Still Virgin?
Branson's promise to break SA's high telecoms costs struck a chord among local consumers
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Branson's promise to break SA's high telecoms costs struck a chord among local consumers
In fact, both Vodacom and MTN hardly ever respond to Virgin's promotions.
I was with VM. I hated it. The network sucks and the call center staff were so incompetent that it gave me heartburn. I ended up porting back to MTN. Now for R230 a month in total I am using my phone much more than I was with VM where my bill was R300 a month with no phone or 3G
Thats strange. On both of our contracts we got a free phone and our bill is much cheaper. I suppose it depends on your calling habits. Most of our calls are during the day whereas yours may be at night where MTN/VC have off peak rates and VM does not.
IMO Virgin partnered with the wrong network - VM&VC would have been a killer combo.
Say whatSays Ikalafeng: "Cell C's positioning is that of an alternative service provider to Vodacom and MTN. An important point is that the distribution networks are so ingrained in favour of monopolists Vodacom and MTN. The market has equally been sewn up by incumbent operators."
Ok, that makes sense and I agree, Virgin basically chose the wrong companies to partner with: CellC is pathetic and its management doesn't know what it is doing; and ABSA has the highest bank charges - not exactly formulas for success IMO.Ikalafeng adds that the factor most critical to the failure of the Virgin brand in SA is its reluctance to deploy its own distribution infrastructure.
"You can't effectively challenge Vodacom when your partner (Cell C) uses a portion of Vodacom's network for distribution purposes. The same applies to Virgin Money, which uses Absa's distribution channel."
Say what
If he had said 'distribution network' - meaning Telkodemonopolies then it might have made some sense, maybe he means the GSM [2.xG] radio networks, i.e. Vodacom and MTN and CellC...?Ok, that makes sense and I agree, Virgin basically chose the wrong companies to partner with: CellC is pathetic and its management doesn't know what it is doing; and ABSA has the highest bank charges - not exactly formulas for success IMO.
Assuming you read the article, Virgin Money's partnership with ABSA was mentioned, the fact that Virgin Money's presence in the financial services sector has not brought about the promised reduction in bank charges, was also mentioned. Virgin Money might be cheap, but that was not what I was commenting on.So what does it matter that ABSA has the highest bank charges? Virgin Money is still cheap...
He's dead right. There is a strong duopoly in existence and the late young newcomer that is Cell-C was always going to struggle, especially where the regulator is so ineffectual. Perhaps if Vodacom gave up its links to Telkom and the giant former UK monopoly, Vodafone, then other players would get a chance to compete.
I find Virgin SA also to be completely different in character to their UK parent. In fact I wish they would choose an image and stick to it, promises and all. They make claims to be different in many respects, but end up copying the worst aspects of local networks.
By choosing to stay with the simplest technologies, they end up offering the weakest & slowest distribution connection, namely Vodacom's GPRS.
AFAIK CellC is supposedly using its own [limited coverage] network in urban areas, and only roams on Vodacom's network in rural areas - something to do with the roaming agreement - that CellC was supposed to rollout its own urban network & have coverage in place in urban areas a lot faster than the reality.That's Cell C's GPRS.
As it is, it's pretty remarkable that anyone earning more than R5k a month still uses a CC from any other bank.