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Here's what the BellSouth-8x8 deal means

On Friday, BellSouth announced that it is teaming up with 8x8 (best known for its Packet 8 VoIP service) to provide $20 a month VoIP service. Subscribers will get free calling to anywhere in the U.
Written by Russell Shaw, Contributor
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On Friday, BellSouth announced that it is teaming up with 8x8 (best known for its Packet 8 VoIP service) to provide $20 a month VoIP service. Subscribers will get free calling to anywhere in the U.S. or Canada,as well as discounted international calls, voice mail and caller I.D.

Until I thought this move through, my first reaction was "why are these companies cannibalizing their own existing services? As stand-alone, full-featured consumer-grade VoIP, 8x8's Packet 8 is a pretty good deal. And why would BellSouth offer VoIP and thus, compete with its own calling plans.?"

Then I parsed it all in my head. This is a proactive defensive move for both parties.

BellSouth has already seen the analyst reports that predict sharp growth for VoIP, and realize that to compete against other triple and quadruple-play VoIP service offerings from the likes of Comcast, AT&T, Time Warner Cable, telco rivals and IMs-gone-VoIP, they need to offer their core customers a VoIP alternative if they want to keep them around.

8x8, meanwhile, is playing CYA and realizing that it will be increasingly difficult for standalone VoIP providers such as themselves and Vonage to compete against the giants and their multiservice offerings.  So, rather than go it alone, or sell out to one of the major multi-servicers, 8x8 is offering themselves as a service provider to the service providers.

What's more, 8x8 gets to sell their own equipment, as well as oversee customer service, fulfillment and billing. Although financial terms of the deal were undisclosed, common business sense would dictate that 8x8 gets a piece of the $20 a month action for account services, and also gets a nice share of net equipment sales as well.

BellSouth also benefits from not having to provide front-line phone-based customer service.

Still, it will be important for the Atlanta-based carrier to educate their CSRs enough about VoIP to answer the pre-signup questions that are sure to arise from newbies. I know the division of responsibility between what BellSouth and 8x8 offer customers on this plan appears clear, but we've all seen apparently clearly demarcated responsibilities get muddled up in the face of poor in-field execution and fulfillment issues that somehow fly below the radar of top execs at participating companies.

Poor integration between BellSouth and 8x8's service components better not happen here, or else the Blogosphere, our Forums, and our Message Boards will be all over it. 

Looking ahead, I'd be watching to see if BellSouth eventually builds their own VoIP technology. Would that end the 8x8 deal? With that in mind, does the BellSouth-8x8 deal have some sort of time parameter and/or sunset provision?

On a broader note, a deal such as BellSouth-8x8 makes it more imperative for other standalone VoIP providers to find a big telco or cable partner.

A big telco or cable partner to line up with, or sell out to. 

 

 


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