Seizing the Phone Giants' Turf
Upstart RCN Digs in Despite Industry's Turmoil
Monday, April 9, 2001
The New York Times
By Seth Schiesel
David C. McCourt, the RCN Corporation's chairman
and chief executive, says he did not set out to become
a pioneer, at least not in the telecommunications
industry.
When Mr. McCourt returned to Boston two decades ago
after graduating from Georgetown and working for 18
months as a probation officer's aide in Washington's
hardscrabble Anacostia neighborhood, he just thought
he was going home.
"When you grow up in New England," he said,
"you just expect that you're going to return."
Mr. McCourt, now 44 was not simply going home. He
was returning to his father's trade: construction.
In 1981, Mr. McCourt found himself digging trenches
all around Boston for entrepreneurs who wanted to
deliver a then-novel service called cable television.
Twenty years later, Mr. McCourt is still laying cables
and building networks, though he and RCN are now based
in Princeton, N.J. ("In the 200 years since my
family moved over from Ireland, I'm the only male
McCourt to leave Boston; I still have to explain myself
at Christmas," he says.) And he is also building
a special place for himself in the telecommunications
industry.
That is because 5 years after the Telecommunications
Act of 1996, which promised to open broad vistas of
competition in formerly cloistered markets, RCN is
the only company of significant size that is focused
on giving consumers an alternative to the local telephone
and cable television monopolies for a combination
of local phone, cable TV and high-speed Internet services.
AT&T, WorldCom and a few cable companies have
made efforts to give consumers an alternative source
of local phone service, but no other significant company
is competing against local incumbents with RCN's breadth
of services.
After the telecommunications act, hundreds if not
thousands of new companies sprang up to deliver local
communications services in competition against old
local phone giants like Bell Atlantic and Southwestern
Bell. But most of those companies look for business
customers. And logically so: a midsize business, after
all, might spend tens of thousands of dollars a month
on communications.
Then there was RCN, quixotically building networks
in residential neighborhoods, hoping to sign up households
that might spend $100 a month on phone, cable and
Internet service. By the end of last year, RCN sold
at least one of those services to about 985,000 homes,
mostly in New York City and other parts of the Northeast,
but also in Chicago and along the California coast.
"The vision has always been to build a new network
for the residential environment that's capable of
selling all of today's services - voice, video and
data - with plenty of capacity for tomorrow's services,"
Mr. McCourt said in an interview last week.
These can be tough times for telecommunications visionaries.
May of the local communications start-ups are starved
for capital, their very existence now in question.
A year ago, for instance, shares of Teligent were
trading as high as $55.50. On Friday, Teligent's shares
closed at 37.5 cents. Lasts week, Winstar Communications,
whose shares touched $56 around this time last year,
announced that it would cut 2,000 jobs. On Friday,
Winstar's shares closed at 40.6 cents.
And there amid the carnage stands RCN. Mr. McCourt
is not happy that his stock closed on Friday at $3.97,
down from a 52-week high of $55. Nor is he happy that
RCN, to conserve cash, has had to scale back its plans
to enter new markets.
In addition, a fair number of analysts think that
RCN's sales, general and administrative costs are
far too high, a problem that Mr. McCourt has at least
tacitly acknowledged and is moving to fix. Mr. McCourt
openly admits that RCN's so-called "back office"
systems, the computers that keep track of customers
and bills, installation requests and service problems,
need a lot of work.
But RCN might just have a vital ally as it tries
to tighten its budget: time. At the end of last year,
RCN had $1.7 billion in cash on hand and another $500
million available in a line of credit. Most analysts
appear to believe that the company is in no danger
of going under any time soon.
"I'm a big believer in the long-term outlook
for this company; our model does indicate that the
company's scaled-back business plan is indeed fully
funded," said Mark Kastan, an analyst at Credit
Suisse First Boston. He added, however, that he thought
the company's cash reserve would eventually hit a
low of only about $150 million, rather than the $500
million that RCN had predicted.
The fact that RCN does not appear to be in danger
of going out of business any time soon is surely a
comforting through to its employees, investors and
customers. Bur RCN's mere existence carries a larger
significance: It is possible for a small start-up
company to challenge the local telephone behemoths
and cable television incumbents and give residential
consumers a choice of provider for both basic communications
services and fast Internet access.
According to the Federal Communications Commission,
big businesses and institutions had about 46.5 million
phone lines at the end of last June. Of those, 17.5
percent were served b competitive carries (not the
dominant local telephone companies). For corporate
customers, competition clearly is taking hold.
But at the same time, homes and small business had
about 145.1 million phone lines and of those, only
4.6 million, or about 3.2 percent, were served by
new carriers. Competition is obviously coming much
more slowly to consumers that it is to business customers
(which may be why, relative to inflation, local phone
service is generally no cheaper now than it was 15
years ago).
One of the challenges in competing with the dominant
local phone companies is that in order to generate
sustainable profits in the telecommunications, a company
usually has to own substantial network assets of its
own: fiber optic lines, switches and other equipment.
The Telecommunications Act required big incumbent
local phone companies to sell access to pieces of
their networks - like the copper lines that run into
almost every home and business - to other carriers.
But each part of a network that is leased by a new
carrier rather than built and owned reduces that new
carrier's chances for profitability.
"You need to own your own network to have a
viable business pan," Mr. Kastan said. "And
to do that you need to raise a huge amount of capital."
That voracious appetite for capital is one reason
so many competitive local carriers are in trouble.
In the current economy and stock market, the capital
markets are essentially closed to them, making it
difficult to raise money for network construction
and for weathering the up-front losses the new networks
incur.
One key reason many analysts expect RCN to survive
the downturn is that Mr. McCourt raised billions of
dollars when the getting was good. Having parlayed
his cable ditch-digging skills into small communications
companies - one in Boston, a second in London - that
he nurtured and then sold, Mr. McCourt used his proceeds
in 1993 to start a partnership with the Peter Kiewit
construction empire, to take control of a small communications
company in Pennsylvania called C-Tec. After a series
of spinoffs, Mr. McCourt kept the company that is
now called RCN - the name was derived from "residential
communications network" - which he moved to Princeton.
In 1999, Paul G. Allen's Vulcan Ventures agreed to
invest $1.7 billion in RCN and still owns about 27
percent of the company. That year, RCN also secured
a $250 million investment from Hicks, Muse, Tate &
Furst, the investment firm, which still owns almost
8 percent of the company. In addition, RCN made secondary
stock offerings in both 1998 and 1999.
Another key to RCN's viability has been the relatively
efficient way that the company has built its networks.
Part of that is simply the operational know-how from
Mr. McCourt's long construction experience. But the
company has also marshaled its resources by concentrating
on relatively densely populated areas, often with
many apartment buildings, rather than trying to string
together single-family homes.
But while deep pockets and careful construction are
necessary for a new local carrier, there is also the
complicated business of running a communications carrier.
The mundane but crucial tasks include scheduling and
dispatching installation technicians efficiently and
making sure that customers are being billed every
month (and cutting off customers who don't pay). Many
a start-up has stumbled on such basic steps, and so
far RCN's record on these matters has been mixed.
"The issues right now are expense control and
upgrades of the back-office systems," Mr. Kastan
said. "They have the right strategy, but this
company will have to demonstrate a lot more on the
expense control and the system-upgrade sides before
they really get out of the woods. I'm a big believer
in McCourt. But they need to show better execution."
Mr. McCourt acknowledges the need for RCN to tighten
up its operation. This year, he recruited two senior
executives to ride herd on expenses and the company's
field technicians. And last week, the company announced
it would buy a new billing and customer management
systems from the Convergys Corporation.
The billing system is of particular concern because
many of RCN's customers who use the company for multiple
services now receive multiple bills each month. Unified
billing would probably please customers and would
also give the company more flexibility in offering
promotions and lower prices for people who subscribe
to a package of phone, cable and Internet services.
It might also enable the company to sign up more customers
more efficiently.
"We kept getting phone and cable on separate
bills and over all, it did seem more expensive than
what people in other building were paying," recalled
Ashley Quigley, 24, an executive conference planner
in Manhattan. Until last fall, she lived in an apartment
building on the Upper East Side served by RCN. Despite
the billing issues, "I was impressed that the
service people I dealt with were actually intelligent
and efficient human beings," she said. "The
service people were really good."
Mr. McCourt, who is married with two children, says
he has no intention of leaving RCN. But he concedes
that the day may come when he is no longer the right
person for day-to-day management.
He said he expected his eventual successor to come
from within the company. RCN's senior management team
includes Michael A. Adams, Mr. McCourt's longtime
business partner, who is now president of RCN's wholesale
and strategic development group; Robert J. Currey,
RCN's vice chairman and former chief executive of
21st Century Telecom Group, a small local carrier
in Chicago that was acquired by RCN last year; and
Jeffrey M. White, president of RCN's customer and
field operations group, who was the former chief financial
officer and No. 2 executive at Telecom New Zealand.
"It takes a different skill set to come up with
an idea and start a company than it does to run it
and maybe take it to the next level," Mr. McCourt
said. "Might I be chairman at some point and
someone else is C.E.O.? maybe. But I will see RCN's
dream become a reality. I'm not going to sell out.
I think I'm qualified to finish that dream."
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