Cellcom (Israel)

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Cellcom Israel
Native name
סלקום
Public
Traded as TASECEL NYSECEL
Industry Telecommunications
Founded 1994; 30 years ago (1994)
Founder Dov Tadmor
Headquarters
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Area served
Israel
Key people
Products GSM, GPRS, UMTS, HSDPA, SMS, MMS
Revenue
  • DecreaseUS$1,701 million (2011)
  • US$1,881 million (2010)
  • DecreaseUS$402 million (2011)
  • US$577 million (2010)
  • DecreaseUS$216 million (2011)
  • US$365 million (2010)
Owner Discount Investment Corporation
Number of employees
7254
Slogan ככה זה כשאוהבים
Website www.cellcom.co.il

Cellcom (TASECEL, NYSECEL)(Hebrew: סלקום) is Israel's largest telecommunications company.[2] Founded in 1994, most of the company's business is centered on wireless service. Cellcom was the first to market mobile phones with Hebrew language menus. Its current CEO is Nir Sztern, who was appointed on 1 January 2012.[3]

History

Cellcom's entry into the Israeli market caused a revolution in wireless services in the country as it offered service at rates which were a fraction of those charged by Pelephone, which until Cellcom's launch held a monopoly on cellular services in Israel. Its launch was not without problems though and during 1995, Cellcom subscribers experienced widespread service disruptions of unknown origin. After an intensive investigation the cause was finally traced to a software bug in Motorola's MicroTAC Alpha handsets – which were ubiquitous on its network at the time.[4] Nevertheless, its attractive rates led to a huge demand for the company's services and within a few years it had accumulated over a million subscribers.[citation needed]

As of the end of the third quarter of 2012, it had around 3.4 million customers, the largest of the Israeli mobile providers in terms of customer base size. The vast majority of active voice clients are on its GSM network while data usage is spread across networks of different technologies.[citation needed]

The company initially operated a TDMA network nationwide in the 850 MHz band but after winning tenders for GSM-1800 frequencies it began offering GSM services.[citation needed]

Cellcom eventually sought to replace the 850 MHz TDMA frequencies it owns with standard 900 MHz GSM frequencies but Pelephone and Partner (formerly known as Orange) petitioned the Ministry of Communications to deny this for technical reasons. This put Cellcom at a disadvantage since though most of its users had converted to GSM, they were not able to make use of the lower frequency's better in-building penetration and greater cell reach.[citation needed]

With its entry into 3G wireless services, Cellcom demonstrated the first mobile video call in Israel.[citation needed] Since the beginning of 2006, Cellcom has been deploying a 3G UMTS-2100 network nationwide which by the end of 2007 covered than 87% of the population.[citation needed] Cellcom was the first in Israel to launch an HSDPA network (also called "Generation 3.5") nationwide.[citation needed] In 2011, Cellcom began to deploy UMTS services in the 850 MHz band, employing unused capacity in that frequency range since it had very few TDMA customers remaining.[citation needed] The Israeli Ministry of Communications has approved Cellcom's plan to shut down the TDMA-850 network on 31 December 2011.[citation needed] In August 2014 Cellcom launched an LTE network in the 1800MHz band.

In mid-2006, Cellcom received a license to offer terrestrial domestic telephony services using the national prefix 073-2. The service is mainly aimed at large businesses. The license allows for advanced wired telephony services, Internet services and high speed data transmission over its fiber optic network which is spread out throughout the country.[citation needed]

Controversy

In 2009 Cellcom launched a controversial ad campaign showing Israel Defense Forces soldiers playing football across the Israeli West Bank barrier.[5] Among others Ahmad Tibi, an Arab-Israeli member of the Knesset, called on Cellcom to withdraw the commercial.[6] A protest in Bil'in accured, soldiers sprayed the protesters with tear gas.[7]

On December 1, 2010, Cellcom faced a major service outage across the country. Cellcom reported the network outage to impact the Q4 results.[8] The company decided to refund customers with one week's worth of calls and messages although the customers never actually received their refund, says Daniel Martinez of The Jerusalem Post.[9]

See also

External links

References

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  5. Seth Freedman, The Guardian, 20 July 2009, Cellcom's cynical commercial
  6. Haaretz, 15 July 2009, Ahmed Tibi joins opposition to Cellcom commercial
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