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Sprint Nextel faces challenges
as it combines technology, customers and culture
by Brett Lieberman
for
Virginia Business
November 2005
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The first large-scale test for the $35 billion merger
between Sprint Corp. and Reston-based Nextel Communications
came one night in early September. As the last customers
walked out of 1,600 Sprint and Nextel stores, employees
scrambled to transform the public face of the newly combined
company.
Overnight, they hung 10,000 banners
showing Sprint’s
new logo over Nextel’s black and yellow colors.
Nearly half of the 80,000 employees took home new uniforms.
Plus, the company distributed 16,000 new nametags and
more than 100 million brochures, displays and other printed
materials proclaiming its post-merger slogan: “Yes
you can.”
Driving home this message is a massive rebranding campaign,
which has been running full tilt since the merger was
approved in early August. It includes television, Internet
and print advertising plus sponsorships of NASCAR and
the National Football League. For added punch, Sprint
Nextel will sponsor the heavily watched Super Bowl half-time
show next year.
To avoid the snafus of other
large mergers (particularly last year’s combination of Cingular and AT&T
Wireless which had consumers grumbling about an $18 activation
fee), planners at Sprint Nextel tried to anticipate every
detail. From Sprint’s Overland Park, Kan., headquarters,
they spent months analyzing issues large and small, down
to the number of new logos that would be needed.
While not flawless, the carefully
choreographed transformation has gone smoothly so far,
say analysts. But the true
tests of whether the merger will work lie ahead. Despite
upbeat talk about growth and opportunities, the merger — which
created the country’s third-largest wireless carrier — faces
tough challenges. While integrating its two cultures,
Sprint Nextel must remain competitive against its larger
rivals, Cingular and Verizon Wireless, in a saturated
cell phone market while at the same time rolling out
new handsets and technologies to retain its nearly 45
million subscribers.
WILL
THE MERGER WORK?
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Pros:
-
Companies
expect to save $14.5 billion due to joint operations
- Merger frees up money for expansion and capital
investments
Cons:
- Employees worry about job cuts
- Settlement of affiliate lawsuits
expected to cost billions
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An even more difficult and costly
task will be dealing with the different technology
the two telecoms used to
build their existing networks. “There are certainly
some great opportunities but some big issues as well.
Nextel is on a very different technology than Sprint,” cautions
Lisa Pierce, a vice president and telecom analyst with
Forrester Research of Cambridge, Mass.
Pierce gives Sprint Nextel a
one-year grace period to succeed. Ideally, the company
will use this opportunity
to gain on Cingular while that company works out the
kinks of its merger. Sprint Nextel also needs to dislodge
the perception that Verizon’s coverage is superior.
Otherwise, it runs the risk of becoming the perennial
third player among top carriers, says Pierce.
Another complication swelling
the merger’s price
tag is legal challenges from some of the 10 affiliates
that sell Sprint and Nextel phone service. Some have
filed lawsuits alleging violation of noncompete agreements,
pointing out that the merged company rivals the smaller
telecom affiliates in some markets. One affiliate, Gulf
Coast Wireless in Baton Rouge, agreed to drop a lawsuit
last month after Sprint Nextel agreed to acquire it for
$287.5 million. Buying out all the affiliates and resolving
contractual issues could cost $12 billion to $15 billion,
according to some estimates.
SPRINT
NEXTEL AT A GLANCE
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• Market
cap: $69.6 billion
• Annual revenue: (for year ending Dec. 31, 2004 on a pro-forma basis)
$40.8 billion
• Employees: More than 80,000 nationwide
• (5,600 in Maryland, D.C. and Virginia)
• Number of subscribers: 45 million
• Primary products: Wireless, local and long distance
• Stock symbol: S (NYSE)
• Headquarters: Reston and Overland Park, Kan.
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For now, though, Sprint Nextel
is enjoying a honeymoon of sorts. It recently raised
its target of post-merger
savings by 20 percent to $14.5 billion and expects to
pick up 1.2 million new subscribers in the third quarter. “What
the merger really offers to the customer is more choice,” says
Christine Pantoya, a Sprint Nextel regional vice president
for field sales whose territory includes the Eastern
Seaboard north of West Virginia.
The new company plans to woo
new and existing consumers with flexible pricing plans,
which allow unused minutes
to carry over to the next month. Sprint’s traditional
base has been among consumers, while Nextel has been
popular with small businesses, government agencies and
businesses with service workers in the field. With the
merger, the company aims to extend its reach with small
businesses, who enjoy Nextel’s walkie-talkie handsets,
and corporate users, who want a single vender to provide
BlackBerrys to executives and push-to-talk handsets for
field workers.
In other words, customers can
have it all — with
a single company. At least that’s the theme of
a fall advertising blitz that has been plastered over
television.
While millions are watching during the Super Bowl, the
company plans to showcase some of its technology. In
October it rolled out NFL Mobile, allowing fans to tap
into sports programming via their wireless phones. For
$5.99 a month, customers on the nationwide Sprint PCS
network and the Nextel National Network can get an NFL
television channel, exclusive video and audio highlights
from NFL films, and team/player scores, stats and schedules.
The long-term prospects for the
Sprint/Nextel marriage may depend on how well the combined
company is able to
smooth over differences. Nextel’s Integrated Digital
Enhanced Network (iDEN) technology powers its “push-to-talk” phones.
They’re wildly popular among service industries
and government agencies because of their easy ability
to connect a group of users. Sprint’s network runs
on the more commonly deployed and faster CDMA (Code Division
Multiple Access) technology. It offers some services
that iDEN cannot, such as high-speed wireless data.
Sprint Nextel will be able to expand its combined network,
which covers 80 percent of the country, by co-locating
transmission equipment. Sprint, for example, can add
CDMA transmitters to Nextel tower sites to expand its
reach where coverage is weak, such as urban markets.
Yet, despite such opportunities
for expansion, the blending of the company’s differing technologies creates
the biggest and costliest challenge. “There is
a reason that Nextel decided to merge with Sprint,” says
Pierce.
Without the merger, Nextel — a small player
on its own in the wireless market — would have
been forced to spend billions of dollars upgrading
its iDEN network from frequency bands in the 800 and
900
MHz spectrum to the 1900 MHz used by Sprint. As part
of a deal with the Federal Communications Commission
to give up its lower band frequencies for use by first
responders, Nextel would have had no choice but to
make the costly switch on its own.
Sprint plans to support the iDEN
technology until at least 2010, but is expected to
begin moving customers
to Sprint’s CDMA network in the next couple years.
That could prove tricky.
If Sprint Nextel mishandles the
migration, it risks disenfranchising its Nextel base
of small-business customers.
They have been among the most loyal in the mobile phone
market, and their monthly bills average $70, among the
highest industry revenues per phone. “One of the
more important things for Sprint to do is take Nextel’s
knowledge about push-to-talk and make its CDMA technology
work as much like it,” says Pierce.
“Yes,
it can be done, but it’s never been done before.”
One downside of mergers is that they typically bring
layoffs as companies shed overlapping units. Sprint
Nextel officials say some reductions are likely, particularly
in the executive ranks. Some thinning has already occurred
as the top 1,500 executives have been named, and analysts
predict more to come. “It’s what happened
when long distance companies merged in the ‘80s,” says
telecom analyst Jeff Kagan. “It leaves numbers
of workers with a job cut.” The combined company operates with a split headquarters.
Reston is home to its executive headquarters, which keeps
the company near government regulators and public-sector
agencies. Meanwhile, operations stay in Kansas.
Cuts or shifts at the retail
level are not likely to occur soon as store performance
and other factors are
weighed. Company officials, who like to cite the example
of gas stations selling the same brand on both sides
of a street, caution that stores won’t necessarily
close because there is a Nextel and Sprint store in the
same mall or across the street from one another. Yet
a key difference is that Exxon stations located across
the street from each other usually aren’t owned
by the corporation.
Sprint and Nextel executives
are trying to avoid the mistakes of past mergers as
they combine systems. The
company has no plans to force subscribers into new
price plans before their contracts expire. Instead,
consumers
are already sampling some of the benefits of the larger
network and both companies’ offerings. For instance,
Sprint and Nextel users call each other free of charge
in-network. Sprint users with plans starting at $49.99
a month will be able to receive free incoming calls,
a feature enjoyed by Nextel subscribers. And, Nextel
subscribers can take advantage of a Sprint plan that
allows them to buy blocks of 100 extra minutes for
$5 rather than incur nasty 40 cents a minute charges
when
they exceed their monthly quotas.
That’s a far better start than charging customers extra fees. If it works,
Sprint Nextel might be paging industry leaders Cingular and Verizon with this
message: “Can you hear me now?”
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