A nice article on MCOM in Forbes today:
Ricochet Hits Mark For Small Businesses On The Go Kevin Ferguson, Forbes.com, 11.08.00, 12:01 AM ET
NEW YORK - As recently as this summer, Metricom's Ricochet, a high-speed wireless data network, drew shrugs from industry analysts. Now it's getting rave reviews from small businesses.
The service, which offers always-on Internet access at speeds of at least 128Kbps, is available in 11 markets, including Manhattan, which was added late last month. Two of those markets, Seattle and Washington, D.C., are being upgraded to 128Kbps from the service's older 28.8Kbps net work.
"The days of sitting in the office doing my work are gone. I take my office with me," crows San Diego, Calif., real estate broker Dee Dee McGann of Landmark Realty. McGann, who pays Tampa, Fla.-based Internet service provider (ISP) Wireless WebConnect $75 a month for the service, uses Ricochet to access real estate and tax databases from the road. Such access boosts her sales by saving her trips back to the office.
To be fair, McGann is still only one of 30,000 to 45,000 subscribers expected to use Ricochet by the end of the year. Early attempts by Metricom (nasdaq: MCOM) to juggle marketing and product development proved too much for it to handle. And Metricom posted a whopping third-quarter loss of $54.5 million in October, or $1.77 per share, on revenue of only $3.9 million, as it continued to build its network.
But the impact of $600 million in funding--$300 million each from Vulcan Ventures and WorldCom (nasdaq: WCOM)--will have a noticeable impact on Metricom's subscriber base as early as next spring, says David Chamberlain, senior analyst with Probe Research of Cedar Mills, N.J. Chamberlain, who previously offered blistering appraisals of Metricom's business strategy, now says Ricochet has a good chance of succeeding. "The company had disappointed me time and again. They were simply never able to scale up their operations. By unloading all those things that prevented them from scaling--specifically, tech support and sales--they're well positioned."
Chamberlain is not only referring to the $600 million investment, but also Metricom's decision to sell its services through WorldCom and through ISPs GoAmerica (nasdaq: GOAM), Wireless WebConnect and Juno Online Services (nasdaq: JWEB). Hackensack, N.J.-based GoAmerica is the most recent ISP to offer Ricochet, adding the service in nine metropolitan markets just three weeks ago.
Ricochet seems particularly useful to small businesses whose work can't always be confined to small screens offered on cell phones and personal digital assistants (although Ricochet modems are now available for PDAs). "Ricochet is fast enough for virtually everything I do," says C. Antonio Romero, part owner of CultureKiosque.com, a Web-based magazine published from Paris. "On the other hand, the limited Internet access that I could get over a cell phone is of virtually no value to me. At most, I could see a critical e-mail and make a cell phone call to respond. Other than that, what can I do--squint at movie listings and sports scores? Day trade? For this I pay how much?" Romero expects to subscribe to Ricochet service in January.
Bryan Thatcher, chief executive officer of FuseBox, a Web site design firm in New York, is similarly impressed. "We have four sales reps. With this they can tap into the Internet and show products to potential clients," he says. Ricochet is not needed by all of FuseBox's 55 employees, he notes. Other FuseBox employees make do with two-way pagers and wireless PDAs.
To date, Ricochet customers tend to be lone wolves, individual subscribers who just happen to work for a small business. But that is likely to change, says Metricom, and multiple-user subscriptions from companies like FuseBox will become commonplace. "I think you'll see more and more corporate buys as the subscriber base increases," predicts Metricom Chairman Timothy Dreisbach.
How far might Ricochet fly in the long term? Wireless data networks under construction that might compete with Metricom--those being built by AT&T Wireless (nyse: AWE), Verizon Communications (nyse: VZ) and Sprint PCS (nyse: PCS)--are still years away from completion. Industry analysts say they're unsure how the market will look in three or four years. And Dreisbach won't publicly hazard a guess, repeating only marginally useful statistics that Metricom's expanding wireless network will be available to 100 million people in another year or so. In the short term, though, Ricochet is flying. |