you might get a few who will, but that hasn't really been our experience
On Sat, Apr 7, 2018 at 2:50 PM, Matt Hoppes <
mattli...@rivervalleyinternet.net> wrote:
> No. We continue to take on customers. Comcast offers a 200 which we all
> agree most people aren’t using. Really it’s marketing more t
Don’t tell the existing clients. Quietly upgrade their speed to the new tier. I
have did me that in the past and no one bat an eye.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Apr 7, 2018, at 12:50 PM, Matt Hoppes
> wrote:
>
> No. We continue to take on customers. Comcast offers a 200 which we all agree
> mos
No. We continue to take on customers. Comcast offers a 200 which we all agree
most people aren’t using. Really it’s marketing more than people need it.
But increasing speed is lowering price.
10 meg for $50
20 meg for $70
Now
So I offer 25 for $50 and 50 for $70. Now my 20meg customers downg
Increase speed, do not lower price.
Are you up against competition that is driving you to need to offer speeds
that fast? If not, make a good comfortable upgrade for the customer and
leave room to offer more later
On Sat, Apr 7, 2018 at 2:23 PM, Matt Hoppes <
mattli...@rivervalleyinternet.net> wr
So I'm looking at deploying 60GHz equipment, and we currently have a
very small fiber network. With the 60GHz, fiber, and even 5GHz nanopops
I can offer huge amounts of bandwidth to end users but I have two
questions:
* My wholesale bandwidth costs are dirt cheap (that's not a problem just