and counts your Microcell data use that uses your own home internet against your phone data cap.
Ahh AT&T, the company that has to subsidize it's network with Wi-fi hotspots all over the place and counts your Microcell data use that uses your own home internet against your phone data cap.
Ahh AT&T, the company that has to subsidize it's network with Wi-fi hotspots all over the place and counts your Microcell data use that uses your own home internet against your phone data cap.
They might simply think that its not worth it to give the third party sellers a cut. They are probably figuring that the additional revenue they get from customers they wouldn't have gotten through their own stores is less than what they're giving away on customers that would have bought from att anyway if the third party sellers weren't an option.
Yeah Amazon has way more phones than the official AT&T site. This is especially important for Nokia users (the largest phone make in the world by the way) because I think right now AT&T only has the E71.The thing is, where they make their money is the plans. By not allowing people to sign up for a phone elsewhere, they're leading them to want a cheaper phone from a different carrier which loses them a plan which means they lose that money.
In the end, I see this as a huge opportunity they're missing out by doing this. That means EVERYONE that shops on Amazon cannot purchase a phone from them and activate service. That's a gigantic customer base right there. Sure, they all aren't shopping for AT&T cellular devices, but if they come across it and see they're selling for $0.01 and they want a new phone, bam. Service extended on AT&T and they gain that money they would have lost to a different carrier.
It's a double-edged sword though - I don't think a lot of people realize that if you have an issue with a handset, and you went through a third party retailer, that you're required to go back to them for any issues with the handset, including "warranty" issues. This highly inconveniences customers, especially if they use retailers with an online-only presence.
Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
The thing is, where they make their money is the plans. By not allowing people to sign up for a phone elsewhere, they're leading them to want a cheaper phone from a different carrier which loses them a plan which means they lose that money.
In the end, I see this as a huge opportunity they're missing out by doing this. That means EVERYONE that shops on Amazon cannot purchase a phone from them and activate service. That's a gigantic customer base right there. Sure, they all aren't shopping for AT&T cellular devices, but if they come across it and see they're selling for $0.01 and they want a new phone, bam. Service extended on AT&T and they gain that money they would have lost to a different carrier.
Seriously? WTF.
I can't quite tell from the article... are they stopping all third-party sales or just third-party online sales? Will you still be able to go to a Best Buy location and buy an AT&T phone, even if you can't buy one from Best Buy's website?
I thought the microcell was just for voice? But yeah, it does use your minutes to use the thing even though it uses your home network.
I can't quite tell from the article... are they stopping all third-party sales or just third-party online sales? Will you still be able to go to a Best Buy location and buy an AT&T phone, even if you can't buy one from Best Buy's website?