Title: New Zealand Mobile
1New Zealand Mobile
- Lorraine Witten
- 14 March 2002
2Contents
- The challenges for 2001
- What we delivered
- Brand
- Distribution
- CDMA
- Strategies
- Our focus
3The challenges
- We said we would deliver
- CDMA Q1 and 1X Q2
- New Mobile Portal and Voice Portal
- M-Commerce Q1
- Packages
- Stronger Branding
- Increased use of SMS and WAP
- Relationships with solution developers
4What we have delivered
- CDMA - on time and budget
- 1X - being tested
- Portals - Word Up and djuice
- M-Commerce - ASB and credit card trial
- Strong Branding - favourability
- Bundled packages - Xtra email, specials
- SMS 8 m/mth and WAP 3m/mth
- Build relationships - dgtzone
5Issues from 2001
- ARPU profile - not focused enough on high value
customers - Connection growth versus profitability
- No TDMA upgrades 1H 2001
- boosted churn
6Brand - Market Share Improving
Source Phoenix Research covers June quarter
2000 to December quarter 2001
7Brand - Market Share Breakdown
- segment market share ARPU
- of phones
- Young 32 29.01
- Family/Home 71 15.41
- SME/HB 69 86.45
- Large/corp 92 43.84
- source Phoenix Research for Dec quarter 2001
8Distribution
- Re-branded 120 stores - improved dealer and owned
store performance - Reorienting distribution footprint to accommodate
data sales - e.g. Data Direct Connect - Retention and win-back
9CDMA
- Delivered on time and on budget
- Technological leadership
- 110,000-plus customers
- Traffic - lt10 customers and approx 20 traffic
- 1XRTT - 2H launch, testing now
10CDMA/TDMA ARPU comparison - Profile of Customers
who Migrated
112002 proposed product range (TDMA/cdma/1xRTT)
12Average prepaid handsets price(to customer)
13Handset Acquisition Strategysource Gartner
Group/Telecom
USD
14Strategic Summary
- Four Key Drivers are
- Value
- Innovation
- Retention and Win-back
- Brand
15Value Strategies
- Focus on profit and margin
- Emphasis on business and SME market
- Capex allocated where best returns
- ARPU growth from existing customers spending more
on - data
- voice stimulation and new applications
- education of phone features
16Innovation Strategies
- Technology - Data direct, enhanced SMS
- Partnerships (Microsoft, Hutchison) to deliver
applications and content - Extract maximum value from technologies (e.g.
TDMA, 1X), IT, outsourcing - Focus on a small number of key innovations
17Data ARPU Trend graph
1.400
1.200
1.000
ARPU
P2P SMS
0.800
Voice portal ARPU
VA SMS ARPU
WAP ARPU
0.600
CDMA Data Direct ARPU
CDPD
0.400
0.200
-
Jul-01
Aug-01
Sep-01
Oct-01
Nov-01
Dec-01
Jan-02
18Retention and Win-back Strategies
- Segmented approach
- Youth, singles, family, business, corporate
- Boost one of those segments
- Focus dealer and sales force effort on retention
and win-back - Service emphasis on high value customers
19Churn Trend graph
20Brand Strategies
- Up-skill customers through education of phone
features - Show benefits - not features
- Target high value segments
- Build on Telecoms full service capability
through packages and pricing
21Our Focus
- Business, corporate and high value consumer
segments - including service - Leverage whole of Telecom
- Extract full value from what weve built -
especially data - Educate people about what weve got
- Target relevant offers
22Disclaimer
This presentation contains not only a review of
operations, but also some forward looking
statements about Telecom and the environment in
which the company operates. Because these
statements are forward looking, Telecoms actual
results could differ materially. The second
quarter media release, management commentary and
various documents filed with the US Securities
Exchange Commission, including the Annual Report
on Form 20-F, contain additional information
about matters which could cause Telecoms
performance to differ from any forward looking
statements in this presentation. Please read this
presentation in the wider context of material
previously published by Telecom and filed with
the SEC.