From TELE.COM September 20, 1999, Issue: 418 Section: Business
  Little Guys Bulk Up -- CLECs And ISPs Come Together To Diversify Tyya Turner
                    Service diversification is pretty hard to miss these days. A prime                   example is AT&T's cable acquisitions and its related aim of                   providing combined phone, cable and Internet services to                   businesses and residences. But it is only a small part of a larger                   trend that's seen big providers move into all sorts of new fields                   through acquisitions and mergers. What may be less noticeable is                   that diversification is no longer limited to just big players.                   Providers of all sizes are joining the movement on the belief that                   service variety is key to success. What may be more surprising,                   however, is that over the past year, dozens of fledgling                   competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) and Internet service                   providers (ISPs) have also started mixing up their service                   menus-and they've done it by buying into each other so that                   CLECs can push into the Internet and ISPs can add voice                   services to their portfolios.
                    The chance to converge services isn't the only reason ISPs and                   CLECs are hooking up. They're also gravitating to each other                   because it is relatively easy to blend their technologies, blurring                   the line between ISPs and CLECs. The synergies from                   combining the two may force the issue even further, says                   Douglas Hanson, chairman and chief executive officer at                   multiservice provider RMI.Net Inc. (Denver). It may make that                   line disappear altogether. "There won't be a distinction between                   these companies like there is now," Hanson says. "CLECs,                   ILECs, ISPs-they'll all be the same."
                    Hanson's company is a prime example. RMI.Net, formerly                   known as Rocky Mountain Internet Inc., started out as an ISP,                   providing access and Web hosting. The company recently                   acquired IdealDial Corp. (Denver), a company that resells long                   distance, in addition to offering calling cards, e-billing and other                   services. Hanson considers the move a no-brainer. "My premise                   is that CLECs and ISPs aren't in each other businesses," he says.                   "They're the same business." To Hanson that means the                   communications business.
                    That may be the case, but that doesn't mean running an ISP and                   operating a CLEC are quite the same thing. Voice users have                   come to expect uninterrupted dialtone, while Internet customers                   are a little more forgiving of occasional networks outages. And                   unlike ISPs, CLECs also have to be concerned about negotiating                   interconnection agreements and pleasing state and federal                   regulators.
                    Yet even with these differences, the synergies from joining these                   types of providers offer any merger at least the promise of                   substantial returns. Look at recent history. Incumbent carriers                   have long realized the benefit of having Internet divisions.                   Regional ISPs, in turn, are moving into voice services, which                   puts them on a more equal competitive footing with incumbents.                   Beyond this, having CLEC status enables ISPs to colocate                   equipment with incumbents and maybe even receive reciprocal                   compensation.
                    On a smaller level, acquiring an ISP lets a CLEC add access,                   hosting and other services and gives the provider more options                   for bundling. That's why competitive carrier Conectiv                   Communications Inc. (Newark, Del.) decided to purchase iNet                   Communications Consulting Inc. (Newark, Del.), an ISP that                   also offers consulting services. Conectiv chose to buy rather than                   build because it needed to move quickly, but decided it lacked                   the in-house knowledge to construct its own service from                   scratch.
                    "What we get as a CLEC is access to a customer base that the                   ISP already has and the opportunity to offer those customers our                   voice service," says Jody Watts, vice president of marketing at                   Conectiv.
                    Time Warner Telecom LLC (Greenwood Village, Colo.), a                   subsidiary of Time Warner Inc. (New York), is another CLEC                   that took the ISP plunge and is happy with the results. When the                   company purchased Internet Connect Inc. (Inc.Net, Salt Lake                   City ) four months ago, the ISP only served three of Time                   Warner Telecom's 21 markets. Today, Inc.Net serves 20 of                   those markets and expects to move into the last one within a                   month. For Time Warner Telecom, the purchase means it can                   now not only offer another service, but also serve customers it                   otherwise couldn't.
                    "We started out serving the Fortune 1,000 marketplace," says                   John Blount, the CLEC's senior vice president of sales and                   marketing. "But by bundling services, we can now justify serving                   smaller customers that we wouldn't have served before." 
                    Copyright ® 1999 CMP Media Inc.
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  Rmi.net acquires Ideal Dial
                    By The Denver Post
                    June 15 - Rmi.net Inc. said Monday it acquired IdealDial, an                   enhanced telecommunications services provider with nearly                   20,000 customers, in a common stock transaction valued at $3                   million. IdealDial has an expected revenue of $10 million for                   fiscal year 1999. "IdealDial's nationwide business-customer                   base will give us additional customers to up sell our enhanced                   e-commerce products to,'' said Douglas H. Hanson, chairman                   and CEO of RMI.   |