Cable Companies Seek a Boost from Service
April 7, 2004
Dow Jones Newswires
By Ellen Sheng
NEW YORK -- Cable TV companies' forays into residential broadband
and telephony have already put traditional phone companies on
the defensive. Now, cable operators are launching their most ambitious
efforts yet to chip away at phone companies' monopoly in telecommunications
services for businesses.
Although retail customers remain the bread and butter of the
cable industry, the focus on business customers comes as growth
in video services, cable's main product, is slowing. Digital TV
hasn't caught on in the way many had hoped, forcing cable operators
to lean more heavily on services such as broadband Internet or
high-definition TV.
"Cable companies need to add revenue streams, and video
is a mature business," said Mike Goodman, an analyst at the
Yankee Group.
Operators like Cox Communications Inc. and Time Warner Cable,
a unit of Time Warner Inc., which started out courting smaller
businesses and telecommuters, are moving to sign on larger companies,
butting heads with incumbent phone carriers in the process.
Cox revealed recently that it is supplying telecommunications
services to several business customers, including MGM Mirage resorts
and Chesapeake Energy Corp.
Time Warner Cable in the third quarter rolled out a suite of
services geared toward the hotel industry, and has also signed
on companies such as L.L. Bean and Fairchild Semiconductor International
Inc.
Cablevision Systems Corp., which has been in the business-services
market longer than most, has 4,800 business customers concentrated
in the health-care, financial-services and government sectors.
Cable TV's increasing ambitions could give phone companies reason
to worry. On the residential side, the number of subscribers to
cable-modem service outnumber digital subscriber lines, or DSL,
by a ratio of two to one.
Standard & Poor Ratings Service recently put Verizon Communications
Inc.'s long-term credit on review for a possible downgrade, citing
cable telephony as a "substantial" new threat. Verizon
joined BellSouth Corp. and SBC Communications Inc. to become the
third Baby Bell with investment-grade debt ratings now on S&P's
watch list.
The regional phone companies are themselves relative newcomers
to the enterprise telecommunications space, which has been dominated
by long-distance carriers AT&T Corp. and MCI. But the carriers
expressed some skepticism that cable operators have all the services
and capabilities that larger business customers want. "As
far as nationwide [Internet protocol] backbone networks, which
are prerequisites to serve these companies, cable companies don't
have that," said Michael Coe, a spokesman for SBC. "They
probably are winning smaller customers, but not what we would
consider enterprise.
"Competition in the consumer area is very intense in broadband
and we anticipate it will get more so in the voice arena. But
in the business arena, we really haven't seen it yet," Mr.
Coe said.
SBC's wireline communications revenue in the fourth quarter
was evenly split between residential and enterprise customers,
with $3.4 billion from residential and $3.2 billion from business.
Verizon's enterprise solutions group, the third-largest enterprise
telecommunications provider in the market, sells to about 10,000
customers in 35 states and has plans to expand.
Enterprise customers are usually pretty demanding and the trend
is toward even more customer service, said Verizon spokesman Jim
Smith.
Expanding into business services gives cable companies another
way to use their newly enhanced networks. The industry spent about
$85 billion on network upgrades to offer additional services such
as HDTV, broadband Internet, phone service and video on demand.
Business services are a great opportunity for cable companies,
because they take advantage of existing infrastructure, said Ken
Fitzpatrick, senior vice president of commercial services at Time
Warner Cable. Cox reported that business services was a major
contributor to overall revenue growth in the fourth quarter. The
Atlanta cable operator's business services unit earned $287 million
in 2003, a 25% increase over a year earlier. Cox expects a comparable
increase this year.
Lightpath, the business services division at Cablevision, reported
its net revenue for 2003 increased about 13% from a year ago to
$178 million. Consolidated revenue at the Bethpage, N.Y., company
increased 10% during the year.
Other companies said they don't break out revenue or subscriber
figures by unit. Cable companies have had an eye on the business
market for some time. Yet efforts to court large business customers
have taken off in earnest only now, as cable operators polished
their telephony offerings.
Not surprisingly, Cox and Comcast Corp., which both offer phone
services, are also the most active in pursuing business customers.
Broadband Internet service is the core of most business offerings,
while telephony comes in a close second. Most cable companies
that don't yet offer telphony are testing some form of phone service.
Comcast, the country's biggest cable operator, has focused mainly
on offering broadband Internet to small-business users, but recently
said it will consider adding to its business offerings with a
voice-over-Internet protocol product, which provides telephone
service over the Internet. The company is preparing to roll out
a residential service in several markets this year.
Time Warner Cable's "Road Runner Business Class" product
doesn't yet offer telephony, but has expanded its services to
include managed security, firewall services, Web hosting and static
Internet protocols, Mr. Fitzpatrick said. The company is testing
a voice IP product geared toward telecommuters in San Diego. But
as newcomers, cable companies have a number of hurdles to overcome,
particularly one of image.
Cox, the country's fourth-largest cable operator, launched a
$4 million advertising campaign last week to give its business
services division a separate brand identity. "We have had
very good success in serving all aspects of the customer base,"
said Bill Stemper, vice president of Cox Business. The
ad campaign is "trying to open their eyes and their minds
in starting to see Cox overall in a different way."
Cablevision has also gone the route of giving its cable business
services division a separate identity by calling it Lightpath.
"Different cable operators are adopting different strategies
... it does seem that companies are thinking very hard about building
a separate brand from the core brand," said Joe Laszlo, an
analyst at Jupiter Research.
Cable operators also have to break through established relationships
that many companies have with incumbent telecommunications providers.
To appeal to businesses, many are stressing flexibility. Cable
operators traditionally have localized sales and marketing efforts.
Companies are playing that up as an advantage in business services,
emphasizing local knowledge and more personal service.
"Larger customers are realizing some things, that regional
Bells aren't the only ones who can provide good data service.
Companies don't want just one telecommunications provider,"
said Joe Lhota, president of Cablevision's Lightpath.