Mobile Competency Releases Industry's First Report Ranking of Carrier Readiness for Wireless Number Portability

Groundbreaking Report Titled: Wireless Number Portability: This Ain't Y2K


NORTH PROVIDENCE, R.I., Nov. 3, 2003 (PRIMEZONE) -- Mobile Competency (www.mobilecompetency.com), a leading independent analyst firm for the mobile and wireless market, today released the industry's first ranking of carrier readiness in a new report entitled Wireless Number Portability: This Ain't Y2K. The report finds that CIOs and IT managers should avoid wireless number portability (WNP) until at least spring 2004 because as the study has found, the industry is clearly not ready to meet the demand.

Wireless Number Portability: This Ain't Y2K is the industry's first ranking of the six largest U.S. carriers' readiness for WNP. The report cautions enterprise users considering changing carriers as soon as WNP takes effect on November 24 not to port until the end of Q1 2004. Mobile Competency found that while Nextel, Sprint PCS and Verizon Wireless are currently the best prepared to ensure that enterprise customers can port with little or no service disruption, they are still appear only 50 percent ready for WNP. The report warns CIOs that it takes two well-prepared carriers to make a successful port, and so far, only a handful of carriers are anywhere near ready.

"If ports fail en masse, don't be surprised when the wireless industry blames the FCC for both moving the deadline to the worst possible time of the year and failing to craft rules that address every possible scenario," said Bob Egan, president and founder of Mobile Competency. "There's plenty of blame to go around, but at the end of the day, that's cold comfort for enterprise subscribers whose mobile phone stops working."

Mobile Competency interviewed the six largest U.S. carriers to assess their ability to provide enterprise customers with quick, glitch-free ports and a smooth transition of key services, such as wireless data. According to their findings, one month before the WNP deadline, no major carrier had completed testing with all five of its largest rivals. Although most major carriers have created WNP FAQs and "tip sheets" for consumers considering porting, only Nextel and Sprint PCS provide guidelines that specifically address enterprise issues and concerns.

"Carriers are finally getting serious about WNP," continued Egan. "But we don't see any evidence that individual carriers, let alone the industry as a whole, have done the extensive testing necessary to ferret out the major problems before November 24. It's too little, too late, so enterprise customers should wait."

Egan added, "CIOs are well advised to ignore carriers' chest-beating and instead demand firm answers to these questions. Better yet, get them in writing. Refusal means that their lawyers told them to guarantee nothing."

The report provides four key questions that every CIO should ask carriers before porting. For more information or to purchase Wireless Number Portability: This Ain't Y2K (US $150), please visit Mobile Competency's website at www.mobilecompetency.com or call +1 (401) 241-4000.

About Mobile Competency

Mobile Competency is a leading market analysis and consulting company founded in 2002. Mobile Competency provides decision makers with clear, competent, actionable advice and experience that enables them to navigate the complex technical and business terrain of the mobile marketplace. The company is dedicated to bringing clarity and thought leadership about mobility to CIO's, IT Managers, product and service companies, and venture capitalists. For additional information, please visit www.mobilecompetency.com.



            

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