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Land-line usage on the wane

Canadians are flocking to lower-cost cellphone services and cutting their land-line cords as aggressive entrants quickly take market share in the increasingly competitive wireless industry.

New players just as Wind Mobile and Mobilicity are offering cellphone plan prices more than 60 per cent lower than the large incumbents, which have been forced to cut prices to defend their customer base.

"There’s material change in this country, and there’s a trend line," says Brahm Eiley, a principal with Convergence Consulting Group Ltd., which has released a report on the telecommunications landscape.

The surge of new competitors has evidently had a big impact on price. Last week, Public Mobile, which offers a discount cellphone service in Ontario and Quebec, dropped prices furthermore, offering an all-you-can talk plan for $15 a month. Such prices were unheard of when the market was controlled by BCE Inc., Telus Corp. and Rogers Communications Inc.

That affordability is enticing Canadians to snip their home phone lines. The report forecasts the number of wireless-only households will double to 22 per cent between the end of 2010 and 2013.

"We will see wireline replacement accelerate," agrees Anthony Lacavera, the chairman of Globalive Communications Corp., which owns both the new entrant wireless provider Wind Mobile and the Yak brand of land-line VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) phone service.

Like larger rivals BCE and Telus, both of which are bleeding land-line phone and long-distance earnings, Mr. Lacavera is planning to ramp up discounts for bundles of services, which help keep subscribers from cutting their lines by offering discounts if a household subscribes to multiple telecom services.

The same time

At the same time, Bell and Telus are both pushing out high-end Internet protocol TV products. These new TV services are making headway, and Mr. Eiley’s firm forecasts that 2011 will be the first year since 2003 that their cable company rivals will to tell the truth lose subscribers, although market share numbers for IPTV will remain relatively small at 8 per cent by the end of 2011.

"Telephone lines can no longer can be seen as the pivot for the telcos," Mr. Eiley says. "However they have stepped up with the TV offering. It’s historic."

More information: Theglobeandmail
References:
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    2011 Landline Usage On The Wain

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    Landline Usage By Year

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    Line Wane

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    2011 Voip Useage

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    Wind Mobile Landline