Your customers don't get a public IP? 

I'll never understand why people do this. 




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Matt Larsen - Lists" <li...@manageisp.com> 
To: "WISPA General List" <wireless@wispa.org> 
Sent: Tuesday, December 31, 2013 1:09:48 PM 
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Internet Packages regarding geography 


This last year, we finished "unification" of all our rate plans so that we 
would have consistency across our network. At this time last year, we had 
several plans that had overlap and different sets of services as part of the 
plans. For example, a 2meg plan for $49.95/month that included dialup and a 
public IP address sold next to a $49.95/month 4meg plan that did not have the 
dialup or public IP. Most of the customers did not use public IP addresses or 
dialup, and we were starting to get 2meg customers complaining about the 4meg 
plan on our website that was 2x the speed for the same price. At the same time, 
we still had a lot of 384k and 640k plans with people who were complaining 
about YouTube not working, but they were reluctant to upgrade to the next 
package because our prices were not as competitive on the lower end with the 
1.5meg dsl bundles. 

What we ended up doing was this: 

1) Replace the 384k and 640k plans with 1meg and 1.5meg speeds at the same 
prices 
2) Bump up all existing 1meg and 2meg customers to 2meg and 3meg speeds for the 
same prices 
3) Eliminate public IP addresses being included with plans, made them a 
separate monthly charge and adjusted customers to have a new speed package with 
the public IP added to it 
4) Later in the year we established a maintenance fee package that was 
automatically added to each customer account, but customers were given the 
choice of opting out of the plan 

After doing all of this, we ended up having a much more competitive service on 
the low end, fewer customer complaints about YouTube and other sites from low 
end customers, and our revenue went up - mostly because of the addition of the 
maintenance package. Any plan inconsistencies between customers and areas were 
also resolved. 

The toughest part of this plan was the pre-planning that was involved to make 
it happen. We did a ton of customer data cleanup and plan adjustment over the 
summer, but that was work that needed to be done anyway because of a lot of 
random, nonstandard plan changes that employees had been doing as shortcuts. We 
also had to take a really strong look at oversub ratios on our access points 
and what the resulting oversub ratios would be with the plan changes, since the 
ratios would generally double. In doing so, we identified a bunch of places 
where we needed to add capacity or just needed to move higher bandwidth 
customers to other access points. There were a lot of radio swaps and service 
calls involved in that process, but the end result was better network 
performance and higher customer satisfaction. 

We set a 4:1 bandwidth ratio as our preferred point of upgrade on access points 
- meaning we can sell 40meg of customers plans on an AP that has approximately 
10meg of capacity (such as a 2.4ghz 802.11g on 10mhz channel). When the process 
started, we had about 27 APs that would have been overloaded with the new 
plans. As of today, we have eight APs that are over 4:1, and six of those are 
just barely over. When it comes to the speeds that we offer in any particular 
area, we decided to make all speeds available, as long as the oversell ratio on 
the access point was not exceeded. 

Going into next year, my plan is to replace all of our remaining StarOS access 
points with either Airmax or Mikrotik, swap out as many old Tranzeo radios as 
possible and add sectors and microcells in places where capacity starts to get 
overloaded. I am not looking forward to the pricetag on this work, but it is 
the right thing to do and it will keep us competitive for the next few years. 

Happy New Year everyone, and have a great 2014! 

Matt Larsen 
Vistabeam.com 

On 12/31/2013 8:19 AM, heith petersen wrote: 





I assume the same would apply if you introduce new plans to existing customers 
as well? I assume customers that cannot get that service will beat on you to 
make some sort of change to get it to them, like a closer site. 




From: Matt Hoppes 
Sent: Monday, December 30, 2013 8:34 PM 
To: WISPA General List 
Cc: WISPA General List 
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Internet Packages regarding geography 


What we have done is offer the same packages across the board. If you can't get 
at least the package you want we don't install you. 

On Dec 30, 2013, at 21:11, "heith petersen" < wi...@mncomm.com > wrote: 


<blockquote>




We are getting to the point in a lot of our markets that we need to offer 
different speed packages. Issue being some markets, being 900 or slightly 
sub-par infrastructure, we wouldn’t be able to promote these packages across 
the board. Was curious if others are offering packages to different areas that 
would not be possible in some? And if so, do you get any backlash from those 
who cannot get those packages? Is it appropriate to offer extended packages to 
users on one tower when another tower down the road wouldn’t be capable of 
these packages? Its bad but we just offer a residential rate, no matter if that 
customer can get 1 meg down via Canopy 900 or close to 10 meg on a UBNT SM. I 
have caught a little heat in an area where we fired up 900 about 4 years ago to 
a market that had only satellite. Then we hooked up a tower in a small town 4 
miles away with UBNT M2 and news spread like wild fire. We went from 40 900 
subs to about a dozen, and a pile of radios I don’t want to deploy again. Shame 
on me for not offering the extended packages at that time for those wanting 
more bandwidth. 

I also have the area outside my home town that Century Link offers what they 
claim is 12 meg service, but it never gets close. I am constantly adding more 
sectors in these areas, Im getting to the point where I am adding UBNT to 
offload Canopy, then adding more UBNT to offload the UBNT that was offloading 
the Canopy, it gets to be a vicious circle. I am already $20 per month more 
than CL, not sure if a lot of customers would stay if I were to charge them 
more for what they are getting now. Once again shame on me. The bosses think 
the prices should be the same across the board, but technically performances 
cannot be matched across the board, plus Im running ragged satisfying existing 
customers when I should be looking at new areas, and start the vicious circle 
all over again LOL. 

thanks 
heith 




<blockquote>

_______________________________________________ 
Wireless mailing list 
Wireless@wispa.org 
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless 

</blockquote>


_______________________________________________ 
Wireless mailing list 
Wireless@wispa.org 
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless 


_______________________________________________
Wireless mailing list Wireless@wispa.org 
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless 
</blockquote>


_______________________________________________ 
Wireless mailing list 
Wireless@wispa.org 
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless 

_______________________________________________
Wireless mailing list
Wireless@wispa.org
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

Reply via email to