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It is believed only 30 mainly-engineering staff remain to maintain the network.
Deloitte and Touche confirmed the layoffs saying: it has been necessary to downsize the Dolphin workforce.
But the administrators are continuing to deal with the day-to-day operations of the business with the support of the retained employees and the customers and suppliers of Dolphin.
While it is too early to state if and when a sale may be concluded every effort is being made to preserve the business.
Deloitte and Touche had set a deadline of September 14 for potential buyers to put in a bid for Dolphin UKs business and assets including its national network which remains operational. (Cont P2)
The deadline passed with no firm bids received. Dolphin passed into administration in August with debts estimated to be $1.2 billion.
Dolphin provided business TETRA communication services to 273500 subscribers across Europe.
The UK network was launched in August 1999 but by August 2001 had only attracted 76000 subscribers.
In November last year Dolphin admitted it had yet to secure financing needed to fulfil its 2001 investment plans.
In December the company announced it required a further $700 million of funding to carry out its plans to rollout new networks second generation handsets and maintain services over the network.
The company ran up huge losses caused by rolling out and launching the network subsidies on handsets and marketing spend. It covered 90 per cent of the UK population.
The service which was introduced to key dealers at a low-key trade launch in January has now been shelved because of adverse conditions on the telecoms market.
The decision is a blow for Caudwells distribution arm 20:20 Logistics which won the contract to source and package SIMs and handsets for the
OnStar service and deal with all admin dealer training and trade customer service.
One 2 One would have been the partner network.
An OnStar spokesperson confirmed the service had been shelved but declined to give any factual details.
A spokesman for 20:20 Logistics said:
We were appointed to look after product distribution sales and dealer support for General Motors virtual network in the UK and it is very disappointing to hear that the launch hasbeen delayed. Under the current market conditions however we fully understand this decision and now look forward to working on the OnStar project in the future when the time is right.
As well as being a mobile phone voice service the plan for OnStar was for a personalised web portal that learned the personal lifestyle preferences of its users and could act as a 24-hour virtual assistant.
The service would have been accessed from mobile phones PCs special in-car terminals (likely to be fitted to GM vehicles) and fixed lines to a customer service call centre.
In the USA OnStar offers GM vehicle owners GPS location and recovery telematics services such as remote diagnostics remote door unlocking and automatic notofication when an airbag is triggered.
A row has broken out between South Wales-based dealership EHD Telecom and Burton-on-Trent Orange distributor Mainline over 20000 in unpaid commissions.
EHD claims Mainline is refusing to pay them commissions due for connecting customers to Orange.
However Mainline says it is not happy with the quality of EHDs connected customers and wants to see copies of customers proof of address and IDs before it will release the money. Mainline has also terminated EHDs dealer agreement.
Mainline managing director Andrew Boden told Mobile News:
Mainline has chosen not to continue to do business with EHD telecom on the basis of subscriber quality.
We will pay the balance of any money owed once all unpaid stock is returned and we have received copies of customer proof of ID and address as stated in our trading terms.
We have received a statutory demand from EHD. These have been passed to our solicitors. Unless we see the documents requested we will hold commissions until the (Cont P2) claw-back period of six months has expired. We have tried to be reasonable. We have offered to pay EHD for the time and cost to produce copies of the documents we require. But it has fallen on deaf ears said Boden.
EHD managing director Eileen Davis claims Boden either does not want to pay or is unable to. She told Mobile News:
We have served Mainline with documents relating to the insolvency act for non-payment of around 7000. The total figure owed to us by Mainline is between 20000 to 25000.
We will issue documents over the remaining amount. Andrew Boden has not been able to agree payment terms with me. I dont know if he cant pay or wont pay.
There is an open door for Mainline to settle up. It is now down to the courts to decide payment terms.
Mainline only terminated our trading agreement after receiving the demands. We have nothing to hide. Our documentation is open for Mainline to see.
Joint administrative receiver Neil Geddes of Manchester-based accountancy firm Levy Gee said:
It is unlikely that the company will be resurrected in its current form. I could not rule out some of the staff being offered alternative posts elsewhere but again I believe that is unlikely.
We have received financial offers for certain parts of the business. I hope to be in the position to accept offers for those areas of the business we are looking to sell within the next few days.
Geddes said that it was too early to say whether the executive directors of The Phone People would face statutory investigation over the millions of pounds of losses.
No significant impropriety on the part of the executive directors has been brought to my notice as yet. The industry is undergoing significant structural change (Cont P2) and it appears that the company failed to deal quickly enough with the operational issues inherited from its predecessor.
It is disappointing that it has been necessary to discontinue trading operations. But there still remains the prospect that certain aspects of the business can be sold and we are looking for early expressions of interest.
Geddes is seeking offers for The Phone Peoples retail sites intellectual property and phone replacement business (see P14-P16).
Generation Telecom is tipped to be close to acquiring a Vodafone service provider for its subscriber base. Genesis Telecom and Global Crossing have been named by industry sources as the targets.
Nash will report to his old chief at Ericsson Generation Telecom managing director Keith Westcott. Nashs role will be to establish a new sales and marketing team and bring on new subscribers. (Cont P2)
Westcott told Mobile News:
I have worked with Barry Nash over the last eight years. I became aware that he was being made redundant at Ericsson and was keen to secure him to Generation Telecoms management team (full story next issue).
The company connected mainly One 2 One handsets and airtime through stores in Clapham Tooting Streatham Camberwell and Maidstone. It went into liquidation on December 21 last year. North London-based insolvency specialist R. Valentine & Co is the appointed liquidator.
NatWest Bank and (Cont P2)
One 2 One are understood to be the main creditors. It appears falling sales and squeezed margins forced the company out of business. In the year ending December 1999 turnover fell from 6.5 million to 2.5 million while profits fell from 36800 to 9062. These figures fell further as sales within the industry slowed throughout 2001.
In July 2000 the company changed its retail trading name from World of Accessories to Mobile Phone House saying the brand was confusing to customers. It retained the World of Accessories name for its own branded accessories.
This follows the suspension of a national sales manager and a dealer manager late last year (Mobile News November 12).
A third employee is being investigated in relation to the misappropriation of the companys funds said an Orange spokesperson.
Orange takes these allegations very seriously and is conducting a full investigation.
It is believed the national sales manager and dealer managers were involved in authorising irregular connections and marketing funds to two Rocom dealers that have since gone in to liquidation (Mobile News November 26).
Rocom is still disputing a 1 million clawback claim from Orange over the irregular connections made through Newcastle-based ITS and Wales-based Select Communications because it alleges certain Orange employees authorised the connections.
At the time Rocom chairman Bob Old officially declined to implicate the suspended individuals.
South London-based One 2 One dealer Mobile Phone House formerly known as World of Accessories and Fastgold Digital Telecom has folded with the closure of all its stores.
The company connected mainly One 2 One handsets and airtime through stores in Clapham Tooting Streatham Camberwell and Maidstone. It went into liquidation on December 21 last year. North London-based insolvency specialist R. Valentine & Co is the appointed liquidator.
NatWest Bank and One 2 One are understood to be the main creditors. It appears falling sales and squeezed margins forced the company out of business. In the year ending December 1999 turnover fell from 6.5 million to 2.5 million while profits fell from 36800 to 9062. These figures fell further as sales within the industry slowed throughout 2001.
In July 2000 the company changed its retail trading name from World of Accessories to Mobile Phone House saying the brand was confusing to customers. It retained the World of Accessories name for its own branded accessories.
A company with a Euro-centric name doesnt appear to be focused on the UK said Euro Cellular chairman and chief executive Win Donaldson.
Thats why Euro Cellular decided to start afresh in the UK with a new company. We sell more internationally than in the UK.
In the UK we have been selling well through non-traditional channels. We were never that desperate to move huge volumes in the UK if that meant offering people silly credit terms.
We didnt want to buy that sort of business. Now the market has changed and we see an opportunity. The company is looking ahead at 3G and we are looking at the level of service we need to offer in readiness for it.
M-Fusion sales director Chris Savva promised next-day deliveries a freephone number and a turnaround time for enquiries of 30 minutes.
Dealers have also accused BTCellnets Northern Ireland distributor Dialogic of poaching customers and bouncing commission cheques to dealers.
Northern Ireland-based dealership Advance Business Mobile told Mobile News that dealers who purchased from UK mainland distributors rather than Oranges appointed N. Ireland distributor Netcom were being denied training and support.
Advance MD John Williams said: Orange is pressurising UK-based distributors to stop supplying connections to dealers in Northern Ireland.
Williams says he prefers to deal with mainland distributors because they offer a better service than Netcom.
We do not trust the local distributors because back orders arrive on the last day of the month. We have been trading with MoCo Cell-Link. We are happy with them and we dont want to be told by Orange who we can buy from said Williams.
All Orange would say was:
Northern Ireland is well served by the existing distributor (Cont P2) relationship. If any dealers are concerned about the service they are receiving we urge them to contact Orange directly so we can address any issues they may have.
However Kent-based MoCo Cell-Link managing director Ian Robinson revealed that Orange did intend to prevent UK distributors supplying dealers in Northern Ireland and had only recently agreed to let MoCo Cell-Link supply an agreed list of dealers.
Orange did intend to stop supplies to Northern Ireland through us. In October/November Orange carried out a survey of opinion and indicated it was going to stop us supplying Northern Ireland dealers. We were concerned that Orange was trying to push us out of a market that has been good business for us over the last few years.
Then in December Orange had a change of heart. But we have been told we cannot recruit any new dealers in the province because Netcom is the preferred agent said Robinson.
BTCellnets Northern Ireland distributor Dialogic been criticised by Northern Ireland dealer HH Communication.
HH boss proprietor Bryan Hamilton accuses Dialogic of poaching customers.
Its not a good sign. Other dealers have experienced the same problem. We dont trust Dialogic. It has its own shops and has been sending out mailshots offering our customers upgrades.
We prefer to deal with mainland distributors. Its harder for them to steal our customers. Especially when they dont have their own shops. We get a better deal on the mainland because the bigger distributors are pushing large volumes through.
But BTCellnet is pushing us to use Dialogic rather than someone in the UK said Hamilton.
Dialogic dealer manager John McGuigan refuted the HH complaint:
It is not true that Northern Ireland dealers have to trade only with us. There has been a misunderstanding.
We have told dealers we are the only BTCellnet-appointed dealer in Northern Ireland. This has given dealers the wrong impression that they have to deal with us. In fact they can deal with any distributor and we are allowed to trade with any dealer on the mainland.
McGuigan denied that Dialogic was in any financial trouble or that it poached other dealers customers.
A BTCellnet spokesperson confirmed:
Dialogic is our appointed direct distributor in Northern Ireland. There was a huge selection process before we chose them.
They manage our dealers efficiently and effectively. We have not heard of any problems before now. If any dealer has a problem they should approach us directly.
We encourage our dealers to use Dialogic. We are not trying to cheat dealers. Dialogic are the best people to be used because they can supply stock much quicker.
We invite some dealers to trade with us directly provide they have been trading for over two years and meet the minimum level of connections.
Highlight of the new handset range is the new Fisio 820. This is is a high-end colour screen phone with built-in email Bluetooth and GPRS.
It is Philips smallest and lightest phone on the market weighing 85 grams and measuring 77cc.
Philips new mid-range handset is called the Fisio 620. The 820 is a GPRS phone that (Cont P2) features customisable covers screensavers downloadable ring-tones and game downloads.
A low-end phone called Fisio 121 will also be launched. This has 15 days standby time a high-resolution display and customisable fronts. The phone will most likely appear in operator pre-pay packs.
The new handset range is due to be launched at the GSM World Congress in Cannes later this month.
Philips UK managing director George McPherson told Mobile News the company was ready to relaunch itself following the sale of its manufacturing facilities to China Electronics and its Le Mans-based configuration facility to European Telecom.
We have stripped out a number of fixed overheads that will enable us to be extremely competitive said McPherson.
Selling the configuration facility to European Telecom was a good move for us. They will take the transceivers directly from the factory in China and add the keypad front and back covers and then load software for operators requirements. They pack the phone into operators boxes where required along with the right manuals and chargers.
It is more cost effective for them to do it because they can offer the same facility to other manufacturers. It is not our core competence. Our strengths are in sales marketing and defining the right products for the market.
We can now concentrate on specifying and designing wireless devices for our customers and selling them into the market.
McPherson says Philips will increase its distribution of handsets by selling phones alongside its other consumer products.
As handset subsidies decrease I expect to see our handsets on sale alongside our other consumer products in the likes of Dixons and our other retail partners said McPherson.