This announcement was something similar to a bamboo stick loaded up with chillies and thrust on their sorry orifices. The department of telecom seems to have woken up to the menace of the telecom firms. Mercifully better sense prevailed and spectrum allocation guidelines have been rationalised. Atleast in theory.
I was expecting and it happened. The COAI chief reacted on expected lines and cried foul. Reliance is waiting in the wings to get the GSM licence for pan India licence and is willing to fork out astronomical sums of money for the same. Real estate developer Parsavnath has thrown it’s hat in the ring.
All for a simple logic. The “relaxed” norms for the foreign ownership is bound to attract the global majors. We have already seen Vodafone owning up the Hutch brand. It makes sense to scale up a brand new service, share towers with the existing incumbents and then sell out at a profit. What else explains this? It isn’t the crap aboout the “fastest” growing market but for the existing segmentation of the customer base. It becomes easier to identify a set customer base and lure them with a better service offering than their existing service provider. All the while it’s the incumbent that spends huge amount of adver tising to get them on the network, the new players lure them with “better offers”. More so, I feel that it might be as well that Indian market may get to see the segregation of the services. For example, we might have new players exclusively for data services rather than plain vanilla voice applications.
It is now being whispered in the Indian media about the inflated subscribers; a fact that I have been talking about ever since this blog came into existence.
It’s more than 3 quarters of the year now. No new initiative on the broadband front except for the customary noises about IPTV. Bah. What do customers really need?
So far, Raja (our “hon’ble” minister) has not been able to exert himself. He remains a pale shadow of former M(o)ara(o)n. If the Indian Government falls to the blackmail of the screwed up commies, expect our broadband dreams to be rolled back by another decade. Most of the operators would hold it because they would be more interested in knowing the exact “policy” of the new guy who warms his ass on the chair.
Madness indeed.
This content is published under the Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
Related posts:
- Hutch: Sell off Ending two months of speculation, Vodafone enters India by buying out Hutch’s stake at $19 billion dollars. The Essars of...
- More on Spectrum madness “The best things in life are for free”. For the telecom operators, it is the spectrum more than anything else....
- Smaller Telecom Operators in India Smaller Telecom Operators in India In the complex telecom muddle, there are a few independent operators that have stood the...
- Reliance, Tata and Indian Telecom Reliance, Tata and Indian Telecom The dust seems to be settling now. Reliable media reports have indicated that patch up...
- Vodafone’s entry It was expected. I had mentioned it long time back that Airtel is looking to divest it’s stake in Telecom...
- Late night thoughts Hutch has finally made a deal with the Vodafone (and supping with the devil). Vodafone would have something exciting to...
- British Telecom firms Scoring the need for “expansion”, Brit firms have been expanding in the Indian Telecom “party”. Much of the talk is...
- Hutch: Sale of the year? It may be a good news for Ruias who hold a stake in Hutch Telecom. Their windfall would be in...
- Mergers & Acquisitions It was the mother of all acquisitions- Hutch bought out BPL mobile for a huge sum. The details don’t matter...
- New developments These are the changing times. For sure. This quarter has seen some record profits being posted by the telecom companies....
Lol. oh well I was wondering as to how best to get my message across..Nothin better than the cute reference to proctology...Trust me..I have fingered many and is not funny to poke your finger in someones' orifice..
- spam
- offensive
- disagree
- off topic
Like