Fido (wireless carrier)

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Fido Solutions Inc.
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryWireless telecommunications
FoundedOctober 25, 1996; 27 years ago (1996-10-25)
HeadquartersPlace Bonaventure, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Products
ServicesMobile communications
RevenueIncrease CA$1.02 billion
Increase CA$800 million
Total assetsIncrease CA$3.4 billion
Number of employees
20,000
ParentRogers Communications
Websitewww.fido.ca Edit this at Wikidata
Fido at Pacific Mall
Novatel G100, the first GSM/GPRS PC Card modem available in Canada[1]

Fido Solutions Inc. is a Canadian mobile network operator owned by Rogers Communications. Since its acquisition by Rogers in 2004, it has operated as a Mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) using the Rogers Wireless network.

Fido's logo is a yellow doghouse. The name, "Fido," was suggested to Microcell Solutions, the first importer of GSM technology from Europe to Canada, on the recommendation of its marketing-communications agency at the time, BOS (Beauchesne, Ostiguy, Simard) of Montreal (now DentsuBos). The agency had been searching for a name that would appeal to both French- and English-speaking consumers. The brand name "Fido" inevitably led to the use of dogs in its commercials, which became the brand's informal trademark in TV advertising, starting in 1995. During the 2000s it ran ads where the narrator finished by catching a jumping dog and saying "regrettably, only from Fido". As of 2017, the tagline is "Go get it."[2][3][4]

Fido pioneered the concept of providing unlimited service in select Canadian cities. Fido was the first carrier in Canada to launch a GSM-based network and the first wireless service provider in North America to offer General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) on its network.

History[edit]

The original development of Fido was funded in part by Voicestream, now T-Mobile US. Fido was the first provider in Canada to offer a network with the GSM standard.

Acquisition by Rogers[edit]

In November 2004, Microcell was acquired by the other competing GSM carrier, Rogers Communications, for an estimated CA$1.4 billion. At the time of acquisition, Fido had 1,275,094 customers. The company's name was changed to Fido Solutions shortly thereafter. Fido has retained its data roaming service with T-Mobile. Shortly thereafter, Rogers Communications also bought Sprint Canada, a telecom services reseller that was an MVNO partner with Microcell. As of May 2013, Fido had a customer base of 3,372,763 customers,[5] making it Canada's fourth-largest wireless carrier.

Within Rogers Communications, Fido has been re-positioned as a mid-range brand, with Rogers Wireless as the full-service brand having the widest coverage and longest service hours, and Chatr as the entry-level offering that offers mostly prepaid plans and has the smallest coverage. Although there is some overlap between Fido and Rogers Wireless, Fido tends to offer a greater selection of Bring your own device plans, while offering less subsidies for devices on contracts, and having a delayed launch of the latest phones. Fido's subscriber base appeals largely to millennials, whereas Rogers Wireless caters to traditional clients including corporate customers. Fido's direct competitors are the flanker brands Virgin Mobile Canada and Koodo Mobile, which complement full-service providers Bell Mobility and Telus Mobility

2022 outage[edit]

In July 2022, during the Rogers Communications outage, many Fido customers experienced issues with mobile services. The issue was eventually resolved on July 8 and compensation was promised to customers.[6]

Network[edit]

Fido now operates as an MVNO of Rogers. Fido customers will see "Fido" as the network name, and Rogers customers will see "ROGERS" as the network name.[7]

Since its inception, the Fido network ran on GSM. This GSM compatibility continues to exist today. The current result is the integration of the Fido network into the Rogers Wireless network after the acquisition by Rogers.

Services[edit]

Since the company's inception, Fido offered unique services to differentiate itself from its competitors. Notably, its CityFido plans include either multiple or unlimited local calling minutes in certain zones throughout Canada. Fido was also the country's first and last mobile service provider to bill postpaid airtime by the second, while other companies round up calls to the next minute except for some grandfathered customers.[8] The FidoDOLLARS program offers a selection of rewards to loyal customers. (FidoDOLLARS are equal to 4 percent of a customer's invoice before service charges (NSF, re-activation fee, administrative fees and taxes). As of April 2016, Fido phased out the FidoDOLLARS program. Fido also offers several plans and add-ons for mobile Internet access.

Voice plans[edit]

On November 4, 2008, Fido announced a re-branding and subsequent relaunch of their services due to competition from Koodo Mobile. This re-positioned the company as a discount wireless brand, offering postpaid plans virtually identical to those of Koodo with no system access fee or carrier-charged "911 fee". Clients using legacy plans, however, may keep them only if they continue to pay both fees. Current plans include 100, 200, 300, 500 or unlimited minutes incoming and outgoing calls (Canada-wide calls). The $50 unlimited plan replaces the previously available CityFido plans.[9]

All current plans include the Caller ID, a basic voicemail service (mini voicemail), call waiting and conference call features, plus unlimited outgoing and incoming text (SMS) and picture/video (MMS) from the Fido network to standard numbers worldwide, at no extra cost. The Rogers-pioneered WhoCalled feature is available for an additional CA$7 monthly fee with the "Value Pack" add on. Circle Calling is also included, which allows "free calls between people on the same account", with a maximum beds of five people per account. They also offer a minute tracker, similar to the one used by Virgin Mobile Canada, to remind customers when they have used 75% and 100% of their monthly minutes.

The CityFido Prepaid plan is now called the "in zone plan". It includes unlimited local calling while in the city of activation, plus unlimited text messages sent to standard Canadian numbers. The plan is now only available in Gatineau, London, Ontario, Ottawa and Toronto. It was previously offered in Quebec City, Montreal, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Victoria. Customers in these cities must now pay a $10 monthly surcharge to obtain a nearly identical "with no zone restrictions plan". Fido discontinued the CityFido plan for new postpaid customers.

Fido Wireless Home Phone service was launched in mid-2013. Designed as an alternative to landline telephony, the service uses a ZTE access point to provide a connection between wired phones and Fido's network. The monthly plan features unlimited calling to and from Canada, Caller ID and voicemail. It costs $30/month on its own, but Fido postpaid customers pay $18/month instead. In the midwestern provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba, and in Quebec, the Wireless Home Phone is offered at a discounted rate of $10/month.

Starting in 2018, Canadian wireless carriers, including Fido, changed the way they offer plans and devices, by separating the cost of each aspect. Previously, plan and device costs were bundled together as one price. This reduced transparency for consumers and made it difficult to understand. However, this new idea of "device financing" is currently being reviewed by the CRTC.[10]

December 5, 2018, Fido confirmed customers are able to purchase wireless plans with eSIM. Customers with the eSIM enabled smartphones and devices can purchase the eSIM voucher online and connect to the network. [11]

As of November 2019, Fido' allows customers to pick a rate plan with different usage limits for talk, text and data. After which the user can choose a new device if interested as well as how much of the device cost they like to pay upfront.[12] Device costs are spread out over a 2-year term. This means that user has to pay a fixed amount for their new device over the term. Once the term expires, monthly payment will decrease to the rate plan portion of the payment that has been made.

Mobile Internet[edit]

Fido offers several plans and add-ons for customers wishing to access Internet content via its mobile network using a BlackBerry, feature phone, mobile broadband modem, or smartphone.

Unlimited mobile Internet access is only available on feature phones. It is no longer possible to pay per month for such access, as only daily and weekly Internet add-ons are unlimited. Smartphone add-ons, except for those BlackBerry-related, can be used on a feature phone.

Smartphones can browse the Internet with a tiered add-on. This includes 100 MB for CA$10 and GB for CA$25. If this allowance is exceeded, usage-based billing begins, costing CA$5 for an amount equivalent to that initially included with the add-on.

Unique BlackBerry Internet Service options are available for BlackBerry smartphones. Unlimited BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) is included on all plans CA$35 or more, such as CityFido Unlimited. For all plans, it is also possible to pay an additional fee to add 100 MB or 2 GB of data. Note that the 100 MB option for BlackBerry devices costs CA$5 more than the regular smartphone add-on.

Fido has been heavily criticized for discontinuing its unlimited Internet access plans and add-ons for devices other than feature phones. In response, the company occasionally releases a popular add-on, providing 6 GB of data for $30/month. It requires a voice plan and hence cannot be used with an Internet access stick.

Home internet[edit]

In November 2015, Fido began to offer cable internet services in selected markets. The service is a re-branded Rogers Hi-Speed Internet, offering a 30 Mbit/s package with a 300 GB bandwidth cap, with discounts as part of bundles with Fido post-paid mobile services. Fido internet is available to markets in Ontario that are served by Rogers' internet. The service is primarily aimed at millennials.[13][14]

Loyalty program[edit]

Fido had a loyalty rewards program known as FidoDOLLARS. For every Fido monthly bill or prepaid top-up, a customers received 4% (previously 5% before September 6, 2012) of the pre-tax total in FidoDOLLARS.[15] This currency would be used towards the purchase of a new device, purchase add-ons such as premium voicemail to text (CA$4), name display (CA$2) or #auto (CA$5) for a total of two months. As well as they were used to purchase travel packs as long as you had the full amount of fido dollars to do so. Prepaid customers would also use their FidoDOLLARS to purchase top-up credits. FidoDollars had no cash value and were non-transferable, except when transferring the responsibility of a number/contract from an account with only one line.

With the release of Fido's new Pulse plans, FidoDOLLARS are no longer accumulated but existing FidoDOLLARS will remain on your account. However, if you are not on a Pulse plan you will continue to accumulate FidoDOLLARS as normal. To make up for the lack of FidoDOLLARS, Spotify Premium and Daily Vice are offered free of charge for 2 years (CA$239 value) in all new Pulse plans.

In January 2016, Fido announced a winddown and termination of the FidoDOLLARS program. See the next section for more details.

Perks[edit]

As the FidoDOLLARS program was wound down, July 2017 saw the introduction of Fido's +5 Hours of Data, allowing customers on a pulse plan to enable 1 free hour of data, 5 individual times during each billing cycle. In May 2018, Fido introduced Fido XTRA which provides customers with perks from various retailers every Thursday, but Fido XTRA discontinued in 2023 .[16]

Discontinued services[edit]

Fido once offered a wide range of services which it no longer offers. These have been discontinued either following the purchase of Fido by Rogers, or during "The New Fido" rebranding era.

Unlimited mobile broadband while in Canada or the United States, older CityFido plans and Sprint Canada bundles were some of the plan options removed after Rogers purchased Microcell. The unlimited mobile Internet access plans were replaced by tiered and rationed Internet access options, although feature phones were still eligible for unlimited access until early 2012. Only some legacy CityFido plans were grandfathered, and Fido now has new CityFido offerings. Sprint Canada bundles with Fido were temporarily replaced by Better Choices Bundles after Rogers purchased both companies.

Better Choices Bundles, couples plans, Danger Hiptop service, fax messaging, FullFido plans and mobile TV were all discontinued after "The New Fido" re-branding. Only some existing FullFido customers were grandfathered. The Better Choices Bundles program once offered up to 15% off a pre-tax Fido monthly bill when combined with one or more Rogers services, but Fido is now listed as a "service[] that do[es]n't qualify for the Better Choice Bundles™ Program".[17] Couples plans were replaced by Circle Calling in 2011. Fax messaging was discontinued on September 22, 2007, but fax numbers could be ported out until December 22 of that year, and a similar service is still available at competitor Mike. The Mobile TV service offered up to 25 channels, but was discontinued due to a lack of subscribers. Competitors Bell Mobility and its MVNO Virgin Mobile Canada both offer a very similar feature called Bell Mobile TV.

Per-second billing on Fido's postpaid monthly plans was discontinued on July 4, 2012. Customers with plans created and activated before that date are kept on per-second billing until they change to a newer plan.

The company changed their plan offerings, now bundling data with their Smart plans, and Max Plans. CityFido plans had a cost of $35 per month and are available in ten select CityFido zones throughout Canada. Unlimited features included incoming calls, outgoing local calls, international SMS text messages and BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) service while inside any CityFido zone.

In January 2016, Fido announced the termination of the FidoDOLLARS program. The earning of FidoDOLLARS ends on or shortly after April 6, 2016, for non-term monthly plans, and ends at the end of the current term for those FidoDOLLARS-earning plans that are on a contracted term. The non-term monthly customers were then told to use up (redeem) their FidoDOLLARS by July 6, 2016, whereas customers on a FidoDOLLARS-earning contracted term could redeem their FidoDOLLARS by July 6, 2018 (or else lose the FidoDOLLARS balance in both cases). Fido customers with multiple lines are deemed to be in the second category if at least one line is on a FidoDOLLARS-earning contracted term that goes beyond April 6, 2016.[citation needed] Many users in their community expressed dissatisfaction at the "scam" that their value had been arbitrarily taken by the company, or the only viable redemption option required a further contract.[18]

Retail presence[edit]

Rogers and Fido phones at Zellers.
A sign of Fido, Rogers, and Chatr at Shoppers Drug Mart.

Fido has its own corporate retail stores, and also allows third parties to become exclusive dealers. For example, Best Buy, Costco, Tbooth, Walmart and WirelessWave sell Fido products along with prepaid and postpaid services. Additionally, Loblaw Companies and Zellers stores sold prepaid feature phones and top-up vouchers. Loblaw stores have a special booth, called The Mobile Shop, where the phones are displayed.

Former retailers[edit]

While Shoppers Drug Mart carried only Rogers Wireless prepaid phones at one time, the stores temporarily partnered with Rogers. As a result, Shoppers stores added both prepaid and postpaid products and services for Rogers and its two other brands, Fido and Chatr. Customers could also try out the iPhone 4. As of March 2011, however, Shoppers Drug Mart stores ended their partnership. They now only sell prepaid top-up vouchers for these providers.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Novatel Wireless Merlin G100 PC Card". Fido. Archived from the original on April 14, 2002.
  2. ^ "Fido delves deeper into millennial life". February 7, 2017.
  3. ^ "Fido account awarded to Taxi".
  4. ^ Powell, Chris (November 23, 2015). "Fido gives users the Slow Clap in new campaign". Retrieved November 6, 2019.
  5. ^ Fido subs vs Rogers sub etc. Howardforums.com. Retrieved on December 29, 2016.
  6. ^ Lee, Michael; Sachdeva, Rhythm (July 11, 2022). "What we know about the network system failure that led to the Rogers outage". CTV News. Archived from the original on July 11, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  7. ^ "Fido Solutions - MVNO Dynamics". Archived from the original on February 2, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2016.
  8. ^ "Bring back per-second billing!". Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  9. ^ Mobile | My Account Fido. Fido.ca. Retrieved on December 29, 2016.
  10. ^ Government of Canada, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) (August 30, 2019). "Show cause proceeding and call for comments – The Wireless Code – Device financing plans". crtc.gc.ca. Retrieved November 6, 2019.
  11. ^ "iPhone eSIM support comes to Rogers and Fido in Canada". Retrieved August 8, 2022.
  12. ^ Gant, Shawn (June 26, 2019). "Here Are The Best Fido Plans (2019)". Tech Daily. Retrieved November 6, 2019.
  13. ^ "Fido wireless carrier adds internet service in Ontario". CBC News. Retrieved December 24, 2015.
  14. ^ "Fido launching home Internet service as Rogers targets millennials". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved December 24, 2015.
  15. ^ FidoRewards – FidoDollars Decreased to 4% from 5%. Forums.redflagdeals.com (August 17, 2012). Retrieved on December 29, 2016.
  16. ^ Staff Correspondent (September 11, 2018). "Fido Reviews - Plans, Coverage, Phones & Fido Perks". Tech Daily Canada. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  17. ^ Rogers Better Choice Bundles (click on "Eligibility")
  18. ^ "FidoDOLLARS". Archived from the original on May 31, 2017. Retrieved April 28, 2017.

External links[edit]