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Customized Cell-Phone Service

A startup is helping consumers build their own mobile networks.

By Wade Roush

Friday, June 15, 2007

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Verizon, AT&T, Sprint Nextel, and the other big players in the U.S. mobile-phone business may not quake with fear when they hear names like ODK Mobile, Farthing Wireless, and Long Island Ducks Mobile. But these tiny do-it-yourself cellular networks are part of a trend that could remake the market for mobile-phone service--perhaps fracturing it into thousands or millions of pieces in the same way that the profusion of small Internet service providers decimated big companies like Compuserve, Prodigy, and AOL.

Credit: Technology Review

One company counting on this trend is Sonopia, based in Menlo Park, CA. CEO Juha Christensen, the originator of the Symbian mobile operating system, says he and his fellow wireless engineers had spent decades building extremely sophisticated devices--essentially, small multimedia computers--only to see carriers limit the number of software applications available to their customers. (Most new cell phones, for example, include location-finding technology such as a Global Positioning System receiver to meet requirements for emergency 911 dialing, but until recently, only one U.S. wireless operator--Nextel--allowed customers to load third-party software that taps into this technology for uses such as navigation.)

The dearth of creative applications, in turn, discouraged customers from using the devices as anything but phones. "We asked ourselves, what will make people take real advantage of the technology?" says Christensen. "That's when we looked at the service side of the industry and realized that people just aren't excited about the one-size-fits-all situation with the major carriers."

In April, Sonopia launched a service that makes it easy for any individual, family, or group to bypass the big carriers entirely and become their own mobile virtual network operator (MVNO). More than 2,400 individuals and organizations have signed up as MVNOs.

Sonopia's customers include TBF Wireless, which operates a cellular network for members of the Bass Federation, a nonprofit grassroots group promoting sport fishing and conservation. By operating a branded cell-phone network through Sonopia, groups and families can not only provide their members with an important service, but they can also keep a share of the revenues from users' monthly mobile-phone bills. "You know that you're going to pay somebody a cell-phone bill every month," says Robert Cartlidge, president and CEO of the federation. "This way, at least you feel good knowing it's going to support what you enjoy doing."

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The "virtual" part of the network means the operator doesn't have to own cell towers, switching stations, or even a license to use certain wireless frequencies. All those infrastructure details are outsourced to a real network operator, while the MVNO takes responsibility for functions such as branding, marketing, hardware selection, billing, and customer service.

These virtual networks have been luring subscribers away from traditional wireless carriers for almost a decade; one of the best known, United Kingdom-based Virgin Mobile, signed up its first million members in just 19 months after its 1999 launch. But while it's far easier to start an MVNO than to build the next Nextel, the barriers to entering the MVNO market have been high. To date, the companies offering the virtual networks have still had to supply much of their own expertise in the area of cellular network operations. They've had to spend millions setting up billing procedures, signing up customers, ensuring responsive customer care, and the like. And once an MVNO is set up, companies have had to deal with uncertainty over demand.

Comments

  • It's a dream....
    to think that the big cell companies will sit still for this.  Google "verizon +wifi +city +suit" -- that's "suit" as in "lawsuit" -- and see what you get.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    rttedrow
    06/15/2007
    Posts:43
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
  • The idea is not new, but it is nice
    This idea is the exact same one that DialupUSA had, where a large company can sit in the background while thousands of smaller ones run the customer service, billing, etc.

    - DialupUSA runs the dialup networking and backbone networks for smaller dialup companies. They also provide the software and setup for high-speed compression utilities. They have a back-end website where these startup companies can manage their services.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    Buckwheat469
    06/15/2007
    Posts:34
    Avg Rating:
    4/5

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