Warning about this large post, but I have a question for everyone here. Especially the executives and finance that browse this site. Maybe you can answer this.
I am by no means an MBA or a Business strategist. I'm just an investor, casual observer, and an economist (by education) looking at this from my limited viewpoint.
Why didn't we (AT&T) focus on doing what we know best? Mobility remains our single most profitable service that we offer. Fiber is our fastest growing product and is quickly becoming (if it hasn't already) our 2nd most profitable.
Why didn't we double down on mobility and focus on producing/selling nearly every leg of the product for the end user. From manufacturing devices to selling the service. In 2011, Motorola went bankrupt and sold Motorola Mobility for pennies on the dollar to Google. Why didn't we beat Google to the punch and buy this? Remember, the Google Pixel (now the nations fast growing phone) is based on Motorola's technology. Why didn't we even buy the company from Google in 2013 BEFORE it was sold to China? (Lenovo). Granted, it took google 10 years before they produced a phone that competes with Apple and Samsung, this still would have been a better decision than the ones we made.
We missed another opportunity as well: Blackberry Limited.
People know iOS and Android, but we forget the 3rd system was blackberry OS.
It cost us $49Bn, to purchase DirectTV. I understand the idea, buy a company with a massive user base and sell them internet/mobility. Problem though, people didn't like DirectTV.
With $49Bn we could have bought the following companies instead:
- Motorola Mobility(Devices): $2.9Bn
- Blackberry Limited(OS): $2.9Bn
- ASE Technology Holdings (Semiconductors): $14Bn
That's $19.8Bn for Mobility. I'm not even including Nokia on this list, which would have been a better purchase as well. Did we forget who manufactures 4G and 5G Micro-Cells that nearly every single telecom purchases?
Now lets jump over to wireline, specifically internet. Figuring out how to massively expand our hold on internet services. With 19.8Bn gone to mobility, we have $29.2Bn left over.
We would have bought the following ISPs:
- Lumin Technologies: $2.3Bn
- Windstream Holdings: $10Bn
These two, Lumin and Windstream already COME WITH a built in subscriber base for internet that could have been leveraged for new mobility customers and thus expand our footprint. Between these two we'd have internet via fiber, internet via copper, internet via satellite, internet via cellular.
$41.5Bn on total. This would leave us $7.5Bn for us to buy up as many local and regional providers we could get our hands on.
All of this, would have been cheaper to purchase than DirectTV and arguably would have been a smarter buy.
We could have been a company that sold customers from start to finish on mobility. The innovation alone, would have made us a more competitive tech focused company. Look at Tmo. The manufacture a CHILDS WATCH. Overnight, Tmo was able to expand their user based to children under 12 years old, by creating a watch that parents can use to track children. Millions of additional lines of service.
Either we adapt or we die.
Why didn't we do this from the jump? Where do we go now?