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”Welcome to the possibleness of a lifetime” reads the pitch tender of their website but is this really the possibleness you’ve been looking for? Reading the next tender will compound your knowledge and give you a clearer picture of Telecom Plus.
Company History
Telecom Plus was founded in 1996 and launched a creation in 1997, that creation was a least cost call routing smart box. For those same me who aren’t very school savvy, this creation would plug into a phone socket and seek discover the best calling rates.
This consort has since gone onto expand by introducing other products same the Landline telephony, ambulatory telephony,broadband, pedal and electricity.
Telecom Plus was awarded the consort of the assemblage honor in 2009 at the quoted consort awards annual dinner and in that same assemblage Which magazine awarded Utility Warehouse best energy supplier in the UK.
Products
I’ve listed the products presented by Telecom Plus above. Telecom Plus is basically a low cost multi-utility consort and if you ever buy from them you’ll be billed under the name of Utility Warehouse.
The great abstract about this is that you can hit all your utility bills under one roof, which is very convenient and sells well to the general public.
Conclusion
Telecom Plus is a first-rate playing no doubt. Multiple awards, millions in profits and they’re even listed on the London Stock exchange. But don’t be fooled by all the shiny medals because it doesn’t needs mean that you’ll attain a collection of money, fling rich and fling young.
Telecom Plus will give you upbringing on how to recommend customers to them and that in my opinion is the wrong artefact to go if you ever poverty to attain decent money with your business.
You see traditional network marketing, which is what Telecom Plus teaches you to hold bag meetings, post flyers, pitch your warm market(family and friends) and prospect strangers who are almost always indifferent in your business.
All this upbringing is valuable but 99.9% of these prospects aren’t ever interested in joining Telecom Plus or buying Utility warehouse services because they aren’t TARGETED enough.
To attain any real spendable money you hit to find a different artefact to mart and build a list of contacts that poverty what you offer and are ready to tie you in business.
Would I tie this business? No Should you tie this business? Thats up to you but I will yield you with this pearl of wisdom.
According to the information released by HOT TELECOM (www.hottelecom.com) in its latest report “Nigeria telecom country profile 2009”, Nigeria’s telecom revenue increased by 29.9% to US$8.4 billion at the end of 2008, and ‘if the current growth trend continues, the country’s telecom revenue should have surpassed US$12.0 billion in 2013’ HOT TELECOM’s president Isabelle Paradis said.
With a population close to 150 million people, Nigeria is one of Africa’s largest telecom markets, surpassing South Africa in terms of mobile subscribers in 2008. Considering its low fixed, mobile and Internet penetration it still boasts significant growth potential.
Nigeria’s fixed sector suffered greatly from the lack of competition as well as fixed to mobile substitution over the last 2 years. The number of fixed lines decreased by 17.3% in 2008 to reach 1.3 million and a penetration of 0.9%. In the first six months of 2009 however the situation improved considerably, with the number of fixed lines increasing by 9.8% to 1.4 million. The sector’s development is almost solely generated by the 15 PTOs which offer the service mostly over their fixed-wireless networks. With the increase of competition, it is expected that the number of fixed lines will increase by and average of 17.4% over the next 5 years, to reach 2.9 million and a penetration rate of 1.7% at the end of 2013.
Nigeria has now outpaced South Africa to emerge as the largest mobile telecom market in Africa in 2008. It had 66.4 million mobile subscribers at the end of June 2009, representing a penetration rate of 44.3%. Mobile connections have soared at an average growth rate of 89.4% over the past 5 years and now represent 97.9% of all telephone lines in the country. The average growth in terms of subscribers is expected to slow to an average rate of 8.8% over the next 5 years, brining the number of mobile customers to 95.8 million at the end of 2013. This trend should, as a result, trigger more intense competition among the growing array of network operators. The mobile sector is currently covered by 5 GSM operators and 4 CDMA providers.
At the end of 2008, there were 11.0 million Internet users and an estimated 1.8 million Internet subscribers. The advent of competition in the form of PTOs as well as the introduction of wireless Internet has significantly stimulated the sector over the last 5 years. Nevertheless, with a penetration as low as 1.3%, there is ample space for growth in this sector. The number of Internet subscribers is forecasted to grow by an average of 10.6% over the next 5 years to reach 3.0 million and a penetration of 1.8% at the end of 2013. The number of Internet users is also expected to have reached 18.2 million at that time.
Very little data is available when it comes to Nigeria’s broadband market, however we estimate the number of broadband customers to have surpassed 250,000 at the end of 2008, representing 13.6% of the country’s Internet connections. With the increased popularity of mobile broadband however, this ratio should have increase to 100.0% by the end of 2013, with all dial-up accounts having been completely replaced by broadband.
> courtesy by hottelecoms

