Page 20 - New York Cooperator March 2019
P. 20

TRENDS 
A 
s more and more of our daily lives  a reduced rate. Here at netBlazr, if you  50 channels live online and are all really  
become more intertwined with on- 
line entertainment and services,  duce our rate by 45-50 percent. So if you  it in, you have a streaming app and you’re  
internet access has become a home utility  have 100 units, instead of paying $6,000,  good to go. You have individual profiles  
along  with  electricity  and  running  water.  you’d probably pay around $3,500. And  set  up  for  everyone  in  your  household,  
Boards can take for granted that every resi- 
dent in their building or community asso- 
ciation wants reliable, fast internet service,  The idea for us is that if you’re unhappy  solely  with  internet  service  without  that  
and while many communities leave the  with our service, you should be able to  older cable setup.” 
selection  of  service  providers  to  individ- 
ual owners, others – especially those with  
shared community spaces in which people  
expect wireless access – have to decide as a  ket, and I’m not even sure whether New  
board which available provider is right for  York is. But Chicago is definitely a bulk  
their association.  
The Cooperator 
 spoke with representa- 
tives of several major telecom providers  ban areas where you do have competition  er, but the primary cost is for the whole  
to discuss what’s currently available for  – which is key in all of this – because you  building. Sometimes not everyone will  
associations – as well as with a property  can find really good rates. It can be frus- 
management professional  to  talk  about  trating if you’re an association outside of  necessarily stop the entire process. Some  
his  client  communities’ dealings with  a city where you have limited options.  people just don’t like change. I’ve been to  
these increasingly essential service pro- 
viders. 
Perry Wasserbauer, Market Develop- 
ment Manager at netBlazr, a Boston- 
based broadband provider  
The Cooperator: What can you tell us  
about bulk package deals for community  
associations and multifamily properties? 
PW: “A bulk deal takes the idea that we  
all need internet, whether that includes  on the demographics. Even older demos  not exist anymore, and that package is not  
cable or (more rarely) phone... but you  have shifted somewhat toward Netflix  even currently available. So you can save  
take the basic premise that everyone in  and Hulu [rather than traditional cable  a lot for everyone in the building with a  
the community wants and needs internet,  TV]. There’s a lot of competition in the  more streamlined bulk package catering  
and that if they band together and go all- 
in with a specific provider, they can get  Tube TV, Google... some of these offer 40- 
want to do a bulk deal, we’d typically re- 
we’re different from some of the major  with all of your favorites and your record- 
telecoms, as we don’t believe in contracts.  ed shows, etc. There’s a lot that you can do  
leave.” 
Are bulk packages catching on? 
“Boston isn’t necessarily a bulk mar- 
market; they’re all about it there. I think  the building. And individual units have  
you’re going to see this a lot more in ur- 
You might be able to find providers in the  plenty of condo board meetings and seen  
suburbs who will do a multifamily bulk  some horror scenarios, but I’ve also seen  
build-out or something of that nature,  great, highly-functional associations. It’s  
and those are typically more local inde- 
pendent companies – but it’s touch and  personalities. Most people—especially  
go.”  
What’s the market like for cable service  
these days? 
“It’s  less  of  a  utility, but  it  depends  which they started that service likely does  
subscription service market. Hulu or You- 
cool. With an AppleTV or Roku, you plug  
What happens when the majority of  
an association desires a bulk package, but  
there are adamant holdouts who insist on  
sticking with cable? 
“The bulk deals are for the entirety of  
the option to go through another provid- 
want  to  be  involved,  but  that  shouldn’t  
all about different people and different  
in a condo building where they have one  
of the major providers and a triple-play  
phone/internet/cable package—the rate at  
to their current interests and usage.” 
Rafael Visbal, Regional Vice Presi- 
dent of Commercial Development  
at Comcast’s Hollywood, Florida  
offices 
The Cooperator: What does  
[Comcast subsidiary] Xfinity of- 
fer community associations that’s  
unique when compared to products  
and services for single-family homes  
or multifamily rentals? 
RV: “Let me start with the big  
picture. Condos, gated communi- 
ties, what have you.... it’s a large part  
of our footprint across the country.  
We know that multifamily is a very  
competitive area today, and created  
Xfinity Communities a few years  
ago as a specific team to address  
this. Over the last few years, we’ve  
transformed our service for HOAs,  
improving customer service, in- 
vesting in better network and en- 
tertainment solutions... and we launched  
our X1 entertainment platform, which al- 
lows you take your content anywhere and  
enjoy it anytime from any device.” 
So I could finish the movie I started last  
night in my apartment on the subway the  
next morning via my phone? 
“Exactly.”  
What does your company offer in terms  
of bulk packaging? 
“It’s one of the segments we service,  
wherein an association has selected a sin- 
gle provider and has decided to enter into  
a multi-year ‘wholesale’ agreement, where  
they want to provide video, or video/in- 
ternet, or a specific array of equipment,  
etc., to the property for the term of that  
agreement. It’s a segment we serve very  
well,  and  we  have  specific  geographi- 
cal areas within our footprint in Florida  
where it’s embraced more than others. In  
West Palm Beach and Southwest Florida  
in general, bulk is a very large component  
of our business. 
“If the HOA documents permit it, and  
there’s political will to do something as a  
community, we can definitely bring to- 
gether what is generally a very custom- 
ized solution. We figure that out property  
to property. And this creates a very stable  
predictable model of pricing and service  
throughout the term of the agreement for  
that property, which is something a little  
Telecom for Your Community 
Evaluating Available Options  
BY MIKE ODENTHAL 
20 THE COOPERATOR 
 — MARCH 2019 
COOPERATOR.COM 
continued on page 24 
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