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AT&T Ranked Last in Consumer Reports’ Best Cellphone Service Survey

The annual survey of wireless customer satisfaction from Consumer Reports hits the streets this week and it doesn’t have much good to say about AT&T. In a canvass of more than 50,000 readers spanning 26 U.S. cities, the organization found the carrier had the lowest customer-satisfaction rating in 19 cities surveyed; Verizon ranked highest.

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To hear that AT&T (T) ranked dead last in customer satisfaction in high-profile markets like New York and San Francisco isn’t all that surprising. New Yorkers often carp about dropped AT&T calls, and complaints about lousy service in the Bay Area are legion.
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But to find that the carrier placed last in 17 other cities as well suggests that AT&T’s shortcomings are more widespread than the carrier would have us believe and not simply the product of a high concentration of iPhones in the country’s larger cities.

As Pali analyst Walter Piecyk wrote in an investor note this morning, “We believe it has been an elitist investor view that only a few high profile AT&T markets are having problems on the theory that only ‘tech savvy’ residents of coastal cities would find enough use in the iPhone to impact the quality of AT&T’s network.”

It certainly would appear that way. With low marks for several key indicators of customer satisfaction–including service availability, circuit capacity, dropped-call frequency and voice service–across 73 percent of the markets Consumer Reports surveyed, it’s pretty clear that AT&T has become overextended by the popularity of the iPhone. Which is bad news for the carrier and, of course, for iPhone owners as well.

As Consumer reports notes, “Apple’s iPhones are the top smart phones in our Ratings–actually, among the best of all phones we tested, period–but their exclusive carrier, AT&T, was middling at best in satisfaction….If you’re readying to buy Apple’s phone, prepare for possible disappointment with its service and expect to love the phone anyway. Despite the network problems, a staggering 98 percent of iPhone users in our cell-phone-buying survey were satisfied enough to say they would definitely or probably buy the phone again. Only 79 percent of respondents who bought other cell phones said the same.”

Verizon (VZ), which has been mercilessly slamming AT&T’s service in a recent ad campaign, is going to have a field day with this. And somehow, I don’t think a hurriedly cobbled together Luke Wilson ad will undo the damage.

UPDATE: Reached for comment, AT&T had this to say about Consumer Reports’ findings, which, the company stressed, were based on anecdotal feedback from a self-selected group of subscribers: “We appreciate and value all customer feedback. We learn from it and it helps us serve our customers better. Without question the surest indication of customer satisfaction is churn, or turnover. For the last quarter, our postpaid churn was just 1.17 percent.”

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  • edward willie
    what does this mean?"over leveraged to the iphone"
  • Todd Thomas
    churn is low...mainly because I'm under contract and can't leave and the iphone won't work on verizon, where i want to go. churn is NOT what AT&T should look at to determine client happiness.
  • That they can make Verizon look so much better makes me question their methodology. Or does the top one get all the red ink regardless of how much better it actually is?
  • Fred Hamranhansenhansen
    Too bad AT&T owns the only real 3G phone network in the US.
  • HughJ
    What are you talking about? PC World magazine ran tests on the various 3G networks across the country....

    Overall, Verizon's was the speediest!

    Tests were also run w/ the iPhone on Verizon's EV/DO network compared to AT&T's W-CDMA network in major metro areas...

    They connected the iPhone to Verizon by connecting over WiFi to the MiFi portable WiFi router that then connects over EV/DO...

    Guess what? The iPhone was actually faster browsing the web, going over 2 airlinks (WiFi & EV/DO) on Verizon than it was going directly over AT&T's W-CDMA network...

    So much for AT&T having the only 'real' 3G network... what world do you live in?
  • mike Diaz
    They connected the iPhone to Verizon by connecting over WiFi to the MiFi portable WiFi router that then connects over EV/DO...

    thats still wifi and NOT a true cell band. I can go to a wifi hotspot and connect my IPhone and it would still be faster then ev/do and GSM. its cuz its 802.11G!.. sheesh..
    so much for being a techie..
  • HughJ
    Er, Huh?

    The MiFi device is a miniature, portable, mobile WiFi router that provides WiFi connections (up to 4) anywhere in a mobile environment...

    WHAT do you think that MiFi router connects back to the internet over?

    Do you think WiFi routers can create WiFi hotspots w/o a broadband backhaul by magic?

    The MiFi router connects over Verizon's 3G EV/DO network...

    Local WiFi connections, whether having a landline backhaul or mobile, have bandwidth limited to whatever the backhaul link can support...

    THEREFORE, the iPhone running over WiFi back over the Verizon 3G network has it's bandwidth limited by that 3G backhaul link....

    Therefore, the Verizon 3G network really is faster in the real world environments tested than AT&T's.

    The iPhone speeds on Verizon also have the inherent delays associated w/ an additional airlink (WiFi) and the router delays in the MiFi device and yet it was still FASTER...

    Thanx for being such a 'techie'....
  • Ted Todorov
    Unless AT&T fixes their network between now and when they lose iPhone exclusivity, those churn figures are going to explode.

    What really puzzles me is AT&T's inability to fix their network in just two cities: New York and San Francisco. I bet that 95%+ of their bad press comes from NYC & SF -- that's where the journalists and techies are. Why is this so difficult for them to understand/correct??
  • I receive dropped calls all day long in KCMO.
  • We'll see what AT&T's churn rate is when Verizon gets the iPhone. Live by the churn, die by the churn.
  • Rob Lee
    AT&T continues a very arrogant position in the marketplace. They have for nearly 2 decades known very well the weaknesses in their network, especially in major markets. Even when the problems are detailed down to a few yards for poor coverage, they don't care. I've personally told executives up to the president of the wireless group in the past and nothing changes.

    Churn means nothing when you have a monopoly, in this case the iPhone. I love it as much as most other users and suffer the AT&T network to have the phone. In a heartbeat all of the anecdotal users I know would switch to another network as soon as possible, breaking contracts along the way to get reliable coverage.

    On the flip side, Verizon still has a ways to go with their 3G network to rival AT&T for simultaneous voice and data - a feature I use daily and would miss dearly.

    Alas, true competition will emerge only when all smartphones are unlocked from their network providers, something Congress and the FCC should seriously consider mandating.
  • loveiphonehateatt
    "Verizon still has a ways to go with their 3G network to rival AT&T for simultaneous voice and data - a feature I use daily and would miss dearly."

    It's not about 3G. You can not do simultaneous voice/text/data on CDMA (Verizon and Sprint). Much of the rest of the world is on GSM, including AT&T and T-Mobile. I used Verizon (Bell Atlantic Mobile till recently) and had maybe a couple dozen or so dropped calls: 17 years! I picked up an iPhone 3 weeks ago and have had at least 80-100 dropped calls. And I live in NJ! I'm comin' home Verizon! You suck, AT&T. Churn this.
  • Eli Bensky
    AT&T should be ranked as one notch below last place. 03/29/10 can't come fast enough - LIBERATION DAY!
  • bettingsystemreviews
    Oh dear, that really is shocking for such a large company. They need to start looking after their customers and then business will take care of itself.
  • How about a link to the source article rather than a link to the Consumer Reports homepage?
  • JohnPaczkowski
    Dan ...

    The source article wasn't live on the CR site at the time the post was written. It's also behind a pay wall. That said, here's the link (which I've updated in the post as well): http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/electronics-...
  • Thanks John. Much more transparent this way. Plus I'm a CR subscriber and navigating to find this myself on their site would have been a challenge. ;)
  • HughJ
    That rumoured Verizon iPhone can't come fast enough!

    I had the original iPhone... I LOVED my iPhone, but I could no longer stand the sub-standard AT&T network (and that one was on their antiquated 2G EDGE network - and the coverage still stunk! - and I live in the NYC metro area!)

    I switched back to Verizon, but I still dearly miss my iPhone. Now my iPhone is just the world's most expensive iPod Touch!
  • sprint68
    hey you could get your iphone flashed and it will work just as good
  • KAlbertT
    I find all the carrier's service terrible but: How can a user be the judge? How can a user determine carrier issues vs phone issues? Worse, how can one user (who likely has one phone with one carrier) compare two different carriers+phones?

    However, if you discuss higher level statics like customer turnover, or help desk calls per total users in a area, etc. and you talk about phone+carrier (not separately) then you can have a conversation.

    Maybe it's counter intuitive but, good market research knows you can't only ask the user what they think.
  • Equality7dash2521
    What? You must be joking! I'll tell you who I am to judge, THE CUSTOMER! Go back and look, the customers surveyed were not comparing anything, they rated their own experience. They show their power to judge by where they spend their money. You are equivocating someone "judging" AT&T with discussing "carrier vs phone issues". You're living in academia. If customers are unhappy, it doesn't matter what "higher level statistic" you have a "real conversation" about! Get a grip!
  • jmzn
    I agree with most of the findings in the survey and with comments posted. The performance and reliability of the network is subpar and this coming from someone who spent 8 years on the Sprint network.

    However, the one point that I disagree with is the customer service aspect. I've been pleasantly surprised with the exceptional customer service and support that I have received over the last 2 years. I and others have utilized the contact centers and found everyone we have encountered to be knowledgeable and willing to help. Again, this won't be enough to keep me on the network if another option arises.
  • gma123
    Curious why you left Sprint? I had Verizon for a few years until I found a better deal with Sprint. I called Verizon to compare the deal with Sprint - they said the only thing they could do was disconnect my phone. Talk about Customer Service!!! I will NEVER go back to Verizon.
  • KAlbertT
    Hmmm, most users of AT&T's network are iPhone users. Most problems are claimed to be AT&T's. Yea 3G is great but not having it doesn't slow me down or cause me any dis-satisfaction. The issues I have with my iPhone are not easily identified as being an AT&T or Apple issues, (this kind of technology is my business and has been for a long time).

    I think it comes down to this: people like Apple (young, Steve, blue jeans hip, etc.) and they don't like AT&T (old, MaBell, starch shirt, stodgy, big, etc.). Verizon is just less old and stodgy than AT&T,... marketing.

    Consumer Reports (or someone) - do some real research on the quality of the products please.
  • loveiphonehateatt
    What? "They don't like AT&T"? Nice weed yer smokin there bro. EVERYONE I know in NYC and SF have problems with dropped calls. Watch some interviews with AT&T top brass and see them wriggle in their seats when asked point-blank about what the deal is with their network and their plans to improve, especially in the NYC and SF markets. Blue jeans and starched shirts? And are you gonna build a CDMA iPhone so Consumer Reports can port it to Verizon to "do some real research..."? Nice place you live in, Albertland, is it?
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