Photon, the brand name for Tata Teleservices’ dongle-based wireless Internet service, has got a shot in the arm after Russian telecom operator Mobile Tele Systems closed operations of its India business -- Sistema Shyam Teleservices -- in 13 out of 22 circles.
MTS operated its dongle-based service under the brand name MBlaze, TTSL has been increasingly shifting its focus to the high-value data business as demand for pure voice services is slowing.
Photon, which is the market leader in wireless internet service with 40 per cent share of the subscriber base, is using this opportunity to consolidate its position.
MBlaze was the third largest in this space following Reliance Communication’s Netconnect.
Closure of its service in 13 circles had put about 300,000 of its customers in a spot. And that is where Photon has stepped in.
“The company has devised circle-specific tactics for acquisition of these customers,” says Gurinder Singh Sandhu, chief marketing officer at TTSL. “These include aggressive tariff, high bundled data on first recharge along with visibility campaigns,” he says.
MBlaze was particularly strong at the lower end of the market because of heavy discounts it offered on dongle, the piece of hardware used to connect with wireless internet connection.
It offered dongles priced at about Rs 1600 for about Rs 800 coupled with discounted tariff for data use in the first year.
This led to pre-paid customers changing their dongle every year as it turned out to be cheaper along with discounted tariff.
SSTL could offer these services at lower cost as it was allotted pan-India spectrum in August 2008 at a low cost under telecom minister A Raja.
In February 2012, the apex court cancelled 122 licenses of 22 mobile operators including MTS’s 22 after questioning the moves of Raja, and ordered fresh auctions for sale of the spectrum.
This left SSTL with only one circle in Rajasthan.
In March, the company chose to acquire the spectrum through auction in only eight circles because of the high base price.
It paid Rs 3,639 crore (Rs 36.39 billion) to the government for using the spectrum in eight circles for the next 20 years.
This is in contrast to Rs 1,626 crore (Rs 16.26 billion) that it had paid earlier for 22 circles which was adjusted against the higher cost for the eight circles.
This naturally means that the company would now no more be able to play the low- cost game with heavy discounts that it offered earlier.
“While MTS has vacated the low end of the market in 13 circles, it has brought an opportunity for others for rational pricing in all circles,”