survey of 400 customers during the last week of February and the first week of March put the attrition rate at 58 percent.
04/08/97 America Online to Begin Pushing Subscriber Growth
Dulles, Virginia, April 9 (Bloomberg) -- America Online Inc., after halting customer growth at 8 million people in January because of problems with access to the service, said it now plans to add subscribers.
In a monthly letter to subscribers, AOL Chairman and Chief Executive Steve Case said AOL will begin marketing its service again. The company stopped seeking to add customers in February after a $19.95 unlimited-access rate in December brought so many new subscribers that the network slowed down. Many people trying to connect to the service got busy signals for hours on end. ``We will begin marketing on a limited basis, slowly ramping up over time so we can measure the impact of each incremental increase in marketing,'' Case said in the letter.
AOL has underestimated demand in the past, particularly when the flat-rate fee was introduced. Customer complaints led to class-action suits and intervention by states' attorneys general offices.
In January, the No. 1 online service settled with 45 attorneys general, agreeing to customer refunds for December and January and halting marketing in February. Last week, the company settled a class-action suit, extending the refunds it will pay for two more months.
Because of continued high demand, AOL also decided to hold back marketing in March. Still, the company never totally turned off its marketing, running TV and print ads and distributing free disks, although not at past levels. While the company had set a limit at 8 million, it needed to add subscribers to replace the ones who left, analysts said.
Estimates of the number of customers who leave AOL range from 30 percent to 40 percent a year. A recent Forrester Research Inc. survey of 400 customers during the last week of February and the first week of March put the attrition rate at 58 percent. ``My guess is they are seeing a lot of attrition,'' said Kate Delhagen, a Forrester analyst. ``They are probably also feeling a lot of pressure from Wall Street about subscriber growth.''
AOL plans to begin marketing almost at a test level to judge the impact that added demand will have on the service, said Bob Pittman, president of AOL Networks, the unit that runs the online service. ``The news here is that we aren't just turning on the marketing machine one day,'' Pittman said. ``We're turning it on slowly and incrementally.''
AOL has been working to improve its network and is spending $100 million through June, on top of the $250 million already budgeted, to improve connection speed and the customers' experience while they are online, Pittman said. The company is also leasing about 50,000 additional modems. ``Everything that has to do with the network is getting better,'' Pittman said. |