Sprint and Virgin Mobile announces Beyond Talk $25 prepaid plan, new prepaid brand
Sprint Nextel, through its Virgin Mobile brand, has announced a pretty big shift in its business model by offering new prepaid plans that begin at a mind-blowing $25 a month. Starting on May 12, three new Beyond Talk plans will include unlimited messaging, email, data, and web, as well as 300 minutes ($25), 1,200 minutes ($40), or unlimited minutes ($60) of talk time. And that ain't all -- BlackBerry data service can be added for an additional $10. Of course, you'll be paying full price for your phone, but at least the selection is indeed better than the usual pre-paid fare, including the Blackberry Curve 8530 ($300) and LG Rumor Touch ($150). We don't know how the other carriers are going to respond, but this does prompt the question: would you put up with Sprint's handset selection for a plan this cheap? PR after the break.Update: The Wall Street Journal has it that Sprint is also fixing to launch an entirely new prepaid brand, and while it declined to share a name for the new branch, it did confess that it "will let customers pay upfront for cell service by the minute rather than signing up for a month at a time." As you may expect, it'll be aimed at "middle-aged Americans who only use cellphones occasionally to make calls," and it'll join Boost Mobile, Assurance Wireless and Virgin Mobile in Sprint's rapidly expanding stable of prepaid sub-brands. Is it difficult to tell these guys love the prepaid and can't quite figure out how to make ends meet on the postpaid side? Nah...
Sprint's Prepaid Multi-Brand Strategy Focuses on Distinct Customer Segments
Differentiated Brands Old & New Aim to Serve Increasingly Diverse Audiences, Tackle Specific Competitors
WARREN, N.J., May 06, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) --Sprint [NYSE:S] today officially unveiled its comprehensive multi-segment approach to the prepaid wireless marketplace. Since Sprint's acquisition of Virgin Mobile USA, Inc., the company has rolled out a series of new prepaid products, enhancements and industry-advancing products, each designed to appeal to specific customers in the wireless space.
"We brought together the resources and experience of the Boost and Virgin Mobile teams in late 2009," said Sprint CEO Dan Hesse. "Since that time, we have been developing the critical pieces of our multi-brand prepaid strategy. Our approach to the prepaid market can truly set us apart from the competition with tailored offers that will address specific needs in this growing market."
"This is the year that prepaid moves to the forefront of the wireless industry," said Dan Schulman, president of Sprint's prepaid group. "In the first quarter of 2010, more than half of the mobile gross additions in the U.S. selected prepaid, and we predict that approximately 70% of the net adds in 2010 will choose plans without a contract."
"With almost 60 million people now on prepaid service," Schulman continued, "the no-contract market has clearly moved beyond the credit-challenged and lower income segments. The prepaid market has changed dramatically, with customers across multiple demographics and lifestyles demanding a wide variety of handsets, features, and plans tailored to their specific needs and wants."
Sprint's prepaid portfolio will initially be driven by four brands, with each focused on a specific audience. "The launch of this portfolio goes far beyond changing prices," explained Schulman. "We are introducing innovative and attractive offers for specific groups of customers based on usage and habits - from those who are on limited budgets and use their phones infrequently to those who want high-end devices to use for all their communications, entertainment and social networking."
Virgin Mobile USA
Reinventing prepaid wireless once again, Virgin Mobile will introduce an innovative new value proposition that focuses on serving customers who use text and data services to power constant connection with their social networks.
With unlimited messaging, email, data and web included on all plans starting at just $25 a month and a new high-end handset lineup, Virgin Mobile will offer a clear alternative for customers who want a data-driven service without expensive annual contracts and thousands of unnecessary voice minutes. With the addition of the lowest-priced BlackBerry(R) service plan in the market, Virgin Mobile will provide real value for individuals looking to stay connected without compromising on handset or service quality.
The way youth and young adults communicate has changed dramatically over the past few years. Data from Nielsen shows that usage patterns for postpaid mobile subscribers aged 18-34 shifted from 2007 to 2009. Minutes of talk dropped over 10% while messages sent and received grew by more than 150%. The amount of data usage within this group grew by over 1800% during the same time period.
Beyond Talk(TM)
On May 12, Virgin Mobile will unveil three new "Beyond Talk" plans that all include unlimited messaging, email, data and web [with no incremental fees or taxes]:
* The revolutionary $25 plan is the industry's lowest price point for unlimited messaging, email, data and web with 300 minutes of voice per month, ideal for high-end device users seeking an unbeatable price to enable the text and data services they need.
* The $40 plan includes unlimited messaging, email, data and web with 1,200 minutes of voice per month -- the perfect value for those seeking an affordable plan with everything they need.
* The $60 plan includes unlimited messaging, email, data and web with unlimited voice to offer great value for high-end smartphone users expecting an unlimited plan to cost much more.
For the first time, Virgin Mobile customers can add Blackberry(R) data service to any of these plans for just $10 more, enabling an unprecedented $35 plan consisting of both voice calling and Blackberry data service.
"Our new offers target a continuing evolution in wireless consumer behavior - increased use of text and data services as a form of wireless communication over talk," explained Schulman. "These Beyond Talk plans offer the most accessible solution for customers seeking that data-driven lifestyle -- unlimited text and data on their terms without a contract, at prices they will love, without requiring them to buy extra minutes they don't need."
New Handsets
Virgin Mobile's new handset lineup proves that a two-year contract isn't necessary to get a hot data-driven device:
* The Blackberry Curve(TM) 8530 smartphone is a particularly desirable device without a contract. Key features include an approachable form factor, full-QWERTY keyboard, optical track pad, Wi-Fi connectivity, dedicated media keys, and 2 MP camera. The Blackberry Curve 8530 smartphone will be available for $299.995at retail and at www.virginmobileusa.om at the end of May.
* The LG Rumor Touch(TM) at $149.99 is the first full touch interface handset from Virgin Mobile and is only available without a contract on these plans. Customers can use all the data they want and message all of their friends easily and simply with a Beyond Talk plan. This handset is ideal for the super-connected with an external memory drive that can store up to 16GB of data.
* The very popular LG Rumor 2(TM) QWERTY launched last year, also only available without a contract from Virgin Mobile. For $89.99, it allows customers to message quickly and easily with preloaded apps like the Ultimate Inbox, threaded messaging and Connect social networking. The popular Opera Mini web browser is included as well.
* The Kyocera Loft QWERTY for $69.99 suits message-savvy customers perfectly with an embedded instant messaging and email application, and message threading for SMS and MMS in a single inbox. The camera phone includes the networking features mentioned above as well as a Google Maps and other navigational applications.
Virgin Mobile USA continues to serve its current base of prepaid customers with a wide range of handsets, monthly unlimited plans, Minute Packs, Texters Delight and Broadband2Go.
Broadband
Broadband2Go,launched last year under the Virgin Mobile label, also targets the needs of the high data-using crowd that wants easy wireless Internet access wherever they are but doesn't want to sign a long-term contract.
"Since we expanded distribution, lowered the price, and added more data capacity without changing prices, sales have tripled," said Schulman. "We'll continue to enhance this product line as well, possibly under multiple brands to include new services and the very latest in high speed networks, including 4G where available."
Broadband2Go operates on Sprint's Nationwide Network, unlike other prepaid broadband offers.
Boost Mobile
Boost Mobile continues its popularity by focusing on consumers who love to talk and text and stay connected with the best value and straightforward monthly unlimited pricing. With more than 25% of U.S households now wireless-only for voice6, Boost offers value and service that is second to none. This week, Boost added unlimited 411 calls, email and instant messaging to its $50 Monthly Unlimited plan, which also features unlimited talk, text and web access.
Boost's ever-increasing suite of CDMA handsets, introduced in late January, is driving significant consumer demand. The Blackberry Curve 8830 smartphone, launched earlier this year, is joined by the Samsung Rant(TM) and, from Sanyo by Kyocera, the Incognito(TM), Mirro(TM) SCP3810 and Juno(TM) on the CDMA side. Depending on a customer's choice of features, Boost Mobile also is available on the Nextel National Network for push-to-talk technology.
Assurance Wireless
First launched late last year, Assurance Wireless is a free wireless service developed specifically for the 37 million eligible low-income households who need it most. Qualifying customers - often cash-constrained individuals eligible for government- assistance programs like Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, or food stamps) - receive a free cell phone and 200 free minutes of airtime for local and long-distance calling every month.
Sprint is "proud to offer this valuable program," according to Schulman, which is currently available in Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia and will continue to expand as individual states approve the program. To date, hundreds of thousands have signed up for this uniquely tailored offer. Sprint anticipates that Assurance Wireless will be available in approximately 25 states by the end of 2010.
A New Pay By the Minute Brand
During Sprint's first quarter earnings call, reference was made to another new brand to launch this month targeting budget-conscious customers who spend less than $30 per month and are focused on the value they pay per minute. Roughly 63% of the no-contract market chooses to pay by the minute or by the day.
"There are millions of people who don't want or can't afford smartphones and expensive data plans," said Schulman. "This is the traditional no-frills prepaid customer base. For these 'basic communicators,' we are creating a fresh brand with industry-leading value and consumer-friendly offers." Designed to resonate directly with cost-conscious consumers, this new brand is expected to initially debut at retail in approximately 16 markets.
About Sprint Nextel
Sprint Nextel offers a comprehensive range of wireless and wireline communications services bringing the freedom of mobility to consumers, businesses and government users. Sprint Nextel is widely recognized for developing, engineering and deploying innovative technologies, including two wireless networks serving more than 48 million customers at the end of the fourth quarter of 2009 and the first and only 4G service from a national carrier in the United States; industry-leading mobile data services; instant national and international push-to-talk capabilities; and a global Tier 1 Internet backbone. The company's customer-focused strategy has led to improved first call resolution and customer care satisfaction scores. For more information, visit www.sprint.com.
SOURCE: Sprint
Differentiated Brands Old & New Aim to Serve Increasingly Diverse Audiences, Tackle Specific Competitors
WARREN, N.J., May 06, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) --Sprint [NYSE:S] today officially unveiled its comprehensive multi-segment approach to the prepaid wireless marketplace. Since Sprint's acquisition of Virgin Mobile USA, Inc., the company has rolled out a series of new prepaid products, enhancements and industry-advancing products, each designed to appeal to specific customers in the wireless space.
"We brought together the resources and experience of the Boost and Virgin Mobile teams in late 2009," said Sprint CEO Dan Hesse. "Since that time, we have been developing the critical pieces of our multi-brand prepaid strategy. Our approach to the prepaid market can truly set us apart from the competition with tailored offers that will address specific needs in this growing market."
"This is the year that prepaid moves to the forefront of the wireless industry," said Dan Schulman, president of Sprint's prepaid group. "In the first quarter of 2010, more than half of the mobile gross additions in the U.S. selected prepaid, and we predict that approximately 70% of the net adds in 2010 will choose plans without a contract."
"With almost 60 million people now on prepaid service," Schulman continued, "the no-contract market has clearly moved beyond the credit-challenged and lower income segments. The prepaid market has changed dramatically, with customers across multiple demographics and lifestyles demanding a wide variety of handsets, features, and plans tailored to their specific needs and wants."
Sprint's prepaid portfolio will initially be driven by four brands, with each focused on a specific audience. "The launch of this portfolio goes far beyond changing prices," explained Schulman. "We are introducing innovative and attractive offers for specific groups of customers based on usage and habits - from those who are on limited budgets and use their phones infrequently to those who want high-end devices to use for all their communications, entertainment and social networking."
Virgin Mobile USA
Reinventing prepaid wireless once again, Virgin Mobile will introduce an innovative new value proposition that focuses on serving customers who use text and data services to power constant connection with their social networks.
With unlimited messaging, email, data and web included on all plans starting at just $25 a month and a new high-end handset lineup, Virgin Mobile will offer a clear alternative for customers who want a data-driven service without expensive annual contracts and thousands of unnecessary voice minutes. With the addition of the lowest-priced BlackBerry(R) service plan in the market, Virgin Mobile will provide real value for individuals looking to stay connected without compromising on handset or service quality.
The way youth and young adults communicate has changed dramatically over the past few years. Data from Nielsen shows that usage patterns for postpaid mobile subscribers aged 18-34 shifted from 2007 to 2009. Minutes of talk dropped over 10% while messages sent and received grew by more than 150%. The amount of data usage within this group grew by over 1800% during the same time period.
Beyond Talk(TM)
On May 12, Virgin Mobile will unveil three new "Beyond Talk" plans that all include unlimited messaging, email, data and web [with no incremental fees or taxes]:
* The revolutionary $25 plan is the industry's lowest price point for unlimited messaging, email, data and web with 300 minutes of voice per month, ideal for high-end device users seeking an unbeatable price to enable the text and data services they need.
* The $40 plan includes unlimited messaging, email, data and web with 1,200 minutes of voice per month -- the perfect value for those seeking an affordable plan with everything they need.
* The $60 plan includes unlimited messaging, email, data and web with unlimited voice to offer great value for high-end smartphone users expecting an unlimited plan to cost much more.
For the first time, Virgin Mobile customers can add Blackberry(R) data service to any of these plans for just $10 more, enabling an unprecedented $35 plan consisting of both voice calling and Blackberry data service.
"Our new offers target a continuing evolution in wireless consumer behavior - increased use of text and data services as a form of wireless communication over talk," explained Schulman. "These Beyond Talk plans offer the most accessible solution for customers seeking that data-driven lifestyle -- unlimited text and data on their terms without a contract, at prices they will love, without requiring them to buy extra minutes they don't need."
New Handsets
Virgin Mobile's new handset lineup proves that a two-year contract isn't necessary to get a hot data-driven device:
* The Blackberry Curve(TM) 8530 smartphone is a particularly desirable device without a contract. Key features include an approachable form factor, full-QWERTY keyboard, optical track pad, Wi-Fi connectivity, dedicated media keys, and 2 MP camera. The Blackberry Curve 8530 smartphone will be available for $299.995at retail and at www.virginmobileusa.om at the end of May.
* The LG Rumor Touch(TM) at $149.99 is the first full touch interface handset from Virgin Mobile and is only available without a contract on these plans. Customers can use all the data they want and message all of their friends easily and simply with a Beyond Talk plan. This handset is ideal for the super-connected with an external memory drive that can store up to 16GB of data.
* The very popular LG Rumor 2(TM) QWERTY launched last year, also only available without a contract from Virgin Mobile. For $89.99, it allows customers to message quickly and easily with preloaded apps like the Ultimate Inbox, threaded messaging and Connect social networking. The popular Opera Mini web browser is included as well.
* The Kyocera Loft QWERTY for $69.99 suits message-savvy customers perfectly with an embedded instant messaging and email application, and message threading for SMS and MMS in a single inbox. The camera phone includes the networking features mentioned above as well as a Google Maps and other navigational applications.
Virgin Mobile USA continues to serve its current base of prepaid customers with a wide range of handsets, monthly unlimited plans, Minute Packs, Texters Delight and Broadband2Go.
Broadband
Broadband2Go,launched last year under the Virgin Mobile label, also targets the needs of the high data-using crowd that wants easy wireless Internet access wherever they are but doesn't want to sign a long-term contract.
"Since we expanded distribution, lowered the price, and added more data capacity without changing prices, sales have tripled," said Schulman. "We'll continue to enhance this product line as well, possibly under multiple brands to include new services and the very latest in high speed networks, including 4G where available."
Broadband2Go operates on Sprint's Nationwide Network, unlike other prepaid broadband offers.
Boost Mobile
Boost Mobile continues its popularity by focusing on consumers who love to talk and text and stay connected with the best value and straightforward monthly unlimited pricing. With more than 25% of U.S households now wireless-only for voice6, Boost offers value and service that is second to none. This week, Boost added unlimited 411 calls, email and instant messaging to its $50 Monthly Unlimited plan, which also features unlimited talk, text and web access.
Boost's ever-increasing suite of CDMA handsets, introduced in late January, is driving significant consumer demand. The Blackberry Curve 8830 smartphone, launched earlier this year, is joined by the Samsung Rant(TM) and, from Sanyo by Kyocera, the Incognito(TM), Mirro(TM) SCP3810 and Juno(TM) on the CDMA side. Depending on a customer's choice of features, Boost Mobile also is available on the Nextel National Network for push-to-talk technology.
Assurance Wireless
First launched late last year, Assurance Wireless is a free wireless service developed specifically for the 37 million eligible low-income households who need it most. Qualifying customers - often cash-constrained individuals eligible for government- assistance programs like Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, or food stamps) - receive a free cell phone and 200 free minutes of airtime for local and long-distance calling every month.
Sprint is "proud to offer this valuable program," according to Schulman, which is currently available in Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia and will continue to expand as individual states approve the program. To date, hundreds of thousands have signed up for this uniquely tailored offer. Sprint anticipates that Assurance Wireless will be available in approximately 25 states by the end of 2010.
A New Pay By the Minute Brand
During Sprint's first quarter earnings call, reference was made to another new brand to launch this month targeting budget-conscious customers who spend less than $30 per month and are focused on the value they pay per minute. Roughly 63% of the no-contract market chooses to pay by the minute or by the day.
"There are millions of people who don't want or can't afford smartphones and expensive data plans," said Schulman. "This is the traditional no-frills prepaid customer base. For these 'basic communicators,' we are creating a fresh brand with industry-leading value and consumer-friendly offers." Designed to resonate directly with cost-conscious consumers, this new brand is expected to initially debut at retail in approximately 16 markets.
About Sprint Nextel
Sprint Nextel offers a comprehensive range of wireless and wireline communications services bringing the freedom of mobility to consumers, businesses and government users. Sprint Nextel is widely recognized for developing, engineering and deploying innovative technologies, including two wireless networks serving more than 48 million customers at the end of the fourth quarter of 2009 and the first and only 4G service from a national carrier in the United States; industry-leading mobile data services; instant national and international push-to-talk capabilities; and a global Tier 1 Internet backbone. The company's customer-focused strategy has led to improved first call resolution and customer care satisfaction scores. For more information, visit www.sprint.com.
SOURCE: Sprint























No...crappy handset selection is crappy.
@DoctarPeppar
If they had the palm pre in the selection then it would be a go.
@DoctarPeppar
One thing's for sure... if virgin makes offers like this, it'd no longer be a virgin.
@DoctarPeppar
Wait, this is a bit confusing. Does this mean they'll be offering T-Mobile-style Even More Plus plans over Sprint's network?
And does that mean I can buy an EVO out-of-pocket and then sign up for one of these plans? All of this collaboration junk in the release makes things very unclear. Fire that press secretary; they're terrible. Wait, no, then the White House might hire 'em.
@steel
The EVO is not on the list of approved phones...that's the whole catch (duhr).
@DoctarPeppar If I can buy an EVO 4G off contract and pay $25 a month for 300 minutes with unlimited text and data, then early June, I will say LATER AT&T!
@DoctarPeppar
Oh.. but that doesn't really make sense. What service provider is going to tell a customer who walks in the door w/ a phone that is compatible on their network that they and their phone aren't welcome here? That would be stupid.
@steel An MVNO that offers super cheap data on the premise that their phones don't use very much of it.
@steel
You have to pay full price for the phone, and only certain phones are approved for this plan...that's the catch, that's why they're making it so cheap....
@who said what
The service will be named Bmobile lol
I haven't taken a look at the phone selection but this sure looks like something I'm interested in.
@steel I have shopped Boost (Sprint) and Straight Talk (Verizon/Wal-mart) They won't activate a phone that did not come from them. Boost won't even activate a Sprint Blackberry. There are forums on how to change to a Sprint Blackberry after you have activated a Boost phone, but it is not a simple task.
Does anyone know... can any CDMA handset be activated on Virgin Mobile?
Usually most CDMA handsets have their unlock code set to 000000, except for Sprint's which are randomized. This is how US Cellular, MetroPCS, etc are able to activate any CDMA handset on their service. I wonder if Virgin can do this too.
@JEdelman at&t and virgin (eg sprint), use incompatible network tpes, you cant move a gsm to a cdma network.
I had thought about switching to sprint. Their plans are so god damn cheap, but i just couldn't wait on getting a new phone any longer to wait for the evo, so I got the incredible.
@I Fling Poo u dum. Do u know how much money u just wasted.
@keyron27 not that much actually? The evo is rumored to be $250 after contract while i got the incredible for $150. Sprints everything plan is 69.99 a month and i'm paying $79.99 for verizon, who has a bigger coverage area and better service. So basically after ten months, i'm still even with where'd i'd be if i had gone with sprint. Everyone is different. Do some research before you start calling someone "dum"
@keyron27
He doesn't seem very "dum." Both of those are great phones.
Mr. Poo, Do you get tethering/hot spot capability with your Incredible via Verizon?
Cannot wait for the HTC EVO 4G to drop!!
@I Fling Poo Incredible = No 4G (w/ unlimited data). No HDMI out. No annual upgrades (via Sprint Premier). No front facing camera. Smaller screen and the fact that $10 difference per month more on VZ effectively nixes the (supposed) phone price differences in less than a year. EVO 4G for the win! :-)
Oh and Sprint's Any Mobile, Anywhere kicks the PANTS of VZ, IMO. No more calling circles.
@skemme Not to mention that $80/mo @ Verizon won't get you unlimited texting and unlimited data. You'll have to jump to at least $90/mo for that, and that's only with 450 minutes. (Verizon customer that would be a Sprint customer if they had native 3G here)
@joefresco see i don't need the unlimited texting and calling, because everyone i know has verizon, so my 450 minute plan and my $10 unlimited verizon texting does me just fine at $80 a month.
Yes, i do get tethering via verizon. Its called pdanet. And its free. Sprint's won't be free. Also, take a look at the 4G map. I don't live anywhere near where 4G is so it makes no point. I don't need the HDMI because anywhere that I would need to play movies off the evo i'll probably have my laptop with me, which has HDMI out.
For sprint premier, this phone is so good you're gunna wanna give it up in a year? You guys are all jumping on me after I said sprint had great priced plans but that i could not WAIT for the evo. Jesus. I didn't knock the phone or the company. Verizon , imo, has better coverage and service and their plan works just fine for me, and the incredible is exactly what I wanted. Not to big, not to small. Perfect for ME. If the evo is perfect for you, GREAT. I couldn't wait that long.
@I Fling Poo Not quite. Eco will have 4G, bigger screen, and much cheaper plans. I would like to see how much Verizon charges for 450 weekday landline minutes, free after 7pm, free weekends, free to all cell phones, unlimited data, unlimited text, and unlimited navigation. Last I looked that was a bit over $80 and much higher than the $70 Sprint charges.
In addition to a better phone and better pricing, Sprint has native coverage second only to Verizon (which does have better coverage in bumfuck boonies) but since Sprint roams for free on Verizon, there is no real advantage.
Add in upgrades every year instead of every two years and I would gladly pay $50-100 more for a specific (better) device and save $30 every month.
Keep on believing what the ads tell you though...it's cool.
@jerbear
how about you read my f'ing post. All the crap you listed I don't need. Verizon has worked excellent for me and I'm happy with the amount I pay. YET AGAIN though you failed to read the main reason I didn't get the evo. I COULD NOT WAIT THAT LONG. READ AGAIN: I COULD NOT WAIT UNTIL THE EVO CAME OUT. I had to get a phone now, and the incredible is imo, the best phone available TODAY. I did not bash sprint in any way, so calm the fuck down. It works for me. Glad it works for you.
@I Fling Poo I don't believe that because I just went on Verizon website and you'll be paying so much more for what you get from Sprint.... I'm talking about unlimited everything...... the same plan with Verizon you'll be paying 130 monthly.
@I Fling Poo I want to get an incredible.. do you like yours?
@keyron27 Read my post again. and read the verizon website again. With all of their plans, verizon offers unlimited calling to other verizon subscribers (aka IN calling). Their $10 texting plan offers unlimited texting to other verizon customers (aka IN messaging) plus 500 messages to other customers. Now add the $30 unlimited data. So we have 39.99 for the 450 min plan + $10 for texting + $30 for the data = $79.99 plus taxes. As I said, most of the people I know have verizon, so its not worth it to pay for the unlimited stuff.
@ibransond love it. Its really fast, great screen and the apps are great. Keyboard is easy to use, which was a big thing for me. The battery life lasts from the morning till the night easily with medium use, which is average for a smartphone these days. The lady at best buy that was activating my phone said this is the first android phone that made her seriously consider jumping ship from AT&T and the i phone.
Woohoo... bout time phone plans were priced what they were worth
@adokimus
Granted, texting prices have always been a scam, but cellular networks are extremely expensive. Everyone complains about Verizon's prices, but there's a reason that they're so good here in the States.
@quasistellar
Yeah. Government infrastructure subsidies that allow them to pocket income that they would otherwise have to spend on buildout.
8^)
that's very impressive.
Tmobile, or AT&T, I'm on my knees, please.
... please.
This is perfect for someone like me, ie, someone who wants a nice smartphone but wants to wait until the iPhone or Evo have been released. I'd rather buy a cheap phone (ebay sells basic phones for around $40) and go month to month (at $25) and just wait until the right [and expensive phone/plan] one comes out.
if Someone does a plan like this with a GOOD WinPho7 phone or an iPhone I'd be tempted.....but thats the only way....
You know, I swore I'd never go back to Sprint after having a horrible experience with them from 2004-2007. However, they really seem to be making a lot of good moves lately (EVO 4G, $69.99 everything plan, etc). I'm under contract with Verizon now, but when my contract is up I'll definitely give Sprint a look again. This is especially true since I live in Charlotte, which has Sprint 4G service already.
@mbushnell If you think those plans are cheap, try these even less expensive plans (from fatwallet.com - http://www.sprint.com/everythingplus, Email: russ.s.mcguire@sprint.com, Last 3 digits of employee ID: 383)
$59.99 for 500 minutes and unlimited messaging and data
$79.99 for 1000 minutes and unlimited messaging and data AND both have Any Mobile, Anywhere (no more calling circles). Heck of a deal!
@skemme
Question: If I sign up for Sprint under the link and sign in provided, would that still allow me to use an employer discount, or does one discount preclude the other? I am looking to switch from Verizon to Sprint. Thanks.
Uh, seriously!?!? I could definitely go for a BlackBerry @ $35/month when I'm paying $30/month now for ONLY data.
@hated one
That is why RIM is completely out of business. No one needs a phone for productivity anymore, so as long as they have fart apps everything is great.
@hated one
Yeah, even the new bb os is a complete joke compared to webos or android \ iphone.
@MRCUR
really? everyone i know (work,friends) has one, its turning into the sidekick phenomenon....maybe its just here in nyc?
@MRCUR Not a big fan of Blackberry, but I'm seriously considering one with this plan.
@Dafrety
RIM is out of business??
@theone87
Didn't you hear? I read it this new blog. Sarcasmo, sarcasta, sarcastic? I don't know what the pronunciation is but it was one of those.
@hated one - You know, I happen to be an iPhone owner. I pay $30/month just for the data plan on my iPhone, along with most everyone else that has one.
I'm also a BB fan, or Android/webOS/WinMo/etc. I'm a fan of phones and I miss having BBM and BB email. A Curve running on Sprint with a $35/month UNLIMITED (I don't use the phone) plan is a no brainer for me as a second phone.
@MRCUR I wish I had a better prepaid data plan for my BlackBerry Bold 9000 on Rogers Pay-As-You-Go. Spending $10 a month with the $6 150 text messages plan is fine, I can also pay $3 for the 20 MB data day pass, which is more than enough for tethering to my laptop to read some blogs with images off, update my blog, read Wikipedia and use IRC/MSN.
Sucks they have to limit the handset selection. People would pay $600 for the EVO 4G if they knew they could have unlimited data, etc. for $25 a month. I guess they assume that if you can afford a higher-end phone you want a contract and a higher monthly bill. Too bad.
Really? Holy Shit!
Sprint is not dicking around... they are killing the other guys in terms of service options and pricing.
I had to do a double take when I read, "include unlimited messaging, email, data, and web".
What, what, wut???