T-Mobile Nederland

T-Mobile Nederland BV
Industry Wireless telecommunications
Founded 2007 (2007)
Headquarters Den Haag, Netherlands
Area served
Netherlands
Key people
  • Martin Knauer, CEO
  • Robert Jelinek-Nacke, CFO
  • Rachid El Hattachi, CTO
  • Marieke Snoep, Business director
Products Mobile telephony
Wireless broadband
Revenue €1.4 billion (2015)[1]
€500 million (2015)[1]
Number of employees
1500 FTE (2015)[1]
Parent Deutsche Telekom
Subsidiaries Ben, Knippr
Website www.t-mobile.nl

T-Mobile Nederland BV is the third largest mobile phone company in the Netherlands. It is wholly owned by Deutsche Telekom. As of 2015, it has 3.7 million customers.[1]

History

Deutsche Telekom entered the Dutch market by the acquisition of Ben on 20 September 2002. In 2007, T-Mobile Netherlands, a wholly owned subsidiary of T-Mobile International, acquired Orange Netherlands from France Télécom for EUR 1.33 billion. This made it the third largest mobile telephone operator in the country behind KPN and Vodafone.

Capacity problems

T-Mobile announced in May 2010 that it was dealing with major capacity problems on its 3G network.[2][3] T-Mobile admitted the problems after much pressure from customers and the Dutch media. T-Mobile could not keep up with the growing data demand from smartphones, caused by the number of new customers who wanted an iPhone: T-Mobile in the Netherlands failed to keep up with the demand, and capacity problems on the network were the result. T-Mobile denied the problems at first by telling complaining customers that their mobile phone or SIM-card was causing the problem.[4]

The capacity problems occurred mostly in cities and densely populated areas. When affected, people could experience problems with calling or receiving calls, text messaging (SMS), or data services. A substantial number of customers were not able to use any of these services in cities or urban areas when the network capacity was overloaded, for instance the cities of Amsterdam and Utrecht were heavily impacted.

After being put under pressure by several consumer interest groups and the Dutch media, T-Mobile started a cash-back settlement for all consumers who had complained about failing communication services.

T-Mobile invested tens of millions of euros to upgrade its network. The upgrade was to have been completed by the end of first quarter of 2011.[5][6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Feiten en cijfers" [Facts and figures]. T-Mobile Nederland (in Dutch). Retrieved 2016-12-01.
  2. van Beijnum, Iljitsch. "iPhone overload: Dutch T-Mobile issues refund after 3G issues". arstechnica.com. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  3. "Netwerkprobleem T-Mobile door smartphones" [T-Mobile network problems because of smartphones] (in Dutch). NU.nl. 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  4. Funnekotter, Wout (2010-05-28). "T-Mobile: Op korte termijn geen oplossing voor belproblemen" [T-Mobile: No short-term call problem solution] (in Dutch). tweakers.net. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  5. Schievink, Bauke (2010-06-16). "T-Mobile meldt oplossing voor 3g-problemen" [T-Mobile reports solution to 3g problems] (in Dutch). tweakers.net. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  6. "Bereik" [Coverage] (in Dutch). t-mobile.nl. Retrieved 2012-03-24. In het eerste half jaar van 2010 investeerde T-Mobile een bedrag van tientallen miljoenen euro’s in de optimalisering en verdere uitbreiding van het netwerk
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.