|
19th March - As the number of reported wireless problems
reaches historically low levels, the overall rate of customers
experiencing a wireless call quality problem has declined
for a third consecutive reporting wave, according to the J.D.
Power and Associates 2007 Wireless Call Quality Performance
Study(SM)-Volume 1 recently released.
Now in its fifth year, the study currently measures wireless
call quality semi-annually. Call quality is based on seven
customer-reported problem areas that impact overall carrier
performance: dropped/disconnected calls; static/interference;
failed connection on the first try; voice distortion; echoes;
no immediate voice mail notification; and no immediate text
message notification. Problems are measured by the number
experienced per 100 calls (PP100), with a lower PP100 score
reflecting fewer total problems experienced.
The study finds that the percentage of wireless calls with
at least one problem has declined by 14 percent since the
last two reporting periods (March-April and June-July 2006).
Considerable improvements have been made with regard to interference/static,
voice distortion and echoes. The number of calls with interference/static
and voice distortion has decreased by 33 percent compared
with the last reporting period in 2006, while the number of
calls experiencing echoes, which occur when voice patterns
become inconsistent due to digital frequency issues, has decreased
by 20 percent over the same time period.
"Wireless providers have clearly made great strides
in improving call quality," said Kirk Parsons, senior
director of wireless services at J.D. Power and Associates.
"With an increasingly competitive environment and an
increase in the number of services used in conjunction with
a cell phone, carriers that offer superior network quality
are more likely to attract new customers and increase customer
retention. In fact, improving network quality is a beneficial
financial incentive for wireless carriers, as customers experiencing
at least one call quality problem are almost four times more
likely to definitely switch carriers in the future."
The study also finds that part of the improvement in call
quality can be attributed to the industry transition to third-generation
networks (3G) and mobile devices that support higher data
speeds, always-on data access and greater voice capacity.
"One key advantage to this technology upgrade is that
carriers can greatly increase the capacity of handling voice
and data transmissions with existing network equipment,"
said Parsons. "As more wireless subscribers use cell
phones that are 3G-enabled, the rate of call quality problems
decreases significantly. For example, problems occur at nearly
one-half the PP100 rate when calls are placed or received
using a 3G-enabled mobile device compared with calls made
or received using lower-generation devices."
Verizon Wireless performs particularly well in the study,
ranking highest in four of the six U.S. regions examined,
while tying with Qwest to rank highest in a fifth region.
U.S. Cellular also ranks highest in one region. Study results
by region are:
Northeast Region: Verizon Wireless ranks highest in the region,
with fewer problems reported with interference/static, dropped/disconnected
calls, initial connections and voice distortion.
Mid-Atlantic Region: Verizon Wireless ranks highest, with
fewer problems experienced with voice distortion and echoes.
Southeast Region: Verizon Wireless ranks highest in the region,
with fewer problems with interference/static and voice distortion.
North Central Region: U.S. Cellular ranks highest for a third
consecutive time with fewer problems in interference/static,
initial connection, dropped/disconnected calls and voice distortion.
Southwest Region: Verizon Wireless ranks highest in the region
for the first time, with fewer problems with echoes.
West Region: Qwest and Verizon Wireless rank highest in a
tie. Qwest customers report fewer problems in the area of
voice distortion, and Verizon Wireless performs well in initial
connections.
The 2007 Wireless Call Quality Performance Study-Volume 1
is based on responses from 29,346 wireless users. The results
are from the two most recent reporting waves, September-October
2006 and January-February 2007. Volume 2 of the 2007 Wireless
Call Quality Performance Study will be issued in September
2007.
Back to News
Reports
|