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    How do ISPs get business?

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    • bigbearB
      bigbear @Markferron
      last edited by

      @markferron said in How do ISPs get business?:

      @dashrender said in How do ISPs get business?:

      I was reading JB's and other talking about getting 100 Mb/s + for around $30-40/month. Others are talking about getting 1 Gb/s for $70/m.

      Here in Nebraska in Cox land, 150/20 Mb/s cost $80/m for residential.
      100/20 for business costs $350/m

      Here in the town I'm in there is only Windstream. 15 Mb/s for $60 a month, ridiculous. Basically government blessed robbery.
      The town over I had TruVista and they charged $10/month for the Wi-Fi feature on their modem/router/AP combos. We obviously opted out, but they still charged us $5/month for the modem rental along with $90/month with the fees for 50 Mb/s. These companies make they're money back on the hardware "rental" fees alone.

      Windstream is a great example of a company who constantly buys up competitors, even larger ones like Nuvox. In a grander scheme they were acquired by Mcleoud or Paetec, cant remember anymore.

      They aren't good about restructuring their networks afterwards like cable operators are. They just keep everything in place.

      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • bigbearB
        bigbear @Markferron
        last edited by

        @markferron said in How do ISPs get business?:

        So random question I've been thinking about today...
        How does a new ISP compete in a crowded city? Where I'm from, you'll almost always see one DSL company, and usually one cable company competing in the same area, but no more. From what I've been told, the local government usually dictates which ISPs can operate in a certain area because of the physical limitations of installing their hardware. Is that true? If it is, how does another potential ISP "move in" on area already provided for?

        And on your original question "How do ISP's get business". Its all direct mailers, sales reps walking in the door and billboards with price-specific offers in the beginning.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @bigbear
          last edited by

          @bigbear said in How do ISPs get business?:

          @markferron said in How do ISPs get business?:

          @dashrender said in How do ISPs get business?:

          I was reading JB's and other talking about getting 100 Mb/s + for around $30-40/month. Others are talking about getting 1 Gb/s for $70/m.

          Here in Nebraska in Cox land, 150/20 Mb/s cost $80/m for residential.
          100/20 for business costs $350/m

          Here in the town I'm in there is only Windstream. 15 Mb/s for $60 a month, ridiculous. Basically government blessed robbery.
          The town over I had TruVista and they charged $10/month for the Wi-Fi feature on their modem/router/AP combos. We obviously opted out, but they still charged us $5/month for the modem rental along with $90/month with the fees for 50 Mb/s. These companies make they're money back on the hardware "rental" fees alone.

          Windstream is a great example of a company who constantly buys up competitors, even larger ones like Nuvox. In a grander scheme they were acquired by Mcleoud or Paetec, cant remember anymore.

          They aren't good about restructuring their networks afterwards like cable operators are. They just keep everything in place.

          Paetec. Paetec changed their name to Windstream to hide because they had built such a bad reputation and burned their own brand to the ground.

          bigbearB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • bigbearB
            bigbear @scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller said in How do ISPs get business?:

            @bigbear said in How do ISPs get business?:

            @markferron said in How do ISPs get business?:

            @dashrender said in How do ISPs get business?:

            I was reading JB's and other talking about getting 100 Mb/s + for around $30-40/month. Others are talking about getting 1 Gb/s for $70/m.

            Here in Nebraska in Cox land, 150/20 Mb/s cost $80/m for residential.
            100/20 for business costs $350/m

            Here in the town I'm in there is only Windstream. 15 Mb/s for $60 a month, ridiculous. Basically government blessed robbery.
            The town over I had TruVista and they charged $10/month for the Wi-Fi feature on their modem/router/AP combos. We obviously opted out, but they still charged us $5/month for the modem rental along with $90/month with the fees for 50 Mb/s. These companies make they're money back on the hardware "rental" fees alone.

            Windstream is a great example of a company who constantly buys up competitors, even larger ones like Nuvox. In a grander scheme they were acquired by Mcleoud or Paetec, cant remember anymore.

            They aren't good about restructuring their networks afterwards like cable operators are. They just keep everything in place.

            Paetec. Paetec changed their name to Windstream to hide because they had built such a bad reputation and burned their own brand to the ground.

            I think PAETEC bought McLeod and Allworx then Windstream bought PAETEC.

            McLeod used to be the envy and pipe dream of every startup CLEC. Mostly because no one could foresee the feasibility of OTT voip back then...

            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @bigbear
              last edited by

              @bigbear said in How do ISPs get business?:

              @scottalanmiller said in How do ISPs get business?:

              @bigbear said in How do ISPs get business?:

              @markferron said in How do ISPs get business?:

              @dashrender said in How do ISPs get business?:

              I was reading JB's and other talking about getting 100 Mb/s + for around $30-40/month. Others are talking about getting 1 Gb/s for $70/m.

              Here in Nebraska in Cox land, 150/20 Mb/s cost $80/m for residential.
              100/20 for business costs $350/m

              Here in the town I'm in there is only Windstream. 15 Mb/s for $60 a month, ridiculous. Basically government blessed robbery.
              The town over I had TruVista and they charged $10/month for the Wi-Fi feature on their modem/router/AP combos. We obviously opted out, but they still charged us $5/month for the modem rental along with $90/month with the fees for 50 Mb/s. These companies make they're money back on the hardware "rental" fees alone.

              Windstream is a great example of a company who constantly buys up competitors, even larger ones like Nuvox. In a grander scheme they were acquired by Mcleoud or Paetec, cant remember anymore.

              They aren't good about restructuring their networks afterwards like cable operators are. They just keep everything in place.

              Paetec. Paetec changed their name to Windstream to hide because they had built such a bad reputation and burned their own brand to the ground.

              I think PAETEC bought McLeod and Allworx then Windstream bought PAETEC.

              That's what Paetec wanted people to think. Paetec was the buyer, though. That's why it was a big deal that they took on the name of the company that they bought, rather than keeping the name of the parent.

              S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • JaredBuschJ
                JaredBusch
                last edited by JaredBusch

                @scottalanmiller Windstream bought Paetec. Period. There may have been some back room handshaking, but when it was all said and done Windstream was buying Paetec legally. Not the other way around. To continue claiming otherwise, you need to show proof. To verify my recollection, I poked at SEC filings and they all state Windstream bought Paetec.

                https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1282266/000128226616000059/a201510k.htm

                MATERIAL ACQUISITIONS AND DISPOSITIONS

                Acquisitions

                On November 30, 2011, we acquired PAETEC Holding Corp. in an all stock transaction valued at approximately $2.4 billion. In this transaction, we added an attractive base of medium to large-sized business customers, approximately 36,700 fiber route miles, seven data centers, and an experienced sales force focused on serving enterprise-level customers.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller
                  last edited by

                  Huh, that's different from everything that I had heard. Being from Paetec's home town, there was a lot of bragging of this and deals made with the city because of it. But you are right, looks like they just lied about it. But of course, they lie about everything, so that's not really surprising.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • jt1001001J
                    jt1001001
                    last edited by

                    Paetec basically bragged to us they were buying Windstream . Our Sales Rep, the Master Account Rep even one of the VP's came to our office and said "buying" not "being bought". Proof though is in the pudding as you can see from @JaredBusch

                    scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • bigbearB
                      bigbear
                      last edited by

                      0_1511997749904_Paetec-9212P-IP-Phone_grande.jpg

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @jt1001001
                        last edited by

                        @jt1001001 said in How do ISPs get business?:

                        Paetec basically bragged to us they were buying Windstream . Our Sales Rep, the Master Account Rep even one of the VP's came to our office and said "buying" not "being bought". Proof though is in the pudding as you can see from @JaredBusch

                        This is what we heard, too.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • S
                          StorageNinja Vendor @Markferron
                          last edited by

                          @markferron said in How do ISPs get business?:

                          So basically, it's impossible to get rid of crappy DSL companies by complaining to your local officials?

                          In my neighborhood we have 5G getting rolled out (Fiber up and down the street right now). Expecting this to give me a 3rd option beyond DSL/Cable.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -1
                          • S
                            StorageNinja Vendor @scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            @scottalanmiller said in How do ISPs get business?:

                            @bigbear said in How do ISPs get business?:

                            @scottalanmiller said in How do ISPs get business?:

                            @bigbear said in How do ISPs get business?:

                            @markferron said in How do ISPs get business?:

                            @dashrender said in How do ISPs get business?:

                            I was reading JB's and other talking about getting 100 Mb/s + for around $30-40/month. Others are talking about getting 1 Gb/s for $70/m.

                            Here in Nebraska in Cox land, 150/20 Mb/s cost $80/m for residential.
                            100/20 for business costs $350/m

                            Here in the town I'm in there is only Windstream. 15 Mb/s for $60 a month, ridiculous. Basically government blessed robbery.
                            The town over I had TruVista and they charged $10/month for the Wi-Fi feature on their modem/router/AP combos. We obviously opted out, but they still charged us $5/month for the modem rental along with $90/month with the fees for 50 Mb/s. These companies make they're money back on the hardware "rental" fees alone.

                            Windstream is a great example of a company who constantly buys up competitors, even larger ones like Nuvox. In a grander scheme they were acquired by Mcleoud or Paetec, cant remember anymore.

                            They aren't good about restructuring their networks afterwards like cable operators are. They just keep everything in place.

                            Paetec. Paetec changed their name to Windstream to hide because they had built such a bad reputation and burned their own brand to the ground.

                            I think PAETEC bought McLeod and Allworx then Windstream bought PAETEC.

                            That's what Paetec wanted people to think. Paetec was the buyer, though. That's why it was a big deal that they took on the name of the company that they bought, rather than keeping the name of the parent.

                            This happens often enough. Avago did this with Broadcom. There were rumors we were going to do a reverse acquisition of our old parent company a while back.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -1
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