Bell & Telus Customers Await iPhone 4 Pricing

In an effort to win the lion’s share of Canadians waiting anxiously for the new iPhone 4, which comes out on Friday, Rogers Communications Inc. is offering big discounts to its existing iPhone customers.

Unlike when the first iPhone came to Canada, Rogers does not have an exclusivity agreement for the newest version of the wildly popular smart phone: Both BCE Inc. ‘s Bell Mobility and Telus Corp. will offer service for the iPhone 4, and currently offer the existing iPhone.

In the United States, AT&T Inc. is the only provider that Apple currently allows to offer service for the device.

If a Rogers customer bought an iPhone on contract before June 7, 2010, when Apple Inc. announced the iPhone at a developers conference, they can receive up to $480 off the device’s full price — meaning, the cost of the device without a handset subsidy and contract from the wireless company. If a Rogers customer bought their iPhone on a contract between January 1, 2009, and June 7, 2010, they get $250 off the non-subsidized device; if they bought the device on or before December 31st, they get $480 off.

The iPhone 4 is also available on a subsidized three-year contract at Rogers for $159, for the model with 16 gigabytes of memory, and $269 for the 32 GB model. Bell and Telus have not yet released pricing for the iPhone 4, but pricing between Canada’s largest three providers, for both devices and data plans, tend to be relatively similar.

As the price of voice calls drops drastically, carriers are looking towards wireless data revenues — from customers surfing the Web, emailing, and streaming video — to compensate. Much of Rogers’ recent revenue growth has been because of wireless data, a lot of which comes from iPhone users. Bell and Telus are likely to retaliate with special offers of their own, given the importance of wireless data to future revenue growth.

When the iPhone first came to Canada, Rogers was the only carrier with a network capable of handling the device and providing a rich user experience. However, in November 2009, Bell and Telus launched an advanced network together that was fully capable of supporting advanced smart phones. Both wireless carriers soon started offering service for the iPhone and have gradually eroded Rogers’ lead in picking up new subscribers, though Rogers still has roughly as many smart phone users as Bell and Telus combined.

Part of Rogers strategy is now upgrading its existing voice-only customers, and its existing smart phone customers, to the most advanced devices – which require lots of wireless data and condition consumers to use more data

Source: <a href=”http://www.ctv.ca/generic/generated/static/business/article1656225.html”>CTV</a>

About Jamie Forestell

Jamie Forestell is the Editor-in-chief and also the founder of Tek Tok Canada. His knowledge and aptitude for Technology led him to create a central website for all Canadians. His strong passion for the Technology world helps him stay abreast of leading-edge technologies and his desire to spread this information was the driving factor behind the creation of Tek Tok Canada.

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