Optus

SingTel Optus Pty Limited
Type Subsidiary of SingTel
Industry Telecommunications
Founded 1981 as AUSSAT
Headquarters Sydney, Australia
Key people Paul O'Sullivan, Chief Executive
Murray King, CFO
Andrew Buay, CTO
Michael Smith, MD Consumer
Rob Parcell, MD Optus Business
Rohan Ganeson, MD Optus SMB
Vicky Brady, MD Wholesale & Satellite
Products Fixed Telephony
Mobile Telephony
Internet Access
Cable Television
Leased Lines
Data Transmission
Revenue A$8.321 billion (2009) [1]
Net income A$584 million (2009)[1]
Employees 10,679 (2008)[2]
Website optus.com.au

SingTel Optus Pty Limited is the second largest telecommunications company in Australia, and is a wholly owned subsidiary of Singapore Telecommunications (ASXSGT). The company primarily trades under the Optus brand, while maintaining several wholly owned subsidiary brands, such as Virgin Mobile Australia and Boost Mobile in the mobile telephony market, Uecomm in the network services market and Alphawest in the ICT services sector.

To provide services, Optus owns and operates its own network infrastructure, as well as using the services of other network service providers, most notably Telstra Wholesale. It provides services both directly to end users and also acts as a wholesaler to other service providers. Through its OptusNet brand, it provides broadband, wireless and dial-up internet services.

The company was originally known as Aussat Pty Limited prior to privatisation, when it became Optus Communications Pty Limited. It was later renamed to Cable & Wireless Optus Pty Limited before changing again to its present name.

Contents

Overview

Key Optus products and services include:

Retail services are sold to customers via phone, internet or through retail outlets, especially franchise chains such as Optus World, Network Communications, Strathfield, Telechoice, and Allphones.

Subsidiaries

A number of notable wholly owned subsidiaries operate in Australia as part of the SingTel Optus group. These are:

Optus also sells mobile services under the brand name Boost Mobile.[5]

Optus also has a 50% stake in the now defunct OPEL Networks.[6]

Other wholly owned subsidiaries of note no longer have a significant active role as individual entities. These are as follows:

Reef Networks was formed in 1999 to provide an optical fibre link between Brisbane and Cairns. Optus gained exclusive access to this link in 2001, ahead of acquiring the organisation in 2005.[7]

XYZed was established by Optus in 2000 to provide wholesale business-grade DSL services under an individual brand, but today provides a collection of products only as part of the Optus Wholesale & Satellite division. XYZed established a network of DSLAMs inside Telstra telephone exchanges, utilising Unconditioned Local Loop services to reach end users.[8]

History

AUSSAT and Deregulation

Optus can trace its beginnings back to the formation of the Government-owned AUSSAT Pty Limited in 1981. In 1982, Aussat selected the Hughes 376 for their initial satellites, with the first, AUSSAT A1, launched in August 1985.[9] AUSSAT satellites were used for both military and civilian satellite communications, and delivering television services to remote outback communities.

With Aussat operating at a loss and with moves to deregulate telecommunications in Australia, the government decided to sell Aussat, coupled with a telecommunications licence. The licence was sold to Optus Communications - a consortium including[10]:

The new telecommunications company was designed to provide competition to then government owned telecommunications company Telecom Australia, now known as Telstra.

Early History

After privatisation, AUSSAT became Optus and its first offering to the general public was to offer long distance calls at cheaper rates than that of its competitor Telstra. The long distance calling rates on offer were initially available by consumers dialing 1 before the area code and phone number. Following this, a ballot process was conducted by then regulator AUSTEL, with customers choosing their default long distance carrier.[12] Customers who made no choice or refused to respond to the mailout campaign automatically remained as a Telstra long distance customer. Customers who remained with Telstra could dial the override code of 1456 before the area code and phone number to manually select Optus as the carrier for that single call. Since 1 July 1997, consumers have the choice of preselecting their preferred long distance carrier or dialling the override code before dialing a telephone number.

The group began by building an interstate fibre optic cable and a series of exchanges between Optus' interstate network and Telecom's local network. It also laid fibre optics into major office buildings and industrial areas, and focused on high bandwidth local, (interstate) long distance, and interstate calls for business. In its early years, Optus was only able to offer local and long distance calls to residential customers connected to Telstra's local phone network. Telstra would carry residential to residential calls to Optus' exchanges, and then the calls would be switched to Optus' long distance fibre optic network.

The Hybrid Fibre-Coax Rollout

These practices meant that Optus was (and still is) the single largest customer of their competitor, Telstra. To become competitive Optus would need to lay its own local phone network. To provide a killer application for this, the Australian Federal government sold subscription television licences. Optus, as well as the Seven Network, businessman Kerry Stokes and American cable company Cablevision, formed the Optus Vision consortium. News Corporation and Telstra created the rival Foxtel consortium.

Telstra's local phone network did not have the capability to deliver Foxtel pay television to consumers in the early 1990s, so Telstra identified a need to create a broadband network to support this new product.

As Telstra and Optus could not agree on terms for a joint broadband cable roll out, they laid two competing cable networks, in addition to Telstra's existing copper network, at a combined cost estimated at over A$6bn.

Whilst Telstra focused on creating a broadband network specifically for broadcast, Optus designed their cable network to provide telephony services in addition to broadcast television.

The network was initially used to broadcast Cable TV only. In 1996 the Optus "New Deal" promotion of 20 cent local calls was launched by the Australian Prime Minister John Howard making the first local call to an Optus customer supposedly using the new Optus network. This call however was made by the existing Telstra POTS network as the new Optus network was not ready for telephony by the advertised launch date. The real activation of Optus telephony services followed later on in 1996.

Takeovers

24.5% stakeholder Cable and Wireless bought out Bell South's equal 24.5% shareholding in July 1997.[13] The company returned to profitability in 1998 and changed its name to Cable and Wireless Optus Pty Limited.[14] Government relaxation of foreign ownership restrictions paved the way for the company to be floated[15] - with Cable and Wireless increasing its holding to 52.5%)[16][17] - and listed on the Australian Stock Exchange on 1998-11-17.[18]

During 2001, SingTel launched a takeover bid for Cable and Wireless Optus[19] which was ultimately successful[20] and the company became known as SingTel Optus Pty Limited.

In the 2003 & 2004 Financial Year, Optus reported a profit of A$440 million. This was an improvement of A$412 million from the previous year. The company has remained profitable since then.

In August 2004 Optus completed a A$227 million takeover of UEComm Ltd.

In July 2005 Optus announced it would acquire Alphawest Ltd. for A$25.9 million. The buyout was completed in November 2005 and Alphawest is now an operating division of Optus Business.

On 12 January 2006 Optus acquired the remaining 74.15% of Virgin Mobile Australia for U$22.6 m, giving it 100% ownership

OptusNet

Optus Communications offered its first business-focused internet products in 1998 under the OptusNet product family, offering in-house developed dial-up and high-speed services. Optus purchased one of Australia's pioneer ISPs, Microplex, in 1998 to provide consumer dial-up internet services.[21][22] Separate to this, under the Optus Vision brand, a cable broadband arm began as a joint venture with U.S cable and content provider Excite@Home and was known as Optus@Home from its introduction in 1999 [23] until it was renamed in 2002.[24] ADSL services were offered from February 2004.[25] ADSL2+ services were provided from December 2005.[26]

OPEL Networks

In June 2007, joint venture subsidiary OPEL Networks was awarded government funding towards the cost of building a regional broadband network. Optus was to be contracted to build the network on behalf of OPEL.[6][27]

In April 2008, after a change of the Federal Government from Liberal Party of Australia coalition parties to Australian Labor Party coalitions, the new government terminated the funding agreement and the project was halted, with its functions to be replaced by the National Broadband Network.

Terria

Optus is part of a consortium – now known as Terria – that in July 2006 announced their intention to make a combined bid to build the proposed National Broadband Network.[28]

Infrastructure

Optus' fully owned network infrastructure consists of:[29][30]

Network Backbone

Customer access network

OptusNet is one of only five ISPs in Australia to provide Cable internet (the other four are BigPond, Neighbourhood Cable, TransACT and e-wire). In August 2010, OptusNet released an upgrade of its HFC network to the DOCSIS 3.0 standard,[31] which enabled customers to access a maximum theoretical downstream bandwidth of 100 Megabits. OptusNet is also one of the few ISPs in Australia to currently provide ADSL2+ via its own DSLAMs, which it also resells to other ISPs.[32]

Mobile telephony

Partly owned infrastructure

Part-owned network infrastructure includes:

Managed services

The Customer Solutions and Services (CS&S) organisation in Optus Business is responsible for providing support for Optus Business customers. CS&S aligns with Optus' subsidiary Alphawest to support end-to-end ICT services as whole-of-business, customised and niche requirements across Optus' large business, corporate and government[37] client base.

Outsourcing

Since 2005, Optus has outsourced some customer service functions to Convergys, with the outsourcer providing 800 staff operating offshore in India, supplementing Optus' 3,000-plus onshore call centre staff.[38] Some functions have also been supplemented in The Philippines.[39] Optus also uses 24-7Customer.com for telephone based outsourcing.

In October 2006, Optus announced that it would outsource 100 contracting jobs to a fellow SingTel subsidiary, IT company NCS, in Malaysia.[40]

References

  1. ^ a b "SingTel Group’s Australia and Singapore operations deliver resilient results". http://home.singtel.com/news_centre/news_releases/2009_05_14.asp. Retrieved 2009-05-14. 
  2. ^ "Management Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition, Results of Operations and Cash Flows for the Fourth Quarter and Financial Year Ended 31 March 2008" (PDF). pp. 76. http://www.optus.com.au/dafiles/OCA/AboutOptus/MediaCentre/SharedStaticFiles/SharedDocuments/4thqtr0708-MDA.pdf. Retrieved 2008-05-15. 
  3. ^ "Optus Total Access Services". http://www.optus.com.au/portal/site/business/menuitem.90ccced4cdd8eb2af42ff7109c8ac7a0/?vgnextoid=b415667da82c8010VgnVCM10000029867c0aRCRD&vgnextchannel=d00cd47b227c8010VgnVCM10000029867c0aRCRD&vgnextfmt=default. Retrieved 2007-06-16. 
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External links