 2008
This article contains promotional content. (January 2008) |
This article may require copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone, or spelling. (November 2007) |
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Communications Services |
Founded | Little Rock, Arkansas, USA (1943)[1] |
Headquarters | Little Rock, Arkansas, USA |
Key people | Scott T. Ford, President & CEO |
Products | Telecommunications |
Revenue | $7.9 billion USD (2006) |
$842 million USD (2006) | |
Number of employees | 15,000+ (2006) |
Website | www.alltel.com |
ALLTEL Corporation is an American telecommunications company with headquarters in Little Rock, Arkansas. Alltel provides wireless services to residential and business customers in all 50 states through roaming agreements. With its own network in 34 of those states Alltel's own wireless coverage area comprises the largest network by square miles covered in the United States. They also offer plans with voice coverage in parts of Mexico and voice and data coverage in parts of Canada.
Company
With a market cap of $24.79 billion and over 12 million customers as of early 2006, Alltel is the largest regional mobile phone company in America, and the fifth largest mobile phone company overall. The wireless group provides service in 34 states. The company focuses on small to medium-sized cities, but also has low-cost roaming agreements with the major national CDMA carriers including Verizon Wireless and Sprint-Nextel. This gives Alltel customers access to nationwide service while providing those carriers coverage in rural areas.
When Alltel acquired Western Wireless in 2005, it gained a large GSM footprint as well. While it does not offer GSM service to its own customers, Alltel has indicated that it will continue to maintain the GSM footprint and perhaps even expand it to provide roaming service to GSM users of other wireless carriers. Although, as of April 1, 2007, Alltel no longer maintains the GSM footprint in the coverage area it acquired from First Cellular of Southern Illinois. They required previous GSM customers in the affected areas to obtain a new phone and contract.
Alltel is the "owner and operator of the nation's largest wireless network." This is in reference to total number of square miles covered by the Alltel network. It does not refer to the number of customers or areas covered by roaming agreements.
In 2006, Alltel added 640,000 net customers through internal growth, an 87 percent increase. Post-pay churn was 1.57 percent and total churn was 2 percent, both improved from the previous year. The company also acquired more than 500,000 customers through the purchases of Midwest Wireless, First Cellular of Southern Illinois, Virginia Cellular and Cellular One in Amarillo, Texas.
Executive team
- President and CEO, Scott T. Ford
- Group President and COO, Kevin Beebe
- Group President, Jeff Fox
- EVP and CFO, Sharilyn Gasaway
- EVP of External Affairs and General Counsel, Richard Massey
- Chairman, Joe T. Ford
History
In 1943, Allied Telephone Co., a small business specializing in installing telephone poles and cabling for telephone companies across Arkansas, was founded by Charles Miller and Hugh Willbourn, Jr.
Alltel's modern history begins in 1983 when Allied Telephone and Mid-Continent Telephone, founded by Weldon W. Case and his younger brother, Nelson H., merged. The elder Case became Alltel's first chairman, based in Hudson, Ohio, where Alltel was first headquartered. In 1985, Alltel launched its first wireless system in Charlotte, North Carolina, and by 1993 Alltel had opened its first wireless retail store. Alltel was named to the S&P 500 Index in 1994. From 1995 until 2006, the Jacksonville Jaguars played at Alltel Stadium. By 1996, long-distance service was offered, and in 1997 the company's wireless and wireline businesses converged into a single organization.
On December 9, 2005, Alltel announced that it would become a wireless-only company, simultaneously merging and building a spin-off company for its wireline services. [1] This company would then be merged with Valor Telecom, which on April 10, 2006, announced it will take the name Windstream Communications. The merger-spinoff process ended July 17, 2006, when Windstream began operations.[2]
On May 20, 2007, Alltel announced an agreement to be sold to two private-equity firms: TPG Capital and GS Capital Partners. Under the deal, the two firms will pay $71.50 a share in cash, or 27.5 billion, a 10% premium over Alltel's May 18, 2007, closing price. [2]
Network technology
Alltel networks consist of analog and digital systems operating primarily on the 800 MHz cellular band, much like Verizon Wireless. Alltel has recently added a few 1900 MHz PCS sites in various places, such as Jacksonville, Florida and Wichita, Kansas for greater system capacity. Native Alltel markets consist of both analog (AMPS) and digital (CDMA) technologies. Select markets have been outfitted with 3G 1xEV-DO digital technology, which allows for additional battery life and faster download times when using Internet or BREW-based applications. AMPS is still in place and in use in most places, but the company acknowledges that it is aggressively converting analog customers to digital technology. In 2005, an Alltel spokesman stated that only 15% of its customer base still uses analog. Alltel has posted a three phase turn down schedule in response to the FCC decision stating that by March 1, 2008 A and B side carriers are no longer required to support analog.
Roaming partners
To further extend service to its customers, Alltel uses roaming agreements with competing providers to provide reliable coast-to-coast service. Roaming agreements in the US are primarily with Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel, but other arrangements are in place with U.S. Cellular, AT&T Mobility (mostly for AMPS), Unicel, and other CDMA wireless providers. They also have agreements with most Canadian cellular providers, such as Telus and Bell Mobility. Since many of these roaming partners operate in the 800 MHz or 1900 MHz CDMA band, Alltel customers on national calling plans are required to use tri-mode (800 AMPS, 800 CDMA, 1900 CDMA) or dual band (800 CDMA, 1900 CDMA) handsets.
On May 9, 2006, Alltel and Sprint Nextel agreed on a new nationwide roaming partnership. (Press releases: Alltel; Sprint) Unlike Alltel's voice and 1xRTT roaming agreement with Verizon Wireless, the new reciprocal roaming agreement is for both voice and 1xEV-DO data roaming coverage. This agreement gives Alltel customers access to Sprint's voice, 1xRTT, and 1xEV-DO networks and gives Sprint customers access to Alltel's denser rural 1xEV-DO voice and data coverage. This agreement is the first of its kind between wireless carriers in the United States because of the inter-carrier 1xEV-DO roaming.
On June 7, 2007, Alltel officially announced that its customers can access the Internet and corporate networks through their data-card equipped laptops in the nation’s major metropolitan areas, at broadband speeds. Alltel’s roaming agreements give its customers access to wireless broadband service in the nation’s largest population centers, including New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Boston, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C.
Network coverage
There are currently Alltel-owned and operated networks in parts of 34 states; Alltel currently has roaming agreements in place to provide coverage in all 50 states including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Alltel also has agreements with cellular providers in Canada. Alltel's free night minutes start at 9:00pm, unless upgraded to a 7:00pm nights plan or add-on.
Much like Verizon Wireless's "North America's Choice Plans," Alltel also now offers coverage plans for all of North America, the "North American Freedom" plans, with roaming agreements in Mexico and Canada. Note that "My Circle" and "Mobile to Mobile" calling only applies within the United States. Outside of the US it is considered part of the anytime minutes in a plan.
Handset and technical specifics
- Handsets typically manufactured by Motorola, LG, Kyocera, Research In Motion (i.e., BlackBerry), Nokia, HTC, and more recently Samsung, Palm, and Pantech Curitel.
- Network equipment is manufactured by Lucent Technologies, Motorola, Nortel, Juniper and Cisco.
- Phones use the BREW interface.
Commercials
Alltel is the first cell phone company to make fun of other major companies through its advertising. It started when Alltel used lookalikes of rival cell phone companies' primary advertising characters. After a little bit of trouble, they placed a message at the beginning of these commercials saying "THESE ARE LOOKALIKES". After that, Alltel started a series of commercials involving Chad, Alltel's spokesman (played by comedian Chad Brokaw[3]), bragging about Alltel's service. The parodied competitors, Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint, take the forms of four stereotypical geeks who are perpetually frustrated by their failures and less popularity, even going so far as to harass and threaten him, albeit with less than effective results.
The promotional campaign features this notice on television and the website: "Our lawyers would like to inform you some of the characters you see here are not associated with Alltel. They are look-alikes. The characters, not our lawyers." The first commercial has an Alltel representative named Chad welcoming the spokespeople of the other Top 5 wireless carriers (Verizon's "can you hear me now?" guy, a man who looks like Sprint's old "trenchcoat" pitchman, "Jack," the animated Cingular figure and a Catherine Zeta-Jones look-alike) to his circle. It takes place at an Alltel store. A second commercial takes place at a bowling alley. The third commercial takes place in a court room, with the faces of the other carriers blurred. The campaign even goes so far to include a MySpace page. The fourth and fifth commercials features employees of other carriers' mall stores trying to convince Chad to end My Circle with $8.00. The sixth has Chad giving RAZR's as Christmas gifts to them. Since this service and advertising campaign started, other carriers started adding similar services: For example, T-Mobile introduced "My Faves" in the fall of 2006.
New services
FAMILY FINDER
Alltel has introduced a new service dubbed Axcess FAMILY FINDER where users on family plans can download software to their childrens' phones and using GPS technology acquire real-time location information either directly on their phone or on the computer. Users can also set up convenient scheduled checks to send automatic notifications of your child's location at set times, or use on-demand location checks to display their location on an interactive map.
City ID
May 22, 2007, Alltel Press Release:Alltel announced that it will be the first carrier to introduce City ID, an enhanced caller ID feature that matches any incoming wireless call with the city and state where the incoming number is registered. The application will initially be available on the LG AX275, but will eventually be integrated with all new handsets operated by Alltel in the near future.
AskMeNow
On March 1, 2007 Alltel announced that they were the first U.S. carrier to offer AskMeNow across all handsets. The partnership provides customers, including those with smart phones, immediate access to the AskMeNow question-answer service.
My Circle, launched on April 20, 2006, is a feature offered by Alltel Wireless that enables customers to make and receive unlimited free calls to and from different phone numbers, including landlines.
Initially, My Circle only gave customers 10 different numbers per account. Now customers have a choice of how many circle numbers they get (1, 5, 10, or 20) based on the cost of their rate plan.
As of January 13, 2008, customers on rate plans $39.99 get 1 circle number. Customers on rate plans $49.99 get 5 circle numbers. Customers on rate plans $59.99 - 79.99 get 10 circle numbers. Customers on rate plans $99.99 and up get 20 circle numbers.
My Circle lets customers choose any combination of wireless, home and office numbers located anywhere in the U.S., regardless of local phone company or wireless carrier. A customer's own number or voice-mail access number is prohibited in My Circle
All incoming and outgoing calls to and from a customer's designated Circle are free, as long as they originate within their rate plan coverage area. A customer with My Circle may change circle numbers whenever, and go into effect around midnight Eastern Time. My Circle numbers are managed on Alltel's website via My Account.
U Prepaid
On January 30, 2006 Alltel introduced a new prepaid service called 'U Prepaid'[4]. U Prepaid is very much similar to other prepaid services like Boost Mobile, Virgin Mobile or AT&T GoPhone. Features that make U Prepaid unique are that it allows the customer to customize their plan with text messaging and unlimited calls to a certain number. U Prepaid allows roaming on Sprint, Verizon, US Cellular, and other CDMA networks.
Alltel Wi-Fi
On September 28, 2007 Alltel introduced a new service called 'Alltel Wi-Fi'[5]. Alltel Wi-Fi provides laptop access to thousands of Wi-Fi hotspots in North and South America. Wi-Fi is available at locations like Barnes and Noble, most major airports, and thousands of hotels and cafes. Alltel Wi-Fi is available for purchase by anyone regardless of whether they reside in a traditional Alltel territory. Customers may purchase Wi-Fi in daily, weekly, and monthly increments. Alltel also has special bundled pricing of their 'Wireless Internet'[6] service and 'Wi-Fi'[7], allowing users to roam from one network to another on their laptop.
Mergers and acquisitions
1998
- 360 Communications (Illinois) - wireless properties and assets, merger adds 2.6 million customers in 15 states
1999
- Standard Group, Inc. (Cornelia, Georgia) - merger adds more than 71,000 local telephone lines
- Aliant Communications (Lincoln, Nebraska) - $1.8 billion merger
- Liberty Cellular (Kansas) - $600 million merger
2000
- SBC Communications (Louisiana) - wireless properties
2002
- Verizon (Kentucky) - $1.9 billion for local access lines
- CenturyTel - $1.5 billion, 700,000 wireless customers
2003
- Cellular XL (Mississippi) - wireless properties
- U.S. Cellular and TDS Telecom - wireless assets [8]
2005
- Cingular Wireless-divested AT&T Wireless properties (Oklahoma) (Connecticut) - wireless properties
- Public Service Cellular, Inc. of Georgia - wireless properties
- Cellular One brand by Western Wireless (Washington) - wireless properties
- Midwest Wireless (Minnesota) - $1 billion, 400,000 wireless customers
- Alltel/Valor (merger) - Alltel spins off wireline business and merges it with Valor to form Windstream Communications
2006
- First Cellular of Southern Illinois (Illinois) - Alltel purchased First Cellular for $14-15 million in cash.
- Palmetto MobileNet, L.P. (North Carolina) (South Carolina) - Alltel has purchased from Palmetto MobileNet, L.P., wireless partnerships that cover approximately 2 million people in North and South Carolina. Alltel already managed and owned 50 percent of each of the 10 partnerships and has purchased the remaining interests from Palmetto. The partnerships include 34 counties across South Carolina and seven counties in Western North Carolina.
- Alltel completes purchase of Midwest Wireless
- In Summer 2006 Alltel's Simple Freedom Wireless, customers were migrated in non-Alltel markets. (see article below)
2007
- Alltel agrees to be acquired by TPG Inc. and the private equity division of Goldman Sachs Group for $27.5 billion.[3]
- Simple Freedom Wireless merges with Alltel "U Prepaid" to form Alltel U Personalized Prepaid. (see article below)
Western Wireless
On January 10, 2005, Alltel announced it would buy Western Wireless (primary operator of the Cellular One brand name) for $6 billion in a stock-and-cash transaction. The deal would bring in an additional 1.4 million domestic wireless customers bringing the company's total wireless customer base to 10 million in 33 states, making Alltel the fifth-largest wireless operator in the United States. The merger would also bring an additional 1.6 million international customers from Western Wireless' overseas wireless ventures. These ventures, however, are being sold. Since both companies operate on CDMA technology, no major network integration issues were expected. According to Alltel CEO Scott Ford, "probably much less than 10 percent" of Western Wireless' 4,000 workers would face job cuts. The merger closed in August 2005; the Cellular One brand name was sold to Dobson Cellular in December 2005.
U Prepaid
U Prepaid is prepaid service from Alltel Wireless. In June 2007 Simple Freedom Wireless announced that it would move its customers to Alltel U Prepaid accounts to create Alltel U Personalized Prepaid. In July 2007 the merger was complete. The service is sold at Target, Wal-Mart and some Sam's Club stores. Some Simple Freedom customers in non-Alltel markets were migrated to Verizon Wireless prepay accounts in Summer 2006. New rate options and features are now available to Simple Freedom customers.[4]
Sponsorships
NASCAR
- Alltel is the primary sponsor of the #12 Dodge Charger driven by Ryan Newman in the NASCAR Sprint Cup series. [9]
- This sponsorship was signed in 2000 under a contract between Alltel and Penske Racing. Greg Penske had joined the Board of Directors of Alltel and recommended the team switch from Herzog Racing to Penske Racing. On June 19, 2003, Alltel was banned from NASCAR sponsorship at the top level, but this current deal is grandfathered, due to the fact that Sprint/Nextel agreed to sponsor NASCAR's top series. The firm may not change names, nor may they switch teams under agreement of this grandfather clause.
Pro Fishing
- Alltel has sponsored professional fisherman Scott Rook during the 2006 CITGO Bassmaster Tournament Trail.
Structure naming rights
- Alltel Pavilion at Walnut Creek, Raleigh, North Carolina
- Alltel Arena, North Little Rock, Arkansas
- Alltel Ice Den, Scottsdale, Arizona
- Alltel Pavilion, Stuart C. Siegel Center, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
- Maxwell Field at Alltel Stadium, Winona State University, Winona, Minnesota
- Alltel Center, Mankato, Minnesota
References
- ^ "Alltel History". Retrieved 2007-12-15.
- ^ Seattle Times
- ^ Nystedt, Dan (2007-05-21). "Mobile provider Alltel agrees to $27.5B buyout". Computerworld. Retrieved 2007-05-21.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ Simple Freedom Wireless – Coverage Area