Mobile Tech Today

CIO Today Network Sites:   Top Tech News  |   CIO Today   |   Mobile Tech Today   |   Data Storage Today
News & Product Reviews for Mobile Tech Users
Monday, September 6th 
Home
iPad
Laptops
Mobile Phones
Mobile Gadgets
GPS & RFID
Wireless Connectivity
Wireless Security
Mobile Industry News
MTT Press Releases
 
Free Newsletters
Top CIO News
 
Mobile Tech Today
 

Advertisement
Mobile Industry News

Sprint Nextel Posts First Subscriber Gain in Three Years

Sprint Nextel Posts First Subscriber Gain in Three Years
July 29, 2010 9:32AM

Bookmark and Share
A focus on customer service and retention is being credited as part of the reason Sprint Nextel was able to report a subscriber gain in its latest quarter. Sprint CEO Dan Hesse said the company's improvements and subscriber growth are "foundational," and that Sprint's report also had some help from the launch of its first "4G" phone, the HTC EVO.


Sprint Nextel Corp. said Wednesday that it gained subscribers in its latest quarter, the first such gain in three years, as it continued to improve customer Relevant Products/Services service and retention.

However, it continued to lose the most lucrative customers, those who sign two-year contracts, and posted a wider loss for its second quarter due to tax effects.

Sprint shares rose 6 cents, or 1.5 percent, to $4.90 in morning trading. In pre-market trading, shares were up as much as 10 percent before investors fully digested the numbers.

Sprint gained a net 111,000 subscribers in the April to June period, compared to a loss of 257,000 in the same quarter last year. It said it expects to keep adding wireless subscribers for the rest of the year, and reduce the number of contract customers who leave.

Sprint still lost 55,000 subscribers under its own brands -- which include Virgin Mobile and Boost -- in the latest quarter, but made up for that by adding 166,000 wholesale and affiliate subscribers, who buy access to the network through resellers.

It lost 228,000 contract subscribers, a figure much improved from the 991,000 it lost in the same quarter last year.

Sprint has been hemorrhaging subscribers nearly constantly since its 2005 acquisition of Nextel. That network, incompatible with Sprint's, is valued for its walkie-talkie-like push-to-talk function, but is poorly suited to smart phones, and more than a million subscribers have been leaving every year.

The rate of contract subscribers canceling service every month was 1.85 percent in the quarter. That was Sprint's lowest figure ever, though it's still higher than the corresponding figure at AT&T and Verizon Wireless.

Sprint CEO Dan Hesse said the company had some help from the launch of its first "4G" phone, the HTC EVO, which can tap into Clearwire Corp.'s wireless broadband network for faster downloads in some areas. But Sprint would still have achieved subscriber growth without it, he said.

"Our improvements are foundational," Hesse told analysts on a conference call.

In May, the American Customer Satisfaction Index showed that Sprint was the only major wireless carrier to demonstrate a significant improvement from last year, allowing it to catch up to its rivals. The differences between the scores of the four national carriers -- Verizon Wireless, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile USA -- are now statistically insignificant.

Sprint ended the quarter with 48.2 million subscribers.

Its quarterly loss amounted to $760 million, or 25 cents per share. That compares with a loss of $384 million, or 13 cents per share, a year earlier. (continued...)

1  |  2  |  Next Page >

 

© 2010 Associated Press/AP Online under contract with YellowBrix. All rights reserved.

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

Advertisement



 Mobile Industry News
1. FCC Wants Input on Net Neutrality
2. AOL Shuns Bing for Google Search
3. China Requires ID for Cell Numbers
4. HP, Hynix Partner To Develop ReRAM
5. Amazon Eyes Video Subscriptions


advertisement


 Most Popular Articles
1. HP Is Looking for a New CEO After Hurd Sex Scandal
2. HP Will Offer Tablets Running Windows 7 and webOS
3. Tablet Rivals May Face a Smaller Apple iPad
4. New Droid 2 Could Be Snubbed in Favor of Droid X
5. Facebook's New Places Feature Could Hurt Foursquare


advertisement

 Related Topics  Latest News & Special Reports

  Samsung Sees Fast Galaxy S Growth
  Verizon Offers Prepaid Data Plans
  Nvidia Shows New GPUs for Laptops
  Spammers Take Over Apple's Ping
  Free Wireless Service Plan Rejected

 Technology Marketplace
Compliance
Stand out from other IS Professionals and increase your earning potential.®.
Manage limitless content today—read EMC’s 15-minute guide to ECM.
 
Data Storage
Isilon scale-out storage is simple. Simple is smart.
 
Digital Life
IT PROS: Receive $10 in rewards to complete a 15 min. survey.
 
Enterprise I.T.
Stand out from other IS Professionals and increase your earning potential.®.
IT PROS: Receive $10 in rewards to complete a 15 min survey.
 
Enterprise Software
Manage limitless content today—read EMC’s 15-minute guide to ECM.
 
Mobile Gadgets
White Paper The Motorola ES400: Desktop power in a pocket-sized device
 
Mobile Industry News
The Motorola ES400: Desktop power in a pocket-sized device.
 
Mobile Phones
The Motorola ES400: Desktop power in a pocket-sized device.
 
Navigation
Mobile Tech Today
Home/Top News | iPad | Laptops | Mobile Phones | Mobile Gadgets | GPS & RFID | Wireless Connectivity
Wireless Security | Mobile Industry News | MTT Press Releases
Also visit these Enterprise Technology Sites
Top Tech News | CIO Today | Mobile Tech Today | Data Storage Today

Services:
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | Free Whitepapers | XML/RSS Feed

About CIO Today Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Services for PR Pros (In partnership with NewsFactor) | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2010 Mobile Tech Today. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo. Member of Accuserve Ad Network.