Wednesday, May 7, 2008

iProvo Sells Network to Broadweave Networks

Provo, Utah's citywide fiberoptic network has been sold to Broadweave Networks, a local company that hopes to make a business out of triple-play services where Provo had not been able to do so. The network, called iProvo, was the largest municipally-owned fiber-to-the-premises network in the United States, reaching all 36,000 residences and businesses within the city.

Up to this point, Broadweave has served the Traverse Mountain planned community of 8,000 homes and 4.5 million square feet of office and retail space across 3,000 acres in Utah's technology belt. So the acquisition gives Broadweave about four times more homes passed than it currently has access to.

Broadweave will purchase the fiberoptic network for $40.6 million, which is enough to retire outstanding bonds incurred by Provo to build the system.

Under the terms of the deal, which is subject to municipal council approval, the city retains a license to use the network to connect city buildings, schools, and power infrastructure. Broadweave will operate as a retail provider, rather than as a wholesale provider of transport to third parties and says it will put more emphasis on services aimed at business customers.

One might draw several conclusions from iProvo's experience so far. Some will argue that overbuilders are going to have a tough time competing against both cable and telephone companies offering triple play services.

Others will say the sale shows municipalities really should not be running communication networks. Some will point to other fiber access networks in the Salt Lake City and Provo regions and argue that neither wholesale nor retail strategies have worked well.

The issue is what Broadweave's new management thinks it really can do to improve financial performance. One of the salient features of most networks serving entire communities is that there is an 80/20 rule for revenue. A small number of neighborhoods actually produce most of the revenue.

In fact, some studies suggest that as few as five to seven percent of neighborhoods of 500 homes or so produce half the revenue created by an entire citywide network. And the same sort of thing is true for business revenue as well. So it might not be so easy to boost revenues.

Broadweave will gain some scale benefits, though the difference between 8,000 and 44,000 might not be as large as you might think. Programming contracts won't be noticeably affected. There might still be a need for two headends. Installers can only do so many jobs a day. Some marketing and other overhead can be spread over a wider base of customers, of course.

Still, operating cost savings are unlikely to change the financial picture all that much. Only significant new sales volume is going to change the current iProvo financial model.

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