Orcon Internet Limited

Orcon Limited (trading as Orcon) is a New Zealand telecommunications company. It is New Zealand's fourth largest Internet service provider (ISP). In 2013 it had a 5% share of the fixed line market.[1]

Orcon Limited
Orcon
Subsidiary
IndustryTelecommunications
Founded1996
FounderSeeby Woodhouse
HeadquartersAuckland, New Zealand
Area served
New Zealand
Key people
Mark Callander, Group CEO
ProductsTelephony, Internet connectivity, hosting
Number of employees
300+
ParentVocus Group
Websitewww.orcon.net.nz

History

Seeby Woodhouse founded Orcon by starting a small business (Orcon Group Limited) while at university in 1994.[2] The startup provided computer advice and support, as well as selling early-model cell-phones and accessories. Demand led the business to expand its scope to include PC upgrade and repair services. Orcon remained focused on the local market on Auckland's North Shore. By 1996 the business had expanded its range of products and sphere of operations. It began distributing computer accessories and supplies to small-business owners and to home users throughout the Auckland region and to other parts of New Zealand as required.

In 1997 Orcon Group commenced as an ISP with three dial-in 33.6k modems. Through the start-up phase it focused on the no-frills end of the market, aiming at skilled and technically minded customers, with pricing at half the price of the cheapest competition. In 2002 Orcon became a major ISP in the residential market; it launched a new web portal and undertook marketing initiatives to grow the customer base that positive word-of-mouth had established.

On 12 June 2007 Kordia, a state-owned telecommunications company, purchased Orcon for NZ$24.3m, effectively nationalizing it. Seeby Woodhouse, an 80% stakeholder, made $19.44 million from the deal, while business-partner Mark Mackay pocketed $4.86 million. As of 2014 Orcon's main competitors included Telecom and Vodafone.

In June 2014 the company was bought by CallPlus (now Vocus NZ).[3]

Local-loop unbundling

Orcon issued a press release on 9 August 2007 stating that they had become the "first 100% kiwi owned telecommunications provider" to install equipment in the first unbundled Telecom exchange at Ponsonby. On 30 August 2007, Orcon released an additional press release to announce that they had successfully connected a trial customer at ADSL2+ speeds to their DSLAM via local-loop unbundling (LLU). In March 2008 Orcon launched their ADSL2+ service in parts of Auckland, becoming the first ISP to commercially provide ADSL2+ in New Zealand.[4][5]

Orcon has been a key participant in recent years in New Zealand's LLU process, which is a rapid u-turn from past public statements by former chief executive Seeby Woodhouse. A Computerworld article from 2005 describing a joint letter by several ISPs to the Commerce Commission quotes Woodhouse as saying he did not sign the letter because he did not agree with the request for local loop unbundling. With LLU, Woodhouse says, only the bigger players such as ihug (now Vodafone), TelstraClear (also now Vodafone),[6] and possibly CallPlus (Slingshot) could afford to put their own equipment into the exchanges.

Ultra-Fast Broadband

Orcon was the first retailer to begin providing fibre as part of the Ultra-Fast Broadband (UFB) scheme.[7] In September 2011, Orcon announced that a group of Northland schools were set up for service, with Orcon delivering telecommunications over fibre in partnership with Orewa-based internet service provider Watchdog Corporation Ltd.[8]

Genius Go

In June 2013, Orcon launched Genius Go, a smartphone app that allows customers to make local 'landline' calls and receive calls to their home phone line via their smartphone, wherever they are in the world.[9]

gollark: I'm sure so many things will be affected by, what, nanoseconds less latency.
gollark: Power could be done via also having copper (with less problematic signal integrity requirements) bundled in a cable with the fiber optic thingy.
gollark: And networking/some peripherals. We already have fibre 10GbE and up, just not really consumery.
gollark: Fibre optic really needs to get more common, the madness in DP 2.0 to get 80Gbps over copper is just ridiculous.
gollark: Yes, optical USB would be cool.

See also

References

  1. Putt, Sarah (15 April 2013). "Kordia sells Orcon to private investors". Computerworld. Archived from the original on 17 April 2013. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  2. "From start-up to SOE". Orcon. 2007-06-11. Retrieved 2013-02-27. While still at university in 1994, Seeby started Orcon Group Limited [...]
  3. Pullar-Strecker, Tom (20 June 2014). "CallPlus expands after Orcon buy". Stuff. Retrieved 20 June 2014.
  4. "Orcon's "3x faster" broadband goes live". Newstalk ZB. 13 March 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-16.
  5. "Orcon launches the first unbundled service in New Zealand!" (Press release). Scoop. 13 March 2008. Retrieved 2014-02-28.
  6. "Vodafone acquires TelstraClear". Vodafone.
  7. "Orcon first retailer on UFB network". Stuff.co.nz. 6 September 2011. Retrieved 2012-02-14.
  8. "Whangarei schools first to plug into UFB". Idealog. 6 September 2011. Retrieved 2012-02-14.
  9. "App allows landline calls using mobile". TV3. 19 June 2013. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
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