This finally made it to Bloomberg late today. Tomorrow will be interesting.
6/5 Some AOL Subscribers Say They Are Likely to Leave, Survey Says Dulles, Virginia, June 5 (Bloomberg) -- Nearly half of America Online Inc. subscribers who also use an Internet service said they are likely to leave the No. 1 online service, according to a survey by researcher Find/SVP.
Users gave several reasons for leaving, including slow connection speeds, cost and access problems because of an unexpected rise of demand after the introduction of a lower subscription fee. Based on the survey, Find/SVP estimates that 1.3 million of the online service's 8 million paying customers will leave or are likely to leave. ``Granting that not all these intentions will actually materialize, they still represent a huge vote of disapproval,'' the researcher wrote in a report on the data.
The people most likely to defect are men under 50 in the middle-income range, the survey said. Those demographics represent problems for the company, because they are the people who are central to the company's growth, the survey said.
Many of the things that AOL subscribers do on the online service and much of the information they look up is replicated on the Internet, the survey said.
The data shows that 22 percent of subscribers' time online is spent using the Internet, 36 percent searching for information on AOL and the rest using e-mail and chat, or electronic discussions, the survey said.
The AOL data is based on findings from Find/SVP's Internet User Survey, when the researcher surveyed 1,000 Internet users and 1,000 non-users. The survey was conducted from February to April.
AOL in December introduced an unlimited usage plan for $19.95 a month, leading to network problems, customers lawsuits and a settlement with 45 state attorneys general. The company told analysts last week that the network problems were mostly under control. The company in April began stepping up marketing again to woo new subscribers.
AOL began offering the new fee to compete with online and Internet services including those offered by AT&T Corp. and Microsoft Corp. --Heather Green in the Princeton newsroom (609)279-4078 through the Palo Alto newsroom (415) 326-3613/smw |