A1 Bulgaria

A1 Bulgaria (previously known as Mtel or Mobiltel /network code 284-01/), is a GSM mobile phone operator in Bulgaria.

A1 Bulgaria
Formerly
Mtel, Mobiltel
Industrymobile telecommunications
Founded1994 (1994) (as Mobiltel)
2018 (2018) (as A1 Bulgaria)
Headquarters1 Kukush Str., ,
Key people
Alexander Dimitrov, CEO
BrandsA1
ServicesSatellite television, IPTV, Fixed/Mobile telephony, Internet service provider, ICT Solutions, Own Sport Channels
Revenue €431.2 mil.[1] (2017)
€130.1 mil.[2] (2017)
Number of employees
3,751[3] (2017)
ParentA1 Telekom Austria Group
Websitewww.a1.bg

History

A1 Bulgaria was founded in March 1994 but was not launched commercially until September 1995 (as Citron).[4]

In 2001, M-Tel (the brand then) launched its prepayment sim cards which allowed customers to purchase credits prior to calling friends. This proved to be a great success and saw the number of customers using their network increase dramatically.

The company had a market share of about 58% and 3,000,000 clients in September 2004. On 14 September 2006 M-Tel reached 4,000,000 clients. As of May 2006 the company has 4,400,000 subscribers and its market share fell to 51.1%. Its contract customers increased to 1.7 mln, while the profit per customer dropped to 9.9 euros for Q1 2007.[5]

The operator has been owned by Telekom Austria Group since July 2005, when it was acquired for up to 1.6 billion in one of Central and Eastern Europe's largest deals and one of the largest foreign investments in Austria. Mobiltel was the first Bulgarian operator to offer EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA, HSPA+ and second to offer LTE services to its clients, with video telephony services being available since 6 March 2006 in the capital Sofia and since mid-July 2006 throughout the Bulgarian Black Sea resorts.[6]

The company was the official sponsor of Bulgarian football club PFC Levski Sofia. Since 2005, the company also organizes the strong annual M-Tel Masters chess tournament, which is attended by six of the world's best International Grandmasters.

Despite the difficult economic environment affecting the entire IT and Telco industry in Bulgaria, Mobiltel's performance remains stable with a customer base of 5.3 million. The postpaid subscribers increased from 61% to roughly 66%. Mobiltel's market share by end Q1/2011 stays at 49.3%.

The Mtel network uses the access code 88. Until 2003, it also used the codes 89 and 87, which had been added as the network had expanded. In mid-2003, however, mobile numbers in Bulgaria increased by one digit and the M-Тel network code returned to being 88 only.

Mobiltel owns Loop, the largest virtual mobile operator operating in Bulgaria, specially designed for young customers. In 2011 Mtel created pre-paid service for cheap telephone calls, SMS and mobile Internet bob, which is available in Austria and Slovenia too.

In 2012 M-tel was rebranded with a new logo, and the dash in the name was removed leaving Mtel (Мтел) as shown in the new logo.

On 28 July 2015, Mtel and Max signed a contract for national roaming. This is the first agreement for sharing networks in the Bulgarian telecom market.

On 29 July 2015, Mobiltel said has agreed to buy cable TV and internet service provider Blizoo. On 18 September 2015, CPC gave green light of the deal and the merger was done by the end of the year.

On 15 September 2016, Mtel became the official sponsor of the most successful Bulgarian football club CSKA Sofia. From 2016 to 2017 season Mtel became the team's principal shirt sponsor.

On 14 January 2016 Mtel launched its own pay television sports pack – MAX Sport (then under the brand Mtel Sport), consisting of two TV channels.[7]

As of 22 May 2018, the company is operating under the A1 brand.

Network

A1 has built various types of networks. The company was first to launch GSM, GPRS, HSPA, HSPA+ and test LTE in Bulgaria. They also have fiber optic internet in most of the big cities (by recent acquisition of former blizoo). In 2012 after big commercials A1 (Mtel back then) announced DTH. As of 2016 depending on a viewer's location A1 can offer to IPTV (marketed as interactive television), CATV (former blizoo), HSPA, HSPA+, LTE and fiber internet (up to 1 Gbit/s).

Mobile

Television

IPTV

A1's IPTV is marketed as interactive television.

CATV

A1 acquired blizoo in June 2015 as a result the company now has access to up to 1.5 million people thanks to blizoo's DVB-C network. Most of the network is FTTB.

DTH

In 2012 after big commercials A1 announced DTH.

A1 Xplore TV (formerly A1 Now, Mtel Now)

After many unsuccessful tries with mobile IPTV, A1 finally made a breakthrough with its latest new service called A1 Xplore TV. As of June 2016 it has been free for current television users (including blizoo's). A1 Xplore TV offers up to 74 channels (as of April 2018), some in HD on all type of devices. The app is available in Google Play Store and AppStore.

Broadband Internet

A1's first major investment was in Megalan Networks.

Services

gollark: Actual track names would require at least three (3) effort to attain.
gollark: It is in fact basically just a list of filepaths.
gollark: Hold on while I find where I put it.
gollark: m3u?
gollark: What format?

References

  1. "A1 Telekom Austria Group's Combined Annual Report for 2017" (PDF). www.a1.group. 13 February 2018.
  2. "A1 Telekom Austria Group's Combined Annual Report for 2017" (PDF). www.a1.group. 13 February 2018.
  3. "A1 Telekom Austria Group's Combined Annual Report for 2017" (PDF). www.a1.group. 13 February 2018.
  4. "Редакционни коментари - Ако Мтел все още беше Цитрон... - Капитал". capital.bg. Archived from the original on 19 October 2008. Retrieved 30 September 2008.
  5. Калина Декова. "Приходите на Мтел нарастват с 12%, пазарният дял намалява". Investor.bg. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 16 May 2007.
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 20 October 2008. Retrieved 4 August 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. "A1 Telekom Austria Group's Combined Annual Report for 2017" (PDF). www.a1.group/. 13 February 2018.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.