O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
03-02-2011, 23:00
|
#1
|
Inactive
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire
Age: 45
Posts: 13,996
|
O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
New rates here.
FAQ Here.
The rationale behind it is interesting.
Quote:
Why are you putting the prices up?
The use of the internet has changed dramatically in recent years, and in order for us to continue to give you the level of service that you’d expect from us we need to continue to invest in our network to keep up with demand.
Since launching Home Broadband and Home Phone we have maintained the same price levels across our packages whilst offering market leading products with unlimited or very generous download levels; however we cannot continue to maintain this service level at the same price in the current climate. Whilst the prices are increasing, we still remain competitive against other Internet Service Providers. We’re always striving to give you a great customer experience.
|
It's interesting in that they've taken the opposite approach to Virgin Media. Virgin Media have raised speeds, lowered prices, started application shaping and kicking off people who use the service too much during peak periods while still insisting that they sell an unlimited service, O2 have decided to raise their prices to cope with the higher usage.
Respect to them for their sincerity on this score, I suspect Virgin's method is the better one from the PR angle though
|
|
|
04-02-2011, 00:27
|
#2
|
cf.mega poster
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 11,207
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
Interesting, though I'm thinking a lot of "WTF" right now. If I'm reading this right they're only putting prices up by between 27 and 58p a month... Hardly worth mentioning given they put prices up by £3 a month during the year I was with them.
I do commend their approach though, as they maintain good levels of latency and contention throughout their network via sensible internal targets. Mind you I thought they too have introduced protocol-based traffic management on their LLU product a while ago. Either that or usage caps, I can't remember, but there was something bad in the T&Cs of the new home broadband product that made me cringe...
[Edit]
Yeah, O2 have a 100GB/250GB FUP on their "Unlimited" packages now. Urgh. They're not really that much better eh?
|
|
|
04-02-2011, 00:28
|
#3
|
Inactive
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire
Age: 45
Posts: 13,996
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
Quote:
Originally Posted by qasdfdsaq
Interesting, though I'm thinking a lot of "WTF" right now. If I'm reading this right they're only putting prices up by between 27 and 58p a month...
I do commend their approach though, as they maintain good levels of latency and contention throughout their network via sensible internal targets. Mind you I thought they too have introduced protocol-based traffic management on their LLU product a while ago. Either that or usage caps, I can't remember, but there was something bad in the T&Cs of the new home broadband product that made me cringe...
|
The legacy unlimited products, which I'm a customer of, are getting increased by far more.
They do not appear to have ever actually implemented the shaping on the new LLU products. Go figure.
EDIT: Older unlimited legacy packages going up by 24 - 27%.
|
|
|
04-02-2011, 00:36
|
#4
|
-
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Somewhere
Services: Virgin for TV and Internet, BT for phone
Posts: 26,536
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
Be interesting to see if they do the same for Be...
|
|
|
04-02-2011, 00:36
|
#5
|
cf.mega poster
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 11,207
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
Yeah, I was on one of those "legacy" products, hence them introducing the "new" packages at a higher price and with fairly low FUP limits was what made me cringe.
Got a link to the new legacy prices? They don't seem listed on that page. The old packages are far more competitive than the new ones and to be fair I'd be happy to pay 24-27% more, when I was there I was getting between 4 and 8 times faster service from my £17.50 to O2 than my £25 to VM.
|
|
|
04-02-2011, 00:52
|
#6
|
Inactive
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire
Age: 45
Posts: 13,996
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
They aren't as the old packages aren't sold anymore. They are notifying legacy customers individually.
|
|
|
04-02-2011, 00:55
|
#7
|
cf.mega poster
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 5,386
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
Still cheaper than be broadband If with o2
|
|
|
04-02-2011, 02:04
|
#8
|
cf.mega poster
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 11,207
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
The old "Unlimited" top package was £17.50 a month after £5 O2 discount IIRC, with a ~25% price rise that'd pretty much put them in line with Be's £22.44. If not with O2 then it'd be 22.5 + 25% = £28.13 which isn't quite so competitive. But still, that'd be truly unlimited + a free wireless N router which you still don't get with Be
O2's new "Unlimited" tariffs aren't a fair comparison as they're not truly unlimited (100GB FUP on one of them)
|
|
|
04-02-2011, 14:14
|
#9
|
Inactive
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire
Age: 45
Posts: 13,996
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
My own is going up from 15GBP pre-VAT rise to 18GBP post-VAT rise and after this increase.
|
|
|
05-02-2011, 21:38
|
#10
|
Simples
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: RG41
Services: 1 Gbps; Hub 4 MM; ASUS RT-AX88U; Ultimate VOLT. BT Infinity2; Devolo 1200AV
Posts: 11,955
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
Might it not be putting money into the O(2 coffers for some deal with BT for LLU Infinity?
__________________
Seph.
My advice is at your risk.
|
|
|
05-02-2011, 23:42
|
#11
|
Inactive
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire
Age: 45
Posts: 13,996
|
Re: O2 Home Broadband Price Increases
There's no need to make a 'deal' with BT over Infinity, the VDSL product is open access and available.
Telefonica appear to be waiting for a newer variant that will give them more control over the product, Virtual Unbundled Local Access.
They do need some cash for backhaul upgrades though, migrating to 10GbE or n x 1GbE where there aren't enough ports for all the 'n' isn't cheap.
|
|
|
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:47.
|