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jimbo2150

join:2004-05-10
Youngstown, OH

reply to Matt

Re: Metered Billing Has Its Place

said by Matt:

There is if you try to do it in a dishonest way that is extremely anti-consumer.
This is exactly the kind of poor thinking of companies and those who support it today. ONLY being dishonest is anti-consumer? Falsifying data (which is what most are doing now) to support their own agenda is not dishonest? What about greed? $1/gb is not excessive greed? $0.20/text message is not excessive greed?

I am all for companies making money, but legitimate money. They can make a decent profit going somewhere in the middle or less without today's view that whatever business does is good for the consumer. Sorry, but I won't stand for this greed going on invading internet too. It is bad enough most places do not have competition, but taking more fees and gross tiering is getting out of line...
--

- "Techie" Jim


fAcEtIOUs
Premium
join:2002-03-03
kudos:4

3 edits

said by jimbo2150:

What about greed? $1/gb is not excessive greed? $0.20/text message is not excessive greed?

I am all for companies making money, but legitimate money.

And what exactly is greed? At what point does making a profit become greed? Well, that is strictly in the eye of the purchaser. For some people, greed is any company that makes a profit greater than 1%. And for a very few, greed is when a company makes any profit at all. So what is the % that fits your definition of greed? Is it a profit tied to the Cost of Capital? Is it a risk weighted return better than you could earn in a so-called safe investment like treasury bills? Is it some % above the rate of inflation?

So, what is your definition?
--
My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page


Metatron2008
Premium
join:2008-09-02
Stockbridge, GA
Reviews:
·Charter
·Clearwire Wireless

2 edits

I'd call greedy any broadband based company that is attempting to get more money for less service during a rough recession that will stiffle recovery

For all the talk of defending corporations TK, I'm surprised your defending this. If the economy doesn't recover, which steps like these may make it happen, their won't be any way for corporations to survive.

With all this said, I think greed is something that works outside of the free market. If you set your product to be any price, and the customer pays it, then good. Even if it's billions of dollars.

If they don't want to pay that, then you go down. Greed is destruction of free market IMO.


Lazlow

join:2006-08-07
Saint Louis, MO

reply to fAcEtIOUs
Tk

Lets say, for the sake of argument, that Espaeth has a point and we move the total HSI revenue cost from $146 million to an even $1 Billion, which should cover ANY imagined costs. You are still making over four times as much as your costs. I do not hold it against any company to make an honest profit, but can you really say that anything over 100% profit is honest? ($4.159 - $1)/$1=316%(profit)



Metatron2008
Premium
join:2008-09-02
Stockbridge, GA
Reviews:
·Charter
·Clearwire Wireless

1 edit

said by Lazlow:

Tk

Lets say, for the sake of argument, that Espaeth has a point and we move the total HSI revenue cost from $146 million to an even $1 Billion, which should cover ANY imagined costs. You are still making over four times as much as your costs. I do not hold it against any company to make an honest profit, but can you really say that anything over 100% profit is honest? ($4.159 - $1)/$1=316%(profit)
I don't see a problem with it, as long as customers keep paying it and WANTING to pay.

The TWC CEO must be a complete idiot, if you are making that much revenue, why piss off your customers?

Make a few network upgrades, add new speeds, make people pay more for the new speeds! Not piss them off, lose customers and business.

When did executives forget how to treat customers? You are supposed to kiss their ass, make them feel good, even if you aren't going to fill their needs...


Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

reply to jimbo2150

said by jimbo2150:

said by Matt:

There is if you try to do it in a dishonest way that is extremely anti-consumer.
This is exactly the kind of poor thinking of companies and those who support it today. ONLY being dishonest is anti-consumer? Falsifying data (which is what most are doing now) to support their own agenda is not dishonest? What about greed? $1/gb is not excessive greed? $0.20/text message is not excessive greed?
I think everything you mention would fall under the umbrella of "dishonest." I also mention several times in my posts that their plan penalizes their existing customers, I think that covers greed too.

Also, I'm not sure I like the implied insult that I am somehow pro-Time Warner or pro any corporation. I most definitely fall onto the pro-consumer side of things, but I'm not naive enough to fall so far to the pro-consumer side that I can't see and understand both sides.


Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

reply to Lazlow

said by Lazlow:

Tk

Lets say, for the sake of argument, that Espaeth has a point and we move the total HSI revenue cost from $146 million to an even $1 Billion, which should cover ANY imagined costs. You are still making over four times as much as your costs. I do not hold it against any company to make an honest profit, but can you really say that anything over 100% profit is honest? ($4.159 - $1)/$1=316%(profit)
Most companies that I have worked for would consider a profit that is 4 times documented costs as a pretty terrible margin. You simply can't expand with that kind of limited revenue flow and the subsequent cash reserves it would allow for.

I think you'd be surprised to know that most companies have profit margins that are 1000's of percentage points higher than the physical cost.

Lazlow

join:2006-08-07
Saint Louis, MO

reply to Metatron2008
Lets flip this around a little bit. Lets compare the video numbers. Cost of Video Revenues $3.75Billion, Video Revenues $10.5 Billion. Now keeping Espaeth point in mind we will add the same $.85 Billion we did for HSI.

3.75+.85= 4.6

(10.5-4.6)/4.6=128%(profit)

So I think disparity in percent profit shows that it is about how much they can convince the user to pay versus what it costs.



Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

Lazlow, can you please provide the link to where you are getting your numbers? Thanks.


Lazlow

join:2006-08-07
Saint Louis, MO

It is from TWC's 10K, usually pages 60 and 89.

»investing.businessweek.com/resea···ype=10-K


jimbo2150

join:2004-05-10
Youngstown, OH

1 edit

reply to fAcEtIOUs

said by fAcEtIOUs:

And what exactly is greed?
Such an easy way to attempt to say nothing is greed. I can certainly ask the same question... what exactly is NOT greed? 800% pofit? 8000%?

So why is to SOOOOO bad to have a profit aimed at giving decent consumer products and make a decent return 5 years in vs. 0.5 years in? I don't know why so many companies seem to think that if they are not making an immediate return, it should not be done or it is the wrong way to go. When did instant gratification become part of business?

Edit: Also, what about COMPETITION?? They do everything to keep it out and in the Internet business there seems to be very little in most places in the U.S. (with exception to very large metro areas).
--

- "Techie" Jim


S_engineer
Premium
join:2007-05-16
Chicago, IL

reply to Matt
I think theres a certain trap that people are falling into, and that's your view falls into one extreme or another. This is the same polarization that is paralyzing Washington DC.
Everyone has the right to a profit. And what one person sees as greed another sees as profit. But here you have a case where a company tries to make drastic detrimental changes to service of the consumer for no reason other than more profit. Then they insult the consumer by implying they're ignorant. On top of that, they then tell you your not worth upgrading. This is consumer rape!

There is a discussion that should have happened a long time ago. A sort of stress test for broadband providers. That is what happens when broadband reaches saturation point?
How would the already oversold services hold up to the expanding web with expanding content. This is nothing new, we were having these discussions years ago. So to me, the basic argument is that are we going to let the already profitable mega carriers extort more money from the consumer because they see an even more profitable business model.
--
"When I was in junior high school, the teachers voted me the student most likely to end up in the electric chair."---Sylvestor Stallone


jimbo2150

join:2004-05-10
Youngstown, OH

reply to Matt

said by Matt:

I think you'd be surprised to know that most companies have profit margins that are 1000's of percentage points higher than the physical cost.
And my entire point is... why? Why do they have to have an immediate return at the expense of their customers? What ever happen to long-term investments? And why is it seen as such a bad thing that a company not make a 1000+% profit margin when they could make a 100%. It may take a bit more time for a full return but it would most likely come.
--

- "Techie" Jim


fAcEtIOUs
Premium
join:2002-03-03
kudos:4

reply to Lazlow

said by Lazlow:

It is from TWC's 10K, usually pages 60 and 89.

»investing.businessweek.com/resea···ype=10-K
And if you look at the overall revenues - costs(excluding a one time charge of $14.8 billion, their profits are not overly high.
Their revenues for TWC were approx $17 billion and the costs were $14 billion. So they made $3 billion on $17 billion in revenue. A 17.6% return.
--
My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page


jmn1207
Premium
join:2000-07-19
Ashburn, VA

reply to jimbo2150
Impatient, short-sighted investors are the culprits behind some of the lousy business decisions we see all the time.



Metatron2008
Premium
join:2008-09-02
Stockbridge, GA
Reviews:
·Charter
·Clearwire Wireless

1 edit

reply to jimbo2150

said by jimbo2150:

said by Matt:

I think you'd be surprised to know that most companies have profit margins that are 1000's of percentage points higher than the physical cost.
And my entire point is... why? Why do they have to have an immediate return at the expense of their customers? What ever happen to long-term investments? And why is it seen as such a bad thing that a company not make a 1000+% profit margin when they could make a 100%. It may take a bit more time for a full return but it would most likely come.
Why would a margin 1000's of times be bad to the consumer if they are willing to pay it?

That's just making money. If the customer refuses, making them pay it is monopolistic greed.

But hey, if the customer wants to pay it, why stop them?

In all honesty, their is a large difference between keeping the customer happy, and letting them have a choice, versus being a hippy who wants to share the wealth.


Metatron2008
Premium
join:2008-09-02
Stockbridge, GA
Reviews:
·Charter
·Clearwire Wireless

reply to jimbo2150

said by jimbo2150:

said by fAcEtIOUs:

And what exactly is greed?
Such an easy way to attempt to say nothing is greed. I can certainly ask the same question... what exactly is NOT greed? 800% pofit? 8000%?

So why is to SOOOOO bad to have a profit aimed at giving decent consumer products and make a decent return 5 years in vs. 0.5 years in? I don't know why so many companies seem to think that if they are not making an immediate return, it should not be done or it is the wrong way to go. When did instant gratification become part of business?

Edit: Also, what about COMPETITION?? They do everything to keep it out and in the Internet business there seems to be very little in most places in the U.S. (with exception to very large metro areas).
I think TK was implying that greed means differently to alot of people.

jimbo2150

join:2004-05-10
Youngstown, OH

reply to Metatron2008

said by Metatron2008:

Why would a margin 1000's of times be bad to the consumer if they are willing to pay it?
Now lets factor it competition into your equation. No/little competition means there is little/nothing to offset that excessive price. It means the consumer has little option besides pay it or drop the service (supposing they are not locked in a contact and have to pay early term fees).

The same companies charge excessive rates to allow others to use their network. Well out of the viable competitive range. THey constantly try to prevent competition and even a community's attempts to create competion (either through a local/private network, wireless, or other).

And in the end the consumer has no voice. Stinks to high heaven of greed to me.
--

- "Techie" Jim


en102
Canadian, eh?

join:2001-01-26
Valencia, CA

reply to jimbo2150

said by jimbo2150:

What about greed? $1/gb is not excessive greed? $0.20/text message is not excessive greed?
1. Text messaging isn't a requirement for cell phone/data
2. There are relatively cheap unlimited plans by every carrier.
3. You can have text messaging disabled

This is more like having a 10GB 1.5Mbps plan with overages, and having the option to upgrade to a 10Mbps plan with unlimited. Of course, unlike text messaging - its the actual plan, while text messaging is an add on (I have mine disabled - waste of money, internet data is cheaper)


Matt
All noise, no signal.
Premium
join:2003-07-20
Jamestown, NC
kudos:12

reply to jimbo2150

said by jimbo2150:

said by Matt:

I think you'd be surprised to know that most companies have profit margins that are 1000's of percentage points higher than the physical cost.
And my entire point is... why? Why do they have to have an immediate return at the expense of their customers? What ever happen to long-term investments? And why is it seen as such a bad thing that a company not make a 1000+% profit margin when they could make a 100%. It may take a bit more time for a full return but it would most likely come.
I don't mean on the value of their stock. The point of such a high profit margin is to allow for investment in expansion, to better the service, as a safety net for the unexpected. There are numerous reason that successful companies must have such a large profit margin and really require one to operate. Apple has what, a 600% profit margin on the iPhone by most estimates? (That's probably on the low side too.)

When you start talking about huge corporations like Time Warner, that percentage can shrink because that percentage of profit is simply a much larger sum of money. You see that in the executive compensation packages. CEO, CTO, CFO's all figured out if they can eek out 2 points on their stock value by cutting costs, they directly stand to benefit. It may not be much to the profit of the company, but it's still a huge sum of money to an individual. After all, what is $28 million if you had a net profit of $7 billion? That's only .4% of said net profit.

However, that $28 million could have upgraded half your market to DOCSIS 3.0. So a lot of what you see is the result of impatient stock holders who want an immediate return. They are not the majority of the smart investors out there however. They came to the forefront when the day trading phenomenon became prevalent. When you couple that with the greed of an executive, little to no competition, and no oversight by an impartial party, you get what we have now. Greed run rampant in the from of anti-consumer practices.

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