@Aki
I see a small problem in your list of Safcom potentials below. You see, Safaricom IS Vodafone. Vodafone is not keen on pushing the safcom brand! If it was up to the, they'd rename it Vodafone!
Two, Vodafone is already operating in other countries eg EA. If safcom was to go to let's say Ug and buy out Warid wouldn't they be directly competing against themselves?
@Mark, just to give you an indication on how dumb the business
developers in Safcom are, consider this ( sry, not offending anyone
but I think this is the reality ). Safcom has the potential to become
a huge African operator and create a boom for its shareholders.
Safcom has the capability to :
1) Buy Satellite transponders with various sat companies. They can
create an African wide beam, develop a vsat service and build the
dishes in kenya. Can be KU band. All the ODU,IDU equipment can be
branded and sold off the shelf. This scenario alone will generate them
millions of USD per month on bandwidth leasing.
2) On the same satellite services on un-used transponders, they can
become next GTV. Millions of USD revenue can be made on content.
2) Integrate the sat service with fiber capacity and compete at
national level and across borders.
3) Compete with KDN and TKL on national and regional fiber networks.
KPLC fiber infrastructure is already in pace. Why buy capacity when
you can own and price the networks?
4) DTV, broadband via fiber and sat.
5) Intergrate a broadcasters license and integrate 3g, 4g etc, DVB and
other services into one stream. Create mobile vehicles that can carry
microwave data and connect various services.
6) Start an inter-active DTV channel that will allow users to interact
using 5) above
7) Start the rollout of high speed copper networks. Forget wireless,
it has serious limitations.
8) Start buying out other GSM operators in other countries. If Zain
could do it from the ME, what is stopping an Kenyan company doing the
same? Again, it would increase its revenues.
The list is huge. Somehow they are keen on ideas that are born out of
petty minds looking at getting a share of the lower end market. These
minds cannot see how regional and international Safcom's presence can
be.
The Queen Bee has some serious thinking to do.
Me thots. :-)
On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 8:19 PM, Mark Mwangi <mwangy@gmail.com> wrote:
> @Michael I do not understand this oppression you speak of. I am a user
> and have flirted with the other telcos but I have found few of their
> services are useful or reliable enough for me to switch allegiance.so
> who is being oppressed? @aki true safaricom are actually not very
> innovative but are very skilled @ localising products and being nimble
> on their feet and not being bogged down by bureaucracy. M-pesa is from
> vodafone uk , supaongea tariff is from MTN SA, e.t.c.
>
> we should be pressuring the CCK and not a successful business. It has
> enough qualified officials and resources.
>
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