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Entries in The Coop Monitor (125)

Wednesday
May022012

Garden Valley Telephone Cooperative Updates IPTV Middleware

Source: Innovative Systems Press Release

Garden Valley Telephone Cooperative in Northern Minnesota has chosen to replace their current IPTV middleware provider with the APMAX Middleware solution provided by Innovative Systems. One important reason for the decision is Innovative Systems’ ability to provide voice, video, and OSS services.

According to GVTC’s Chief Financial Officer, Mark Klinkhammer, a totally integrated solution from the enhanced service hardware (all the way to the billing system) has many advantages in cost savings and efficient business practices.

Located in Northern Minnesota, GVTC serves over 13,000 subscriber lines over an area that covers about 3,200 square miles. GVTC has been in business since 1906 and today provides its customers with voice, video and internet services.

Tuesday
Apr242012

Kalona Cooperative Telephone Selects CHR to Deliver Cloud Solutions

Source: CHR Solutions Press Release

CHR Solutions, Inc. announced Kalona Cooperative Telephone Company (KCTC) has selected CHR’s Cloud Solution to deliver white label Cloud Applications and Services to the Iowa-based company’s small to medium-sized business (SMB) market. This partnership offers KCTC the necessary cloud infrastructure, platform, and technology to quickly deliver revenue generating applications and services.

“We received a number of requests from our SMB business customer base who were looking for productivity solutions, specifically online backup and storage, web hosting and hosted server solutions. Unfortunately, we did not have the local resources to deliver this solution nor did we want to undertake the capital investment it would require to build out this offering,” said Gary Davis, general manager, Kalona Cooperative Telephone Company. “After meeting with CHR and seeing their Cloud solution first-hand, it was an easy decision for us. CHR delivers the cost-effective solution we require to be able to go to market quickly with the latest and greatest productivity solutions.”

Thursday
Apr122012

Two North Dakota Cooperatives Complete Massive Fiber Optic Project

Source: The Jamestown Sun

According to an article in The Jamestown Sun, the combined efforts of Dickey Rural Networks and Dakota Central Telecommunications have brought fiber-optic broadband services to about 16,000 businesses and homes in south central North Dakota. The article said that the project is the largest geographic area in North America served by fiber optic cables directly to the home.

The combined projects totaled about $90 million and included funding from USDA Rural Development and loans from other sources. The Rural Development funds included additional money from the federal stimulus package, The Jamestown Sun reported.

“What you’ve done with these two cooperatives is set the standard for the entire United States,” said Dallas Tonsager, USDA Rural Development undersecretary. “This area serves as a great role model for the rest of the country.”

Thursday
Apr052012

For Consolidated Telcom, North Dakota is All Boom and No Bust

Co-op Capitalizes on Region's Boom, Expands Unregulated Services to Compensate for USF Losses

For telecom providers like Consolidated Telcom in North Dakota, this century's oil and natural gas boom has made quite the impact. Whether it's devising the company business plan or competing with oil company salaries and perks, nearly everything has changed. Most importantly, however, the boom has brought an unprecedented increase in new telecom customers and lists of subdivisions and businesses eagerly awaiting connectivity.

In fact, if you consult the Dickinson Press nearly any day of the week, you will find some mention of how the oil boom in North Dakota is impacting this relatively small community. Residents are renting out rooms to oil workers for extra income. There's more trash and litter. Increased traffic has led to deteriorating road conditions. And just last week, the state of North Dakota granted $12m to improve and expand "oil patch" schools and $5m to bolster emergency services and law enforcement. And then there's the telecom needs of this drastically changing environment.  

"Unlike the rest of the nation- we are in the midst of the biggest oil boom in the history of our state and possibly in the nation,” said Rhonda Dukart, marketing and public relations manager for Consolidated Telecom, based in Dickinson, North Dakota. “We are a small agriculture community in the southwest corner of the state. In the past years we have seen thousands and thousands of people from all over the country moving to our area. We do not have the infrastructure, housing, school capacity, law enforcement, city services just to name a few of the challenges we are facing.”

But the boom has brought a new pool of subscribers, too. Dukart says that Consolidated is “very grateful” for the growth that the oil and natural gas industry has brought to North Dakota, but it would be a bit easier if they could “just control the pace a bit.” For now, Consolidated is just trying to keep up—and trying to find ways to physically get to their new customers and lay the connections. “New housing subdivisions are popping up everywhere, and of course they do not have the infrastructure anywhere nearby to allow for water, sewer, utilities, roads etc... so trying to get to all these new subdivisions has been the most challenging thing our company has ever had to face.”

Consolidated ceo and general manager Paul Schuetzler said that “new subdivisions are cropping up in the Dickinson area faster than we can find them on a map. There is a real urgency to providing these areas with services as they have few or no options for quality services from other providers.”

And Consolidated was already growing on its own, prior to the oil and gas boom. The company just celebrated its 50-year anniversary and just completed an FTTH upgrade in all of the cooperative's towns. “We are now in the process of overbuilding with fiber to all of our rural areas as well,” Dukart said. “Given 9k square miles, much of which is extremely rough terrain, and a short construction season because of weather, this is a monumental task.” But the fiber connections are robust and allow the company to provide digital TV as well. According to Dukart, the fiber connections offer “up to 100 Meg broadband packages, over 220 channels of digital television and of course telephone service.”

Dukart said that broadband is available to about 90% of Consolidated's customers, with the remaining 10% of customers able to get broadband through Wild Blue Satellite. Take rates for broadband are about 75%, Dukart said.

Of course, one boom always brings many others, and Dukart says that competition is everywhere now. “We have competition in ALL areas and ALL services,” she said. “Midcontinent [a regional cable provider] is our biggest competitor in all of our cooperative towns, Century Link is our competitor in our two CLECs, and of course all the wireless providers are competitors, now offering all services. Everywhere we turn we face competition.”

In some cases, the astounding increase in competition has also impacted Consolidated's own personnel. Dukart explained: “Along with this influx of people comes everyone scrambling to keep their employees, as oil companies pay much higher wages than most any employer in the area. We have lost several great employees to companies offering higher salaries, etc., and if they can find employees that already have a place to live, they make salary offers that are very hard to refuse.”

As a rural provider, Consolidated also expressed concern that recent USF/ICC changes will impact their business plans going forward. Bryan Personne, coo of Consolidated, said “Like all small telcos” the company would “see significant changes to its traditional revenue streams as a result of the USF/ICC funding changes” and that it will “attempt to fill the gap in lost funding by rolling out new unregulated services to its customer base.” Looking forward, Personne said that the company is looking to roll out “new supplemental services like security systems, wi-fi and mobile broadband using 700 Mhz licenses to expand its service offerings and take advantage of new technologies. We have a number of staff who are responsible for researching and developing new services for our customers.” Dukart added, “We have hired several technicians specifically for the security service and have just started the roll out of marketing materials.”

Like so many of the cooperatives we talk to, Consolidated also works in the community to support the efforts of local colleges and universities, schools, and businesses. Dukart said that one of the things Consolidated is most proud of is the recent construction of the Badlands Activity Center at Dickinson State University—a local university that the telecom company has worked with on many occasions. Dukart said that Consolidated's main effort was to build community support for the stadium's construction: “The marketing manager was a key player in getting a yes vote out of a very conservative community to use sales tax to assist in the funding of the new facility. This took about nine months of continued effort to inform the community of the benefits of tearing down a very old outdated stadium that no longer provided for the needs of both the athletes and the fans.” The end result was “a beautiful new $16m dollar facility that is a 'jewel' in our community and a tool to attract students and athletes to our college.” The Badlands Activity Center was constructed with a combination of state and local funds.

Consolidated acknowledges that the company's outlook is somewhat different than others in the industry, with greater opportunity for growth and a constantly expanding customer base. “Our situation is different than many of the telcos that I visit with on a regular basis,” Dukart said. “I am very grateful for that and we look at our enormous challenges as opportunities to shine. We have just celebrated our 50-year anniversary and I believe we can boast that we have been successful because of our commitment and dedication to our customers. We have the most outstanding employees and that is not just saying the 'right words.' It is a sincere belief that our commitment to serve is possible because of the quality of our employees.” In the end, Dukart said that the co-op's core values “is what separates us from the competition and ensures we will be here another 50 years.”

Wednesday
Mar282012

Panhandle Telephone Coop to Go Live with 4G LTE Bonfire Service

Source: NetAmerica Alliance Press Release

NetAmerica Alliance, LLC announced that Panhandle Telephone Cooperative Inc. (PTCI) is going live with 4G LTE service in rural Oklahoma at the end of March as the NetAmerica Alliance Membership concurrently unveils its new 4G LTE consumer service brand called Bonfire.

Panhandle, headquartered in Guymon, Oklahoma was announced as an Alliance Member in 2011, and owns spectrum which covers six counties comprised of more than 45,000 people, nearly 20,000 households and covers over 7,500 square miles.  PTCI’s current 4G LTE network consists of 45 towers covering 5,000 square miles and a population within reach of those towers of nearly 30,000.  The network is being brought online connected to the NetAmerica Alliance IMS-Powered SuperCenter™ which also goes live concurrent with the service launch.  

The service brand name was chosen after months of primary market research and consumer testing which provided Alliance Members incredible insight as to what their potential customers deemed important in service delivery, support, and branding of a 4G LTE service.  The data will prove invaluable as they prepare to roll out service aggressively in their individual markets.

No matter what age or gender, everyone has their own image of fun, family, and community experiences which were shared around a bonfire many times in their life.  The name captures the feeling and emotional response from customers which Alliance Members will manifest through delivery of the service.

“Today’s announcement is exciting on so many levels,” said Roger Hutton, Chairman and CEO of NetAmerica. “Our IMS-Powered SuperCenter is going live, our service brand is launched, and Panhandle is armed to serve the good citizens of Oklahoma with 4G LTE.  This is why the Alliance was formed, to revitalize rural America with lifestyle and livelihood enhancing services, and today all the pieces have come together to make that happen.”

“It is indeed a special time for our customers, for rural America and for PTCI,” said Ron Strecker, CEO of PTCI. “Prior to joining the Alliance we evaluated the risks and complexity of deploying a 4G LTE network on our own and decided the alliance model made a lot of sense.  I can say now, with the benefit of hindsight, that the decision was an excellent one. The alliance model was ready and we were able to focus on our business while still sharing knowledge with other members, gaining the benefit of brand positioning based on hard research, and cost effectively taking advantage of leading edge technology based on the IP Multmedia Subsystem architecture.”

 NetAmerica Alliance, officially launched in early 2011, selected its technology partner, Ericsson, in March of 2011 and has since gone from launch to live service in a year.  While others have talked about serving rural America, the Alliance has been busy working out operational issues, deploying network infrastructure and bringing online its IMS SuperCenter, which will provide Alliance Members the tools and infrastructure they need to deploy advanced 4G LTE applications, as well as a platform upon which to converge wireline and wireless services, thereby protecting their core business and providing their customers with high value “anytime, anywhere” services.