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Free DSL Winfire is ramping of the pace of its "free DSL" rollout. Find out how this company charges less for the same services. In field littered with the corpses of free ISPs, Winfire, Inc. is ready to step up the pace on its free DSL rollout in the second half of 2000. Free doesn't pay The ISP offers free 144Kbps DSL service after users pay for the $199 DSL modem kit, which includes modem, telephone jack filters and its proprietary self-install software. Customers can opt to make 23 monthly payments at $9.95. Note that many fee-based services waive the installation fee. Covad Communications offers free setup and modem with a contract, and then charges around $40 a month. Bill Rodey, DSL Forum vice chairman and treasurer, said the offering is a great boon to consumers. "It's a great world when consumers have all these choices," Rodey said. "All of this was made available by the Federal Communication Commission's freeing up the bundled loop. We're very encouraged that there are more options available out there for consumers. I live in Chicago and I'll probably end up using the service." Bring 'em in with the catch-phrase So is the "upsell" working? 35 percent of Winfire's customers use the FreeDSL service. The basic premium service gets rid of the pesky ad banner and guarantees up to144Kbps at $9.95 a month. For $19.95, or the monthly price people pay for premium dial up service, DSL users get 384Kbps download speeds, and $34.95 a month gives them 1.54Mbps. Paying for the premium services negates the DSL modem kit charge. Free Internet users who upgrade their service to the paid, premium service get a refund towards the 13-month contract they sign with the provider. The 13 months is determined by the RBOC, which activates the leased DSL for one year. Any customer who decides to cancel their subscription before the 13 months is required to pay the rest of that yearly lease and return the DSL modem. As the numbers point out, many customers are opting for the paid DSL services. Fifty percent are signed up for the $19.95 service and 10 percent have taken the $34.95 service. Only five percent take advantage of the no-banner-ad service at $9.95 per month. Discounts are key Compared to other DSL services that can cost between $40 and $60 per month, Winfire's services present a tremendous value to customers," Steelberg said. "In quarter three of 2000, only 35 percent chose to use the free service. Most subscribe immediately with the paid services. It's a value proposition for many people, who pay half the price of regular DSL service." It's also the ticket to a gross positive margin, which, in the Internet logic of the times, may be the sign of a successful venture. The light of a GPM day Instead, Winfire pays for the copper transport to a co-location facility,
where it's then routed throughout the world. The company currently has
an agreement with Williams
Communications Group, Inc. It also saves money with proprietary self-install software, which saves
Winfire the cost of a truck roll. Steelberg would like to license his
splitterless setup, but doesn't want to make things any easier for the
competition.
Banner advertisements are not a reliable revenue stream. They are an
eyesore and burden for most Internet surfers. Even if customers don't
actively try to "hack" out the banner console, its effectiveness is minimal,
as clickthrough rates attest.
To spice up advertising, Steelberg has been working to provide his advertisers
the option of 7 second, 15 second, and 30 second streaming media spots
on his banner service to get the message out. Ad banners these days are
a waste of money, he said, and advertisers don't want to spend money on
ads that don't deliver the clickthroughs. Streaming media ads are a viable
option with the DSL service.
"The reason other free ISPs haven't worked is because banner ads would
never sustain the company," Steelberg said. "We've been partnered with
DoubleClick, so the tracking has always been good, but the content wasn't.
We think we've addressed that with the new ads that take advantage of
DSL's speed."
The value of experience With his brother, he co-founded AdForce, an online centralized advertising
firm, building marketing partnerships with Netscape
Communications Corp. and 24/7 Media.
After selling out the company to CMGI Ironically, Steelberg managed the online advertising sales for NetZero
Analysts weigh in "Free DSL can succeed, but there's a pretty narrow window of opportunity,"
Lowe said. "First, since they're still paying for the DSL line they're
giving away, cost structures need to come down pretty dramatically. This
is starting with the advent of line sharing, but that's just a start.
Second, providers like Winfire are counting on subscribers upgrading to
higher speeds of DSL and buying value-added services. These are their
primary revenue streams. If actuals fall short of forecasts, they could
be in trouble.
"In a nutshell," Lowe concluded, "if Free DSL works, it could change
the way we do business when it comes to DSL. However, they really need
to throw a bullseye to get it to work."
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