Texting delays mar popularity of $50 Boost plan
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Apr 30, 2009  3:27 PM (ET)

By PETER SVENSSON
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20090430/D97SVNA80.html



NEW YORK (AP) - A new $50 unlimited-calling plan sold under the Boost brand 
has been a badly needed success story for Sprint Nextel Corp., luring 
hundreds of thousands of new customers, by industry estimates.

But dealers and customers report widespread problems with texting on the 
Boost network. Messages are frequently delayed by hours, in many cases 
reaching their recipients early in the morning.

"That kind of kills the point of using the text messaging feature," said 
Daniel Michael, a firefighter in Salisbury, N.C., who also works at a cell 
phone store. He and his wife signed up for Boost Mobile around the end of 
February, and use their phones to text their children, but often get delays 
of three or four hours.

"There's a huge deficiency in the text messaging and multimedia messaging," 
said John Kim, an independent dealer who has a Boost Mobile store in the 
Dallas area. He warns new customers about the problems, and tests the 
system by sending himself text messages.

"I got five text messages at 4 o'clock in the morning that I sent myself 
nine hours before," he said.

He's been signing up 10 to 12 new customers a day on the plan, three or 
four times the number that came in before the Boost Unlimited plan was 
introduced in January. But a lot of them come back, "very irritated" about 
the text messaging problems, he said.

"This trend of a lot of people signing up to Boost is going to disappear 
really quickly if they don't resolve the texting issue," Kim said.

The new Boost Mobile plan uses Sprint's Nextel network, which uses a 
different underlying technology than the main Sprint network. Nextel users 
have complained of occasionally delayed text messaging for years, but the 
network's main selling point has been the walkie-talkie-like "push to talk" 
capability, used by work crews and emergency responders. Now the new Boost 
plan has opened the network to a new category of customers, for whom text 
messaging is more important.

John Votava, a spokesman for Boost, said the texting problems are due to 
the influx of new customers, and denied that there are long-standing 
problems with the Nextel network.

"The popularity of Boost Mobile caught us off guard. It overwhelmed our 
system," he said. The company has been working "day and night" to fix the 
problems, and aims to have the system "much improved" by next week, Votava 
said.

Analysts expect Sprint to report Monday that Boost attracted somewhere 
around half a million subscribers in the first quarter, which would be a 
rare piece of good news for the company. The additions from Boost are not 
expected to outnumber defections from Sprint as a whole, however.

The Boost plan was partly a response to the network expansions of MetroPCS 
Communications Inc. and Leap Wireless International Inc. They have long 
offered unlimited calling for about $50 per month in limited areas, but in 
recent months they've moved into big cities in the Northeast, greatly 
increasing their possible customers. Virgin Mobile later responded with its 
own $50 unlimited prepaid plan, and T-Mobile USA started offering long-term 
customers a similar plan to keep them.

The experience of Jibril Sulaiman, who runs a cell phone store in 
Pensacola, Fla., supports the notion that the Boost network is congested. 
Messages he sends early in the morning go through with minimal delays, but 
those sent later in the day are sometimes held up for five hours. One of 
his employees who has a Boost phone activated another phone on another 
service just for texting, he said.

Despite the texting problems, it seems most Boost subscribers aren't giving 
up. In North Carolina, Michael said calls and the push-to-talk function 
have worked flawlessly.

Bryan Scheiber in Grosse Ile, Mich., signed up for Boost Unlimited in 
February, and has been mostly happy with it. The call quality is better 
than on his previous carrier, AT&T Inc., he said. He's woken up to find 
four text messages that were sent to him the previous day, but he's not a 
big texter.

"For the price," he said, "you can't complain."


=================================================
George Antunes                    Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor               Fax   (713) 743-3927
Political Science                    Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011         

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