It never fails, DSL companies complain, often bitterly, about competitive disadvantage. The regional Baby Bells have often stretched the boundaries of what the FCC and courts have mandated, making it tougher for dedicated, independent, DSL companies to enter the marketplace. In my opinion, these turf wars which have taken place for years behind the scenes in server closets and local telephone depots, have been key to keeping business, and even residential, DSL services uncompetitive. Who is the big loser? The customer! By squeezing out the “new players,” the Bells have again tried, largely successfully, to keep the marketplace to themselves. Of course, this often translates to the customer receiving poor service and higher prices. As a consultant, I have been hurt by the tumult.
I am not a communications consultant but that doesn’t stop my customers from asking me my opinion on solutions to their internet bandwidth needs. Over the years, I have recommended a number of good companies with often superior technology and pricing, only to find that they are leaving our market, declaring bankruptcy (riches to rags in a mere matter of months), or otherwise fail to supply “the product” which was promised. The list of names on the DSL roadside are too numerous to mention..... All of this has led me to very reluctantly make some basic recommendations when asked for broadband solutions for my small office clients in the middle Tennessee area: when possible, stick with a “big name company” such as BellSouth or Verizon who has the financial backing and infrastructure to deliver-- albeit sometimes slowly and impersonally-- the bandwidth and uptime reliability they promise. Better yet, small companies are often better served going with a cable provider for their high speed internet needs if their office is already wired with the proper coax cabling. Companies such as Comcast typcially charge small businesses a higher rate than a comparable residential service, but the payback is typically more bandwidth for the money (even at the “small business” rate) and a more stable connection than even the “big DSL players” can or will provide. Of course DSL and cable have other issues which can impact your decision. Security, variable bandwidth (cable speeds can vary dramatically based on overall usage. Downloading that big Microsoft Service Pack after school lets out and every teenager in the region has logged onto their IM (Instant Messaging Client) isn’t normally a great idea), and other factors a knowledgable small business consultant or networking expert can help you understand need to be considered. Still, in the majority of cases, cable is the way to go especially if you are in a SOHO (small office home office) environment.
What if you can’t get cable? What if your commitment to voice lines makes working with one of the big regional service providers impossible or impossibly expensive? You may be in for some real challenges as a recent install with a client illustrates. What follows is a real world illustration of the challenges small business faces. First of all, the truth is a smaller DSL company must still rely on local Baby Bell techs for several aspects of completing the circuit. The result, be prepared for a long wait and multiple visits. In the case of this install from order placement to completed line was six weeks (XO claims the average install in this area should take thirty to thirty-five days, if this is true we just wound up on the wrong side of their bell curve in this instance). Were cable an option, installation could have been completed within a week’s time (based on my years of experience with this area’s local cable provider, Comcast).
Problems begin with sign up. XO will not, that is to say they refuse, take a DSL order over the telephone! Perplexing given the fact XO also sells voice lines (which is the very reason my client couldn’t economically use BellSouth for their DSL needs). You must order through their website, hit “Enter,” and pray. In this instance at least, there was no follow up contact whatsoever, none! The first human contact was in the form of an installer from another company showing up unannounced at my client’s office. This hapless soul had a work order instructing him to run the DSL line to the demarc (a location typically in or near a wiring closet containing inbound voice lines and other wiring the typical small business person hopes never to actually have to see or deal with directly. He performed his job per the work order and disappeared. My clients understandably scratched their collective heads and said “now what?” To which I responded, “this is only Act II, hang in there.”
The next installer’s objective was to set up the (free after rebate) modem/router. Again he showed up without an appointment and went to work. The install proceeded but he located this piece of equipment on a wall near the demarc in my client’s warehouse. This location was some one hundred feet (approximate) from the office area. When I saw the location of this equipment on the wall I scratched my head and wondered how XO expected us to use this circuit. I wondered why they wouldn’t run the line into the office area which very obviously was the necessary end point. Of course, the online sign up didn’t ask for specific locations and no one ever contacted me or my client prior to actual installation to get clarification of this seemingly self-evident issue. This led to further delay and a follow up installation visit to move the router to a usable location. To the company’s credit, a local representative did finally make contact and had this follow-up visit “expedited.”
You might think this story is nearing a conclusion. Not quite. Neither tech actually tested the circuit before leaving! I had actually tried the circuit while the modem was located in the back of the warehouse using one of my laptops without success. I didn’t worry at that point (my mistake) knowing a follow up visit was required to move the modem into the office space. When I went to the office to configure their computers with the DSL line and do the actual networking, I was greeted with this problem. I searched for paperwork to show me configuration information for the circuit. I wanted exterenal IP Address and subnet mask, DNS server information, and some other standard network information which is normally supplied by a service provider doing these kind of installs. No joy. I then searched for a Tech Support Number. No joy! Folks, when a communications company, actually a telephone company at heart, doesn’t provide Tech Support numbers making it possible, if not easy, to talk to them, you know there is trouble. After a call to directory assistance, I finally began the odyessy of XO’s voice system. It took ninety (90) minutes on hold (including a disconnect from their system after thirty-five (35) minutes and two entry level support staff to simply get a Trouble Ticket! No solution. No serious checking of the circuit from their end, just a Trouble Ticket and the promise that the issue would be reviewed by second tier engineers over the next twenty-four hours. At this point I was a bit frustrated and my client was understandably rolling his eyes and wondering just how much longer, and how much more expensive, it might be to get an “always on” internet connection up and running for himself and his staff.
The next follow up call from XO’s engineers was productive. This individual reviewed the Trouble Ticket and determined the company had assigned an improper IP address, as well as wrong DNS server information, which was causing the link failure. In other words, the company has misconfigured the DSL circuit on their end. You might think checking out this information should be performed as part of the first call for help. I would agree. For whatever reasons, this was not the case. Grateful that the line was finally running, we said goodbye to tech support. Another mistake.....
One of the primary reasons for getting a DSL connection in this office, was for the company to have access to email without tying up their precious voice lines to obtain a dial-up connection. This is often one of the compelling uses for a broadband connection (for small business or in a residential setting). You would think that a DSL provider would realize this fact. In the spirit of bureacracy at its finest, or worst, depending on your definition, XO requires additonal steps, and hold time, to obtain configuration information to complete this task. I will spare the less technical readers the details, but suffice it to say, in order to minimize SPAM (please don’t laugh) ISPs require authentification for outgoing email traffic. You must use your internet service provider’s SMTP server to send outgoing mail. In order to configure an email client such as Microsoft Outlook or Outlook Express you need your company’s SMTP server information. Of course obtaining this from XO required another follow up call to “Customer Care--” 30 minutes on hold later I began a conversation with the first of three tech support individuals, including a “round trip” from Gateway services, to get proper SMTP information. This information should be a basic part of the “leave behind” sheet containing vital configuration information for the supplied circuit. This is something BellSouth and others have grown to understand, why can’t the smaller companies match, no beat, the bigger, presumably less nimble service providers, in the areas of Customer Service and information sharing? You DSL companies looking for competitive points of difference, here are a couple of areas which can allow you to excel or fall by the wayside!
On a final note, I made an online inquiry approximately two and a half weeks after placing the initial order inquiring as to who our “Customer Care Support Contact” is (i.e. name and ‘phone number). It took over a week to get a response (remember this company insists on communicating with their DSL customer base online). And after a week what was their response...? “They can’t respond to a request for contact information at this time.” Wow.
The circuit is up and running. It is faster than dial-up but worlds slower than cable. The DSL circuit is running at 144 kpbs while regional business cable is offering local connection Speeds: Up to 6.0 Mbps downstream, 768 Kbps upstream at comparable monthly rates. There are lots of lessons, technology and business related, to take from this experience as a consumer and as a service provider. XO is certainly not the only DSL provider failing to live up to customer expectations. Sadly, I here of instances like this all too frequently while at the same time, legal and market forces are at work limiting our options for high quality broadband connectivity. The world is literally leaving us in the electronic dust. Other countries already have infrastructure in place allowing for much faster “broadband connectivity” at comparable market rates to what we are now paying (but this issue will be left for another post). It is time for companies who still have a chance to offer real alternatives to get their respective market driven houses in order before we all vote with our pocket books and it is too late.
As always, I am interested in hearing what you have to say on this subject.
I am a hugeTIVO fan. I purchased my first DVR (digital video recorder) several years ago. Since then I have purchased several as gifts, proselytised the virtues of the TIVO “way of life” to many others who have become converts, and purchased a second unit for use elsewhere in my home. My personal set up uses a home office wireless network to allow communication between the devices. There are other great reasons for adding your TIVO to your network but more on that later.
(Before I forget, shameless plug. If you elect to buy a TIVO DVR as a result of this blog, feel free to add my email address (rwachs at pcmgconsulting.com) as the referral. The company’s TIVO Rewards program is great and it costs you nothing to let them know who got you looking. You enter this referral information when you sign up for the monthly or lifetime service not at the time you purchase your system.) The TIVO Rewards Program actually represents a means by which this company can grow through granular marketing. This is a program worth participating in should you decide this technology benefits you and your family. But I digress.
A few weeks ago, I casually flipped through the “What’s On TIVO” listings to find something to peruse for a few minutes after a long day. As I scanned the listings, which are filled with a diverse array of shows ranging from my daughter’s varied tastes to a variety of shows I find of interest, something on the screen immediately caught my eye. The TIVO screen allows you to quickly determine a show’s status using a number of icons. The system is designed to be intuitive and is amazingly simple to grasp from the very first use which is one of many reasons TIVO continues to be the defacto generic term in our lexicon when it comes to PVRs (Personal Video Recorders).
The circular icons to the left of the show descriptions indicate whether or not the show can be deleted to accommodate new material. TIVOs can capture a lot of (non-HDTV) content depending on your model’s hard disk size and the recording quality you select. Perhaps it is because my eyes have grown somewhat less discerning through years of staring at computer monitors, but I findTIVO’s Medium quality setting adequate to capture all but fast moving sports events and a select few cinematic movies worthy of close scrutiny.
While scrolling through my listings, a red, blinking, flag, immediately caught my eye. It was listed next to a drama series, Lost, which has found its way onto my Season Pass listings. When I clicked to explore the listing, there was a notification that this show could be erased at any time between now and the following evening. In essance , I was informed that I could not in fact “time shift” this show outside of the proscribed window dictated by the show’s controlling authorities! The content management flag also adds some code which makes transfer to VHS, DVD, or other media “impossible.”
.I cannot wait to see the faces of the Hollywood gang when some sixteen year old manages to break this restriction and publishes it on the internet for all to download! When will this group learn that customers are clamoring for TIVOs,Ipod s and other devices to allow greater flexibility in content viewing, not less? The fact that the popular DeCiss software program created by a young Norwegian teenager is being used by countless thousands to make legitimate backups of DVDs should tell the movie makers, “another mousetrap” isn’t the answer to their piracy concerns.
Almost immediately, the TIVO community was abuzz about the new flag. The company issued a statement explaining that the use of this flag on commercial programming (such as ABC’s Lost) was a “mistake.” Publicly, this flag is being positioned for use only with “premium content” such as PPV (pay per view) material. I am skeptical. If we are not vigilent , the day may (very soon) come when Hollywood tries to use technology to mitigate the value of digital video recorders in a way they were unsuccessful in doing decades ago during the birth of the VCR. What may scare you even more is that our current legal rights to “time shift” shows stems from a legal ruling made by jurists.
Don’t think that if this content management flag gains traction, the music industry won’t take note! Imagine purchasing online songs through Apple Itunes Music Store or MusicMatch Jukebox only to discover you aren’t allowed to copy your legally purchased songs to CDs for listening in your car. There are digital rights management tools which place some restrictions on how you can use your downloaded music. There are also numerous services through the reborn Napster Music Service which allow you a vast music library on a per month rental basis. In essence , your music disappears if you miss a payment. The digital content flag could allow a host of new restrictions placed on content you purchase!
Even more recently, Apple has rocked the world of commercial TV distribution by developing a distribution system with ABC (notice how this network keeps coming up in this article!?). Popular shows such as Lost and Desperate Housewives are going to be sold on a per episode basis for viewing on the company’s newest video Ipod . If this catches on, look out! Local television affiliates will lose a key, young demographic audience and finger pointing is sure to emerge between Apple, ABC, and other content providers less willing to give up today’s business distribution model.
I remain convinced with every passing day the complexity of technology and its interactions with our daily lives makes decisions made as to the legal use of these tools increasingly difficult by our court system. Too often, we are asking intelligent, largely reasonable, judges and juries to evaluate technological resources which they have only a passing understanging of in their “everyday” use and application. The next time you see a red blinking flag on your television, pay close attention, you may be the one lost if your show happens to be deleted before you have had an opportunity to click your TIVO remote.
PVRs are just now becoming mainstream. I have pleaded with friends and clients to at least try to understand how these boxes can allow you to control the quality and type of content you view in a way that is radically different for yesterday’s VCR. (TIVO and its ilk make programming far easier than a VCR. How manyVCRs still blink “12:00” to this day because the unit’s owners never mastered the art of programming these boxes?) Microsoft’s excellent Media Center Edition, not to mention Myth TV for the more technologically advanced, promise to bring thePVR “revolution” to a critical mass of consumers over the next couple of years. Let’s hope Hollywood doesn’t kill the golden goose in their zeal to protect their content from the very audience they claim to be trying to hold on to!
As always, I am interested in your thoughts on this issue.....