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#126 | |
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T-Mobile Value Plan
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T-Mobile Value Plan : 500 minutes $35, Unlimited Text $5, 2GB data (unlimited edge) $10 = $50/month (2 year contract) My old AT&T plan: 450 minutes $40, unlimited text $20, 2GB data $25 (no longer available) = $85/month (2 year contract) Bottom line: consumers now have more OPTIONS. The upgrade every 20 months + sell on ebay/Craigslist cycle wasn't cutting it for me anymore. But I'm glad there are new alternatives. ![]() *Also note that no-contract plans are $10 more per month than the individual Value Plans. I just decided to agree to 2 years to save an additional $10/month. |
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#127 |
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Won't for me, unless VZW starts throttling my unlimited. Or kills it or whatever.
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-- Spiky |
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#128 |
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I think the big impact here is what it will do to the handset market. Right now at the end of a 2 year contract, the customer can unlock their phone and resell it for, say, $300 (usually to a t mobile user since they need unlocked device) and then buy the newest model for$200. The user gets the newest phone and $100 in his pocket.
But if this model changes, would people upgrade as often? I sure don't replace other technology (computer, stereo, tv) every 2 years. Nevertheless, it's good for consumers but possibly bad for handset makers because 1) so few consider total cost of ownership and 2) customers less likely to upgrade as detailed above |
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#129 | |
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I don't get why everyone is so excited over this because you always had that option to pay a lower monthly rate, now they are just taking away an option. Though I really would love it if phones had to directly compete with each other along with cellphone services, none of these contracts and carrier exclusive phones.
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#130 |
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#131 |
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http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-573...less-industry/
T-Mobile exec: Subsidies are hurting wireless industry http://www.neptunemobile.com/2012/12...ing-subsidies/ There’s been no shortage of detractors over T-Mobile’s risky decision to move to a Value Plan only world in 2013. Now, Tracy Isacke, director of Telefonica Digital, a large Spanish multinational telecommunications company with more than 313 million customers worldwide is advising T-Mobile not to go down this path. Isacke suggests taking it from experience as Telefonica decided to undertake the same move earlier this year with less than favorable results. In September of this year alone, Telefonica lost 253,520 mobile users as Vodafone, another large European operator (part owner of Verizon/Wireless) is also seeing negative results from the removal of subsidies.
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#132 |
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#133 |
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http://news.yahoo.com/why-dropping-p...163529858.html
Why dropping phone subsidies could put T-Mobile in jeopardy
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Top 100 Books Ranking (By Genre) rated by readers |
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