MATT HARTLEY
From Thursday's Globe and Mail Published on Wednesday, Jul. 09, 2008 8:18PM EDT Last updated on Tuesday, Mar. 31, 2009 8:16PM EDT
Rogers Wireless Communications Inc. is learning the hard way that the iPhone isn't your average cellphone and that Apple fans aren't your typical cellphone customers.
After receiving a deluge of calls and e-mails, and watching as more than 50,000 potential customers signed an online petition protesting against the company's iPhone pricing policies, Rogers bowed to mounting pressure and slashed its data fees just two days before Apple Inc.'s coveted touch-screen cellphone arrives in Canada.
While poring over e-mails and transcripts from recorded customer calls, Rogers executives quickly learned that customers don't see the iPhone so much as a traditional cellphone as they do a pocket-sized Internet portal, one that is sought after by tech-savvy users.
In order to recover some of the momentum it had hoped to carry to the launch of the summer's hottest electronic device, Rogers came up with a new plan that more than triples the amount of data a customer can send and receive on an iPhone, making it cheaper to surf the Web and send text and e-mail messages.
Analysts applauded Rogers' efforts, but they could prove to be too little too late for consumers who may have already written off the iPhone because of the controversy.
"Our customers told us they wanted to use this phone in a way that they have not used other phones," said John Boynton, senior vice-president of Rogers Wireless and its chief marketing officer.
"They said their historical usage patterns were not a predictor of what they wanted to do with the iPhone going forward. They said they are fine with the price and with not having unlimited data, but they wanted more data."
It's not the first time Rogers has had to contend with customer discontent. Years ago, Rogers' cable division provoked a consumer revolt when it introduced negative-option billing.
That process charged subscribers for new specialty services unless they opted out.
Under the new plan, customers who purchase an iPhone and sign up for a three-year contract any time before the end of August will be eligible for a $30-a-month data plan giving them access to six gigabytes of data. Rogers previously had charged $100 for a 6-GB plan. The special rate is available not just to iPhone customers, but to any Rogers customer with a 3G smart phone, such as the BlackBerry Bold, which is expected to be released later this summer.
However, Rogers — which along with its subsidiary Fido is the sole Canadian carrier for the iPhone — stopped short of offering an unlimited data plan the way carriers in other countries, such as AT&T Inc. in the United States, have done.
Mr. Boynton said that Rogers' strategy was not unique and that more than 50 per cent of iPhone carriers around the world have opted not to offer an unlimited data plan.
"We're not in favour of unlimited plans," he said. "We believe people should pay for what they use. We think that is fair and we don't think that people who don't use a lot should pay the same price as people who use a lot."
Unlike other carriers who plan to sell the iPhone without a contract, Rogers will not allow its customers to purchase an iPhone — which costs $199 for an 8-GB version and $299 for a 16-GB model — without signing a three-year contract.
But Rogers' new plan is comparable to those being offered by many European carriers and represents a huge step forward for the Canadian cellular marketplace, said Amit Kaminer, an analyst with the telecom consulting firm SeaBoard Group.
"It shows that even old 'Fidos' can learn new tricks," he said. "Rogers has listened to the market. With this price plan … you can actually use the iPhone the way it was meant to be used."
According to Rogers, iPhone users with 6 GB will be able to visit 35,952 Web pages, or send and receive 157,286 e-mails or watch 6,292 minutes of YouTube videos in a month.
In recent days, rumours swirled online about a widening rift between Apple and Rogers, with the Cupertino, Calif.-based computer company reportedly upset over the negative reactions coming from customers over Rogers' plans.
One blog posting on a popular Apple rumour site stated that Apple planned to divert some iPhone shipments that had been earmarked for Rogers to Europe as punishment, leaving some Rogers outlets with as few as 10 iPhones to sell. Another stated that Apple's decision not to sell the iPhone through its own Canadian Apple Store retail outlets was motivated by its displeasure with Rogers.
Rogers has vehemently denied those rumours, saying that its planned inventory levels have not changed and that its allocation and distribution of iPhones remains the same.
"Unfortunately anyone can say anything on a blog or a message board and not be held accountable," Mr. Boynton said. "I wish there was a way of reducing that kind of stuff. But we live in an Internet world where anybody can post anything."
Apple and Rogers are "great partners" and there have been no talks regarding pricing or iPhone shipments in the past week, Mr. Boynton said. The decision not to sell iPhones in Canada's six Apple Store retail outlets was one that was made months ago, he said.
"We have similar partnerships with RIM," he said. "Whether it's RIM or Apple they're in charge of the devices and we're in charge of rate plans. Apple has left this to us to do the right thing and I think we've done the right thing."
A spokesman for Apple in Canada refused to answer questions relating to the company's decision not to sell the iPhone in its own retail store the way it does in the U.S. and some other markets.
Also on Wednesday, Rogers announced it would hold special launch day events to welcome the iPhone to Canada at six Rogers Plus locations and one Fido store which will open at 8 a.m. on Friday with special promotions and free breakfast. Customers will be permitted to purchase a maximum of two iPhones.
Join the Discussion: