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Return to Virginia Business - November 2003

Telecommunications

At Nextel, talk is cheap

Related link:
Marketing shifts into high gear as Nextel becomes NASCAR sponsor

by Garry Kranz
For Virginia Business
November 2003

WEB POINTERS
For additional information on telecommunications:
Nextel Communications
Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association

During the mid-1990s, while other high-tech companies in Northern Virginia inflated the technology bubble, Nextel Communications was sucking wind. Although it had a novel idea — a push-to-talk cellular phone that doubled as a walkie-talkie — the technology behind it failed to live up to expectations. Subscriptions flagged, and Nextel couldn’t crack an already-fragmented market for wireless phone services. Fickle investors, who had given Nextel a huge ride through the equity markets in the early ’90s, bolted for more surefire ventures. “We went from being viewed as a very promising company to one that was on the verge of bankruptcy,” says Tom Kelly, Nextel’s executive vice president and chief operating officer.

What seemed like the end, however, turned out to be a new beginning. As other carriers jostled for consumer cellphone subscribers, Nextel took aim at underserved commercial and enterprise markets. In 1996, it began offering high-end data applications and other advanced communications services on one handset, particularly to corporations with a large mobile work force. To showcase its wares, the company opened a glitzy, high-tech showroom in Reston where it could sell businesses on the advantages of using the wireless gizmos. As Kelly says cryptically: “Soccer moms were not our target.”

The rest, as they say, is history or, more accurately in Nextel’s case, a glimpse of the future. As 2004 approaches, Nextel still dominates the walkie-talkie market — even though competition is heating up. Along the way, it’s reshaped the competitive landscape insofar as winning business customers goes. Armed with a much-improved Direct Connect walkie-talkie cell phone and a coast-to-coast “all-digital” wireless network, Nextel has cut a swath through the Fortune 500. The company boasts of serving 95 percent of America’s largest companies, with nearly 90 percent of its 12 million subscribers originating from within the business sector.

Analysts say Reston-based Nextel used innovative product development to capture an untapped business market. In 2001, for example, it unveiled the first mobile phone in the U.S. capable of running Java-based computer applications. Nextel took a novel approach to pursuing the business segment, says Adam Guy, a research analyst with the Yankee Group in Boston. “Rather than mass-market to enterprise customers, which is what other carriers did, Nextel differentiated itself by taking its push-to-talk (walkie-talkie) integration and successfully marketing it to specific business segments with specific business needs.”

Indeed, the company went after core business segments with vigor. Higher revenue growth and job creation have followed. In June, the company posted its fifth consecutive quarter of profitability, including revenue of $2.6 billion — a 19 percent jump from the previous year. In the past year, Nextel has increased its work force by 13 percent to 15,000 employees, including 3,500 people in Virginia. The company also is scouting for 300,000 square feet of additional office space in Northern Virginia.

A series of catchy advertising campaigns have made Direct Connect into a national brand. Nextel has even upset the apple cart in the world of sports marketing, taking over the title sponsorship of NASCAR from tobacco giant R.J. Reynolds, which held the spot for 32 years. (See story on page 22) Beginning in 2004, NASCAR’s Winston Cup series becomes known as the Nextel Cup.

Nextel also leads the pack in two critical metrics watched by all wireless companies: revenue per subscriber and customer churn. Through the second quarter of this year, Nextel’s average monthly service revenue per subscriber was $69 per month. And its “customer churn,” which reflects how quickly customers leave Nextel for competitors, is an industry-low 1.6 percent. That suggests Nextel is doing a good job of acquiring customers as well as convincing them to buy additional services, says Guy.

Nextel offers Direct Connect walkie-talkie service as a standard feature on all its phones. Customers also can purchase service plans that tack on additional options, including text messaging and wireless Internet access. The walkie-talkie feature was first unveiled in 1992, when the company was known as Fleet Call Inc. and based in Washington, D.C. Fleet Call, launched in 1987 by Morgan O’Brien and Mark R. Warner, Virginia’s current governor, went public in 1992. A year later, the company name was changed to Nextel. O’Brien serves as Nextel’s vice chairman. It’s unclear if Warner still holds stock in the company, since he put most of his assets into a blind trust before taking office in 2002.

For more than a decade, Nextel’s hold on the market remained unchallenged, but lately its success is attracting challengers. Verizon Wireless launched its own push-to-talk phone in August, and other providers plan similar rollouts. Kelly says Nextel will parlay the competition into more innovative product development. “We’ve always had competition. What makes a difference for us are the services we deliver and the network we use to deliver them,” Kelly says.
That network, which is entirely digital and spans both U.S. coasts, enables Nextel to offer long-range walkie-talkie service without relying on the public telecommunications infrastructure, which providers can neither manage nor improve. A humorous Nextel TV ad features a Monty Python-like spokesman who tries to convince viewers that messages are carried from point to point by bionic homing pigeons. Humor aside, Nextel’s network involves sophisticated switching technology and specialized mobile radio spectrum, known as SMR. The network, based on Motorola’s integrated Enhanced Digital Network, bypasses heavily trafficked public telecom networks. Data is sent using digital radio signals, rather than a series of interconnected wires, hubs and routers. That means data packets don’t need to be broken down and reassembled at the end of their digital journey. The result, according to Nextel officials, is transmissions that are crisper and instantaneous. Nextel completed a national rollout for Direct Connect in July, a month ahead of schedule.

The service has a lot of satisfied users. Howard Berger, who runs Stafford Systems, a carpentry and construction company in Stafford County, outfitted his work force with Direct Connect phones. Foremen, superintendents and key skilled tradesmen use Nextel to bid on jobs, order materials and keep tabs on project development. Not only that, but most of Berger’s customers and suppliers also are on the Nextel network, which speeds communications and reduces voice mails and faxes. “This is a tool that gives us an advantage. It’s our belief that the first one (to bid on a job) gets the prize, so the sooner we can respond to a customer, the better,” says Berger.

Nextel’s intense focus on business customers is embodied in the gleaming 5,800-square-foot Nextel Center of Excellence, which opened in Reston in October 2002. Featuring interactive exhibits, a plush multimedia theater, and numerous wall-mounted plasma screens, the center is used to woo potential customers and to train salespeople about new products. Companies like Coca-Cola Bottling Corp. and Waste Management Inc. have visited the facility to get hands-on demonstrations. “It’s a place where executives can come and see the wireless products we have for enterprise use. Many people still think of us as just a cellphone company, but we do a lot more,” says Danielle Schweisthal, manager for the center.

Nextel also works with strategic partners, including Sun Microsystems, Electronic Data Systems, IBM, Motorola Inc. and others to customize wireless devices for specific industries. They include a device equipped with chip sets for global positioning systems, which Nextel sells to customers in transportation and logistics. Nextel developed a special wireless two-way radio, used by public safety professionals, that operates even if E911 networks are interrupted. Sales people use Nextel’s wireless credit-card scanners to close deals in the field. Other companies equip their mobile workers with wireless bar-code scanners to update inventory from remote locations.

Things weren’t always this rosy, however. When Kelly arrived in 1996, Nextel was on life support. Its walkie-talkie technology had failed to take off as hoped — Kelly says it “failed miserably” — which stalled revenue growth and relegated Nextel to being a regional carrier. Another problem was huge debt, incurred when Nextel began acquiring massive amounts of mobile radio spectrum from carriers and other companies in the late 1980s.

The plan had been to use the radio spectrum to build a vast wireless network that stretched the country. But it wasn’t until 1995 that Nextel began executing its strategy, thanks largely to $1.1 billion invested by wireless pioneer Craig O. McCaw, who in effect became its largest shareholder. McCaw wanted a fresh challenge. A year earlier, he had sold his cellular-and-paging company, McCaw Cellular Communications, to AT&T Wireless Services for $11.5 billion. The company became known as AT&T Cellular.

Shortly after McCaw’s investment, a new slate of management, including Kelly and President and CEO Tim Donahue, came aboard to right the ship. (Donahue recently inked a deal to remain at the helm through 2006). Donahue came to Nextel in 1996 from AT&T Wireless, where he occupied several executive positions. Kelly also had been with AT&T Wireless as vice president of marketing immediately prior to joining Nextel in 1996. The pieces then were in place to start fresh. Management knew it had an ace in the hole: even though Nextel’s initial push-to-talk phone was flawed, the company had no competitors. It had managed to corner the market, even with an inferior product.

Nextel got Motorola, which had exchanged its SMR spectrum for an equity stake in Nextel in 1995, to rework the walkie-talkie technology. Then it went after high-value customers in fields such as construction, financial services and real estate, among others. And, it focused on productivity savings rather than the convenience of wireless. It also took two bold steps: eliminating roaming fees and offering national calling plans with standard pricing.

Meanwhile, the company continues to invest in its network. Nextel is available in 293 of the 300 largest U.S. markets, a geographic span encompassing 242 million people. “From day one, we targeted businesses vs. consumers and Direct Connect had a lot to do with that decision. We understood how companies were using Direct Connect for a lot of their internal communications with staff, suppliers and customers,” Kelly says.

So powerful is Nextel’s network that it has been a flashpoint for controversy in recent years. The network has been linked to causing public-safety interference in the 800 MHz band, an issue the Federal Communications Commission has yet to resolve. To diminish interference caused by its network, Nextel wants the FCC to restructure the 800 MHz band into two parts, one for cellular systems and one for public safety systems. A coalition of wireless/cellular companies, public safety agencies, and other businesses, including competitors Verizon Wireless and Cingular Wireless, are vehemently opposed. “Nextel’s plan is too complicated, too costly and takes too long to complete. It also gives away billions of dollars worth of public property to a single company,” says Tom Wheeler, president and CEO of the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association, an industry group based in Washington, D.C.

Despite the opposition, Nextel is plowing forward with no apologies. It has been paying off debt — $4.3 billion since the first quarter of 2002. That solidified plans to roll out its national Direct Connect network, says Guy. “Nextel always was an enterprise player, even in the mid-1990s. But it was only after buying spectrum that Nextel was able to put together a nationwide network. And that’s been a key attraction for businesses.”

The accolades continue to pour in. Nextel was ranked No. 1 in Business Week’s Tech Info survey for 2003. It was named top mobile communications company for 2003 by Frost & Sullivan, a New York City consulting and market research firm.

Still, success can be a double-edged sword. Now larger wireless competitors are chatting up their own walkie-talkie services. Verizon Wireless launched its nationwide walkie-talkie product in August, along with an advertising campaign that touted its network as superior. Nextel responded by filing suit in federal court in New York City in September, alleging that Verizon’s ads make “false and unsubstantiated claims” and seeking damages. To date, Verizon has made no public comment on the suit.

Regardless of the legal wrangling, Nextel knows lawsuits won’t chase away the competition. AT&T Wireless and Sprint PCS will join the fray, with each planning to introduce walkie-talkie phones soon. Although Nextel should continue its stranglehold on the walkie-talkie market in the near term, its grip no doubt will be tested.

Return to Virginia Business - November 2003


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