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nadim
07-27-2011, 03:48 PM
http://www.cbc.ca/fp/story/2011/07/27/5167098.html

Since its inception, Wind Mobile has set itself apart from “The Big Guys” in Canada’s wireless market by being the bearer of unlimited cell phone services to long-suffering consumers.
Executives from the startup operator have condemned the labyrinth of tiered price plans sold by incumbents Rogers, Bell and Telus that more often than not come chained to multiyear contracts, while extolling on its own unbound all-you-can-gorge plans.
According to an analyst report Wednesday, all that is about to end.
The startup is aiming to move “upstream” this fall, a note published by Canaccord Genuity says, “with an emphasis on postpaid contract plans.”
According to the note, published a day after the Toronto securities dealer had lunch with Wind management, the carrier will begin subsidizing smartphone sales. That means customers will be required to sign contracts to to pay off the device over the life of the term. Sound familiar?
Canaccord Genuity analysts say the carrier, which has attracted more than 300,000 customers as it has rolled out across the country since December 2009, may also seek to implement tiered “caps” on its unlimited mobile Internet plans — a move other carriers have taken recently amid claims of network congestion.
Wind currently sells unlimited data plans for $45 a month or a $10 add-on for voice plans, but “management acknowledged that with the explosion of wireless data usage, tiered pricing may be inevitable over time,” analyst Dvai Ghose said. [Eds note: Wind sells tiered pricing on data already but unlike incumbent operators, sells all-you-can-eat plans as well.]
The moves — if implemented — are likely aimed at taking greater share among the core customer bases of Rogers Communications Inc., BCE’s Bell Mobility and Telus Corp., which are increasingly comprised of smartphone users on tiered plans attached to term contracts meant to pay down a device subsidy. Wind would almost certainly maintain lower pricing than incumbent rates, while locking in its own postpaid base.
Wind is one of a handful of newcomers challenging the incumbent operators, which has proved more difficult than initally thought for it and others, like Mobilicity and Public Mobile, which launched last year. But armed with more financial might and legal certainty than ever, the carrier is indeed signaling intentions to step up efforts to outlast others and carve out a long-term business.
“I’m still working on the business plan to ensure we’re clearly differentiated from the other new entrants and clearly differentiated from the incumbents,” chairman Anthony Lacavera told this newspaper last month. “What we don’t want to do is go with a ‘me too’ offering.”


Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/fp/story/2011/07/27/5167098.html#ixzz1TLC0DVD3

Silver Arrow
07-28-2011, 08:33 PM
I would like to see wind put in 2 year contracts. Contracts are NOT bad as long as they are decent. 2 years is decent 3 isn't, i just hope they don't get rid of the unlimited data

0defaced
07-28-2011, 09:16 PM
*ahem*

f**k that!

:)

this is going to KILL Wind as a whole, they need to hang onto subscribers as long as they can......desperate measures. reminds me of Fido's thought process way back when.....

mattt33
07-29-2011, 09:08 PM
It has been confirmed by Tony himself - NO, Wind will NOT be implementing contracts.

What they will be doing is increasing the amount able to be put on the tab for a new device.

This is totally different from being on contract.

0defaced
07-29-2011, 09:21 PM
It has been confirmed by Tony himself - NO, Wind will NOT be implementing contracts.

What they will be doing is increasing the amount able to be put on the tab for a new device.

This is totally different from being on contract.


HA HAHAHAHAHAHA no.....

that's just another word for it. glad to see their shady marketing tacts are working on.....well you.

savbers
08-01-2011, 07:42 AM
HA HAHAHAHAHAHA no.....

that's just another word for it. glad to see their shady marketing tacts are working on.....well you.

A WINDtab is a no-term contract.
It is advertised as such.

Maeltne
08-18-2011, 04:58 PM
Windtab+ is a contract in every way shape and form. This cuts one of the big advantages of Wind in my opinion - but the remaining one - unlimited local calling and data for $29 is still more than enough to make me a customer however.

I still feel the need to complain about their costs however. The Nexus S should be no more than $350, with the WindTab+ bringing it down to somewhere between $50 and $100.

With the Windtab+ on the Nexus S being $396 (and paying ~$100 out of pocket) (reduced by ~$35/year), and wiped out on month 37 - it just seems like there is too big of a chance of paying more than I should have for the phone.

If I really feel strongly about it, I'll just buy a mobilicity phone / koodo phone / kijiji phone. I'm still thinking about it.

nadim
08-22-2011, 04:11 PM
wind tab is dumb. They should lower the prices like Mobilicity did.

Kudos for Mobilicity for lowering prices when clearing instead of introducing a supertab

mattt33
08-26-2011, 12:56 PM
HA HAHAHAHAHAHA no.....

that's just another word for it. glad to see their shady marketing tacts are working on.....well you.

While it may appear to be a 'contract' per se (as apparently all Canadians are used to), it is MUCH different from Robelus' 3 year contracts.

Wind's Tab+ system is a much more 'fair' approach to offering a phone subsidy. You are getting up to a $300 savings on a phone, but should you decide to leave the early cancellation fee does not cost nearly as much as that with Robelus.

Heck, the only reason why Wind is implementing the Tab+ system is because Canadians are so brainwashed into thinking phones should be free. Look all around the world and you will see most people pay FULL PRICE for their phones - and willingly at that.

The subsidy amount claimed by Robelus is inflated anyway - their full price for phones is higher than Wind's to begin with.

MrCrowley
08-26-2011, 01:02 PM
While it may appear to be a 'contract' per se (as apparently all Canadians are used to), it is MUCH different from Robelus' 3 year contracts.

Wind's Tab+ system is a much more 'fair' approach to offering a phone subsidy. You are getting up to a $300 savings on a phone, but should you decide to leave the early cancellation fee does not cost nearly as much as that with Robelus.

Heck, the only reason why Wind is implementing the Tab+ system is because Canadians are so brainwashed into thinking phones should be free. Look all around the world and you will see most people pay FULL PRICE for their phones - and willingly at that.

The subsidy amount claimed by Robelus is inflated anyway - their full price for phones is higher than Wind's to begin with.

Telus also does the same thing, you pay off the phone and your contract is done.

mattt33
08-26-2011, 01:05 PM
Telus also does the same thing, you pay off the phone and your contract is done.

I agree, what Telus is doing is more fair than the continued practices of Rogers and Bell with with regards to how much you owe upon cancelling.

0defaced
08-26-2011, 03:57 PM
same **** different pile?

icing on a mudcake, still makes it a mudcake....

MrCrowley
08-26-2011, 04:16 PM
same **** different pile?

icing on a mudcake, still makes it a mudcake....

Wouldn't icing make that mudcake a little sweeter??? lol:eek:

0defaced
08-26-2011, 06:16 PM
3 years of icing gets pretty boring and gross...lol

mattt33
08-27-2011, 12:11 AM
Well then I suppose that puts the comparison between Wind and Robelus on par in regards to the subsidy goes.

HOWEVER, the one difference is still in pricing - I still think Wind is offering much more value for your money.

Just curious, who do you guys have service with?

I can't wait for Wind service in my area and pay my cancellation fee to Rogers woohooo

0defaced
08-27-2011, 01:44 PM
Mobilicity.