Boston, MA - August 1, 2014 – Iliad’s surprise bid for T-Mobile would
leave Sprint the least able to compete if wireless prices tumble,
according to the Strategy Analytics Wireless Operator Strategies (WOS)
service report, “Iliad Bids to Escalate US Market
Disruption with T-Mobile Offer”. While Strategy Analytics believes the
bid will ultimately fail, it represents a wake-up call for all the
carriers in the increasingly saturated market.
Click here for the report: http://bit.ly/1kqfg6V
Key findings from the report:
·
Iliad’s Free has had a dramatic impact on the French market, driving a
29% decline in service revenue and 19% decline in EBITDA since its launch;
·
Iliad’s founder, Xavier Niel, is also an investor
in Israel’s Golan Telecom, who’s aggressive mobile launch two years’ ago
has had an
equally dramatic impact on the market;
·
Despite good logic to a bid by an operator keen to play outside the contracting European market, Iliad is
unlikely to have an appetite for a bidding war with Softbank.
Quotes:
Susan Welsh de Grimaldo, Director, Wireless Operator Strategies
said: “While T-Mobile’s UnCarrier strategy has elevated its market
position, its Q2 performance trailed AT&T’s and its transformation
has
been more about offering customer choice and flexibility rather than
lower prices. Iliad’s Free strategy is all about the price. Pushing
multi-play bundles would be an obvious response for Verizon and AT&T
to the Free approach, a strategy which has enjoyed
some success in France, but that is currently not an option for
Sprint.”
Phil Kendall, Executive Director, Wireless Operator Strategies,
commented: “Perhaps more fundamentally, a successful Iliad bid would
force the operators to move away from battles based on network coverage,
speed, and pricing, and
focus on effective marketing strategies built on segmentation. But
irrespective of T-Mobile’s ownership, this is a wake-up call for
operators to get ahead of the game: differentiated products targeted at
specific market needs by segment are the key to success
when pricing, network quality and product features are all ultimately
replicable.”