Telecommunications groups Vodafone and Hutchison have made the first steps in preparing for the merger of the two companies, which was announced last month.
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The two groups are now designing IT systems and drawing up plans, but these will only be integrated after the merger has been approved by regulators.
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“We are independently starting to plan. An inventory, on each side of the fence, is being prepared. It will enable us to understand what systems each company has in place,” a Vodafone spokesperson says.
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Hutchison’s seven-year-old network and IT outsourcing agreement with Ericsson has been placed under review, while the two groups say it is likely to pick and choose some systems from both companies.
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Ovum research director David Kennedy says that IT systems are an important part of a telecommunications operation and that the two groups are “certainly” looking at this part of their business.
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“In the mobile industry, profitability depends on scale. The bigger you are, the more profitable you are, and that’s simply because you’re serving a number of customers with a fixed number of IT management systems,” he says. ย
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“So in order to generate the profitability they’re hoping for, they’re going to be looking at merging systems or migrating one customer base on to the other’s systems.
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“Looking at IT systems will be a key element of that.”
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The two companies announced last month that they will enter into a 50:50 joint venture, which will be known as VHA and use the Vodafone brand. Hutchison’s 3 brand will eventually disappear, while all existing 3 customers will come under the Vodafone brand.
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The new joint telco will carry six million customers and is expected to record an annual revenue of $4 billion.
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Related articles:
- Jobs to go and prices to rise in Vodafone and 3 merger
- Why the Vodafone and 3 merger will lead to higher costs for consumers
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