Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
AT
AIRCEL LIMITED, NEW DELHI
TO
BY
JUNE 2010
CERTIFICATE
(Industry Integrated)
TO
Under my supervision and guidance and that no part of this report has been
submitted for the award of any other degree / diploma/ fellowship or similar
titles or prizes.
FACULTY GUIDE
Shailendra
Signature:-
Qualification:- MCA
STUDENTS DECLEARATION
To
Is my original work and the same has not been submitted for the
Award of any other Degree/diploma/fellowship or other similar titles
or prizes.
The successful culmination of any project is due to the multi faced help directly or
indirectly rendered by various people during the execution of the project.
I express my foremost gratitude to AIRCEL Ltd, Delhi branch, and Collage of
management, School of business, for providing opportunity to gather information for
my project.
I wish to express my sincere and grateful thanks to the people who helped and
extended their support in this endeavor. I take the opportunity to express sincere
thanks to Mr. Vishwesh kumar (ASM) Aircel Ltd for his scholarly guidance
I would also like to thank Mr. Ambrish Panday (TSM) for their support from time
to time and for providing the necessary resources for the timely completion of the
project.
Delhi.
PREFACE
Master of Business Administration is a course, which combines both theory and its
applications as its contents of study in the field of management. As part and parcel of
this course, every aspirant has to undergo an ‘in – company training’ in an organization.
The purpose of this training is to expose the student of management sciences with real
life situations existing in the organization and to provide an insight into the various
functions who can visualize things what they have been taught in classrooms. Actually,
it is the life force of management. It is in practical training that the effectiveness of
management itself is realized.
As a complementary to training, every trainee has to prepare and submit a report on the
working of the organization. This report is in continuation of that tradition. It is an
attempt to present an account of practical knowledge and observations gathered during
the training.
I hereby declare that the project report on “AIRCEL LTD” is written and submitted by
me to NDIMS, New Delhi towards the fulfillment for the study of MBA. This project is
based on my knowledge and database gained from the company. The report written is
original work of me. The contents provided are true to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
I further declare that, this project report is not been copied and submitted to any other
university for any other degree, or requirement course.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION
About telecom sector in India.
Basic structure of Indian telecom.
2. COMPANY PROFILE
AIRCEL in Delhi & NCR
Often telecommunication systems are two-way and devices act as both a transmitter
and receiver or transceiver. For example, a mobile phone is a transceiver.
Telecommunication over a phone line is called point-to-point communication because it
is between one transmitter and one receiver, telecommunication through radio
broadcasts is called broadcast communication because it is between one powerful
transmitter and numerous receivers.
The Global System for Mobile communications (GSM: originally from Group Special
Mobile) is the most popular standard for mobile phones in the world. GSM service is
used by over 2 billion people across more than 212 countries and territories. The
ubiquity of the GSM standard makes international roaming very common between
mobile phone operators, enabling subscribers to use their phones in many parts of the
world.
From the point of view of the consumers, the key advantage of GSM systems has been
higher digital voice quality and low cost alternatives to making calls such as the Short
Message Service (SMS).
The advantage for network operators has been the ability to deploy equipment from
different vendors because the open standard allows easy inter-operability. Like other
cellular standards GSM allows network operators to offer roaming services which mean
subscribers can use their phones all over the world.
GSM is a cellular network, which means that mobile phones connect to it by searching
for cells in the immediate vicinity. GSM networks operate in four different frequency
ranges. Most GSM networks operate in the 900 MHz or 1800 MHz bands. Some
countries in the Americas (including the United States and Canada) use the 850 MHz
and 1900 MHz bands because the 900 and 1800 MHz frequency bands were already
allocated.
• Micro
• Pico
• Umbrella cells.
The coverage area of each cell varies according to the implementation environment.
Macro cells can be regarded as cells where the base station antenna is installed on a
mast or a building above average roof top level. Micro cells are cells whose antenna
height is under average roof top level; they are typically used in urban areas. Pico cells
are small cells whose diameter is a few dozen meters; they are mainly used indoors.
Umbrella cells are used to cover shadowed regions of smaller cells and fill in gaps in
coverage between those cells.
The network behind the GSM system seen by the customer is large and complicated in
order to provide all of the services which are required. It is divided into a number of
sections and these are each covered in separate articles.
• The Base Station Subsystem (the base stations and their controllers).
• The Network and Switching Subsystem (the part of the network most similar to
a fixed network). This is sometimes also just called the core network.
• The GPRS Core Network (the optional part which allows packet based Internet
connections).
All of the elements in the system combine to produce many GSM services such as
voice calls and SMS
]
In the United States, Canada, Europe and Australia, many operators lock the mobiles
they sell. This is done because the price of the mobile phone is typically subsidised
with revenue from subscriptions and operators want to try to avoid subsidising
competitor's mobiles. A subscriber can usually contact the provider to remove the lock
for a fee, utilize private services to remove the lock, or make use of ample software and
websites available on the Internet to unlock the handset themselves
Some providers will unlock the phone for free if the customer has held an account for a
certain period. Third party unlocking services exist that are often quicker and lower
cost than that of the operator. In most countries removing the lock is legal. In countries
like India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Belgium, etc., all phones are sold unlocked. However,
in Belgium, it is unlawful for operators there to offer any form of subsidy on the
phone's price. This was also the case in Finland until April 1, 2006, when selling
subsidized combinations of handsets and accounts became legal though operators have
to unlock phone free of charge after a certain period (at most 24 months).
Over the past several years, developing countries have also recognized the important
role a responsive, business-oriented, and technologically advanced telecom sector plays
in the growth of the economy. Many developing countries now see the constraints of
estate monopoly in telecom as standing in the way of a response to the twin challenges
of spurring internal growth and competing in an increasingly global economy.
Past experience of reform across many countries suggests that the fundamental issue
that must be addressed in telecom reform is effective separation of the basic functions
of policy making, operational management, and regulation (ITU Report 1989). The
Second level of consideration is access to capital and human resources. The third level
of concern is the introduction of competition for efficiency. Competitions perhaps more
important than right ownership, if ever there was anything like it, in bringing about
efficiency.
The Indian telecom sector was wholly under government ownership until 1984, and
was characterized by underinvestment, outdated equipment, and growth well below the
potential of the market. In the mid-1980s, telecom was included by the government as a
part of the so-called .Technology Missions a set of dedicated, welfare-oriented, and
well focused programmes then implemented at national level.
The DoT and the Precursor to Reform
In one of the earliest steps towards reforms and boosting indigenization efforts, the
government set up the Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DOT) in 1984 with
the objective of initiating and managing research in the switching and transmission
segments. Subsequently, the government separated the Department of Post and
Telegraph in 1985 by setting up the Department of Post and the Department of
Telecommunications.
In 1986 two new public sector corporations. The Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Limited
(MTNL) and the Videsh Sanchar Nigam
Limited (VSNL).were set up under the Department of Telecommunications (DoT).
The MTNL, which was carved out of the Dot, took over the operation, maintenance,
and development of telecom services in Bombay and New Delhi. The VSNL was set up
to plan, operate, develop, and accelerate international telecom services in India. The
government created the corporate organizations in orderto allows decision making
autonomy and flexibility and facilitates public borrowings that would not have been
possible under a government framework. However, policy formulation, regulation, and
several key decision areas remained with the DoT.
A new organization, the Telecom Commission, was created in 1989 with a wide range
of executive, administrative, and financial powers to formulate and regulate policy and
prepare the budget for the DoT. The Telecom Commission had four full-time members’
managing technology, production, services, and finance and four part-time members
representing the Planning Commission, Department of Finance, Department of
Industry, and Department of Electronics. The creation of the MTNL, its subsequent
operations, and the relationship of the personnel employed in the MTNL to their
counterparts in the DoT raised questions about the organizational structure most suited
for this sector. Therefore, in 1991, upon government initiative, the high-powered
Athreya Committee submitted a report on the appropriate organizational structures for
this sector.
Subsequently, other studies for reforms had been commissioned, but in the
absence of public debate, and employee and union concerns regarding the
consequences of implementation.
The government did not formally adopted any report.. Since 1997, there were
several statements in the media by key decision makers and the
Communications Minister calling for corporatization of the DoT. However,
there was very little public information or debate regarding the sequence of
decisions leading to corporatization or the form of corporate structure.
Since 1995, there was increasing pressure from international organizations such
as the WTO to review the monopoly status of theVSNL and the Dot’s monopoly
in international long-distance communication respectively. The government had
undertaken to
Review the monopoly status of the VSNL in 2004 and the possibility of opening
of long distance in 1999.
The government’s view has been that a person from outside the ITS cadre
would be better able to oversee the corporatization of
the DoT since in the past senior management of the erstwhile DoT, mostly from
the ITS, had resisted any kind of change
.
Although an outsider Secretary was ostensibly to facilitate corporatization, it is
not clear how, without the requisite mandate from the employees and especially
the senior managers, he/she would be able to lead such a major task. This is not
to say that the ITS cadre was better equipped to handle this task. What was
missing was an overall strategy and an indication of the direction of change to
inform the administrative changes. The government seemed to view
corporatization as an administrative decision rather than a process.
(a) Make recommendations, on a request from the licensor, on the following matters,
namely:
(vii) measures for the development of telecommunication technology and any other
matter relatable to telecommunication industry in general;
(ii) notwithstanding anything contained in the terms and conditions of the license
granted before the commencement of the Telecom Regulatory Authority
(Amendment) Ordinance,2000, fix the terms and conditions of inter-connectivity
between the service providers;
(v) lay down the standards of quality of service to be provided by the service
providers and ensure the quality of service and conduct the periodical survey of
such service provided by the service providers so as to protect interest of the
consumers of telecommunication services;
(vi) lay down and ensure the time period for providing local and long distance
circuits of telecommunication between different service providers;
(vii) maintain register of interconnect agreements and of all such other matters as
may be provided in the regulations;
(viii) keep register maintained under clause (viii) open for inspection to any
member of public on payment of such fee and compliance of such other
requirement as may be provided in the regulations;
(d) Perform such other functions including such administrative and financial functions
as may be entrusted to it by the Central Government or as may be necessary to carry out
the provisions of this act.
Provided that the recommendations of the Authority specified in the clause (a) of this
sub-section shall not be binding upon the Central Government:
Provided further that the Central Government shall seek the recommendations of the
Authority in respect of matters specified in sub-clauses (i) and (ii) of clause (a) of this
sub-section in respect of new license to be issued to a service provider and the
Authority shall forward its recommendations within a period of sixty days from the date
on which that Government sought the recommendations:
Provided also that the Authority may request the Central Government to furnish such
information or documents as may be necessary for the purpose of making
recommendations under sub-clauses (i) and (ii) of clause (a) of this sub-section and that
Government shall supply such information within a period of seven days from receipt
of such request:
Provided also that the Central Government may issue a license to a service provider if
no recommendations are received from the Authority within the period of specified in
the second provision or within such period as may be mutually agreed upon between
the Central Government and the Authority.
Provided also that if the Central Government has considered that recommendation of
the Authority comes to a prima facie conclusion that such recommendation cannot be
accepted or needs modifications, it shall, refer the recommendations back to the
Authority for its reconsideration.
Milestones in Telecom Reforms
1984 Manufacturing of subscriber terminal equipment opened to private sector.
1985 Telecom was constituted into a separate department with a separate board.
1986 MTNL and VSNL created as corporations.
1988 Government introduces in-dialing scheme. PABX services only within a
building, or in adjoining buildings.
1989 Telecom Commission formed.
1991 Telecom equipment manufacturing opened to private sector. Major
international players like Alcatel, AT&T,
Ericsson, Fujitsu, and Siemens entered equipment manufacturing market.
1992 VAS sector opened for private competition.
1993 Private networks allowed in industrial areas.
1994 Licenses for radio paging (27 cities) issued.
May 1994 New Telecom Policy announced.
September 1994 Broad guidelines for private operator entry into basic services
announced.
November 1994 Licenses for cellular mobiles for four metros issued.
December 1994 Tenders floated for bids in cellular mobile services in 19
circles, excluding the four metros, on a duopoly basis.
January 1995 Tenders floated for second operator in basic services on a circle
basis.
July 1995 Cellular tender bid opened.
August 1995 Basic service tender bid opened; the bids caused lot of
controversy. A majority of bids were considered low.
December 1995 LOIs issued to some operators for cellular mobile operations in
circles.
January 1996 Rebidding takes place for basic services in thirteen circles. Poor
response.
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) formed by ordinance.
October 1996 LOIs being issued for basic services.
March 1997 The TRAI Act passed in Parliament.
June 1998 Several VASs available through private operators. The first private
basic service becomes operational.
March 1999 Announcement of National Telecom Policy.
January 2000 Amendment to the TRAI Act.
August 2000 Announcement of Domestic Long Distance Competition Policy.
October 2000 Planned Corporatization of DoT.
BASIC STRUCTURE OF INDIAN TELECOM
EVOLUTION OF THE INDIAN TELECOM MARKET
The Indian cell phone market essentially started in 1992 with the sale of licenses,
which enabled the private sector to participate in the industry (COAI, 2006). In 1994,
cellular service licenses were granted for the major metropolitan areas. This then
expanded to 15 circles in the following year. Services were rolled out in 1995 – with
Kolkata becoming the first city to get a cellular network in August 1995. However, in
December 2000 – 5 years after launch of cellular licenses – penetration was still quite
low. In fact, there were only about 3.2 million subscribers, primarily in the major cities
and large towns.
The major driver for change was the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India
(TRAI).TRAI was instituted in 1997, and soon started building policies and regulations
to push prices downward and spur competition. By December 2004, there were about
93mn phones in the country, of which 48mn subscribers were cellular (TRAI, Dec.
2005). The number of cellular phone users increased to about 76mn in December 2005
and about 89mn phones in March 2006 (Financial Express, Apr 2006)
This trend indicates a CAGR of over 30%. Jorma Ollila, Chairman and CEO of Nokia,
recently commented that “India is amongst the top 5 telecom markets in the world”
(Light reading 2006) when he visited the country to reiterate his firm’s commitment to
the market. Indeed, no other country in the world has added 4-5mn mobile phones per
month. Exhibit 1 shows the growth of the postpaid and prepaid market in India,
including prediction for 2010.
Player
The Indian wireless market has both CDMA and GSM network operators. CDMA
operators entered the picture and grew rapidly – Reliance, which owns about 70% of
the CDMA market currently with ~ 20.44 mn subscriptions, grew at over 114% year-on
year in 2002-03 – one of the most explosive phone launches ever ( TRAI Jun 2003,
Financial Express, Apr 2006). The overall CDMA subscriber base, though, is still
about 22.2% of the market – with Tata Teleservices taking up most of the remaining
CDMA share.
The GSM players account for the remaining ~78% - with a market that is less
dominated by one player. Bharti, state-owned BSNL, and Hutch control the largest
parts of this market and have been adding subscribers at an impressive pace. As of
April 2006, Bharti was the largest player by far, with 30.37 mn subscribers. BSNL had
a subscriber base of 20.44mn, followed closely by Hutch with 22% of the GSM market
and an overall share of 15.02%.
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India overseas the evolution of this market.
Since its establishment in 1997, this agency has made many key judgments – including
statements on tariffs, quality of service, next generation networks, etc. TRAI also
releases quarterly reports on the state of the telecom industry – with special emphasis
on tariffs, interoperability between networks, and usage (TRAI).
Since Indian regulation makes it difficult for network operators to also sell phones (due
to revenue share agreements), there is a completely parallel market for users to buy
phones. In the GSM space, users go to handset providers to buy phones and then to
network operators to get network services. Most global handset manufacturers are
present in India – with Nokia leading the pack by far. In 2005, more than 31mn
handsets were sold. Of this, Nokia captured about 60% share – over 18mn phones in
one year. Motorola, which has a smaller share, is seeing growth with the introduction
of more advanced phones including its Razr platform. Samsung, LG and Sony Ericcson
all have reasonable market share as well – with LG catering almost exclusively to the
CDMA space through a tie-up with Reliance.
Demand for cellular services is interesting for a variety of reasons. Before catering to
this market, service providers must consider unmet needs, price sensitivity, diversity in
consumer profiles, and the skew in urban-rural markets.
1. Unmet needs
Current Indian teledensity is 11.43 (i.e. only 11.43 phones both cellular and
fixed line exist per 100 people) While that points to a staggering ~ 125mn
phones already in the market, it also points to a large unmet demand.
Specifically, peer countries have much higher teledensity. China has a mobile
teledensity of 28.3 while in Malaysia, that number is 77. If India is to attain
China’s teledensity in 5 years – up from its current penetration of ~ 7%, this
implies an almost 4x increase in the number of phones. This would lead to
demand for about 210mn additional phones in that time.
More than 95% of India’s population is under the age of 65.70% of the
country’s citizens are below the age of 36, and half of those are under 18.
(Bharadwaj etal, 2005; Wikipedia; Census Maps; Answers.com). Further, the
standard of living has been increasing: only 26% of the population is below the
poverty line now, compared to over 50% in the mid-70s. (Sinha, Jayant, 2005)
Thus, the young, mobile segment of the population is quite large and more
connected than any previous generation. In addition, it earns more and is more
willing to spend on convenience products than previous generations. In fact, in
some instances, consumer products like cell phones now have are a symbol of
status. Young consumers are willing to buy new phones and are constantly
looking for good deals and the opportunity to “trade up” to better products.
3. Value sensitivity
The Indian consumer is also very price sensitive. Product managers have found
that consumers in India will not buy products unless there is a clear value
proposition – at the lowest possible price. For instance, Nokia successfully
introduced a customized version of their 1100 phone with features uniquely
tailored to India – dust-resistant body and a built-in flashlight – making it very
popular among truck drivers (Bharadwaj et al, 2006). The phone itself retails
for about $40. Indians also expect a high quality of services at the lowest
possible tariff rate. Thus, tariffs in India for voice services are among the lowest
in the world. While average American carrier charges about 30-40 cents per
minute, the corresponding rate for an Indian carrier is only about 2 cents per
minute. (Cingular, T- Mobile, TRAI Dec 2006).
4) Pre-paid rules
Indian consumers choose plans and tariff structures that minimize monthly
expenditure. Further, they also choose tariff plans that let them switch easily –
especially since they shop on price. Thus pre-paid SIM cards are the dominant
method of revenue generation. With this scheme, consumers buy a SIM card to
use in their phones with a set amount of money on it (say ~$10).
In addition, since receiving calls in India is free, very often consumers will only
receive calls on their phones. And almost every cellular company has also
introduced free incoming plans for 1-2years & lifetime free incoming plans.
Thus, revenues per user are low, with pre-paid users contributing ~$5.6 per
month. While the average post-paid user spends much more – contributing
~$19 per month – this is a small segment of the market in India. In 2006, for
example, over 95% of new phone additions were pre-paid plans. (TRAI Dec
2006) (See Exhibit 1 for potential growth of pre-paid vs. post-paid in India).
Consequently, operators are dropping prices to ensure they get their hands on
the expanding customer pie and the large untapped market means that revenues
from the voice market will drive the growth for the next few years.
6. Demographics
The expected growth in the Indian GDP, 6-7 percent annually from 2005 to
2007, is a good indicator of the increased purchasing power of the population
(Asian Development Bank – 2005). A greater percentage of the Indian
population has higher levels of disposable income with which to purchase
products and services. Along with lower connectivity costs and cheaper
handsets, the mobile market in India is seeing a huge influx of subscribers who
can now afford basic coverage.India is also experiencing changing
demographics that have contributed to the explosion in the mobile market.
Approximately 70 percent of India’s 1.1 billion population is between the ages
of 15 and 40 (U.S Census Bureau-International Database, 2003). As a result,
telecom players are looking at a young population with increased pay scales and
more job opportunities. Furthermore, a high percentage of these Indians are still
living at home and saving their salaries. Thus, this generation is able to spend a
large percentage of their income on the purchase of entertainment and consumer
electronics, including cell phones.
7. Role of Government
The Indian government has played a significant role in setting the stage for
growth in mobile telecommunications. Through the oversight of the Telecom
Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), the government has made many changes
to regulations and policies to remove hurdles and spark growth. First, the Indian
government introduced the Unified Licensing Regime in 2003. This regime
allows operators to offer any service through the technology of their choice, in
any area in which they currently operate. Thus, all telecom services (including
voice, data, cable TV, and radio broadcasting) can now be delivered through a
single medium and are covered by a single license. Unified licensing shifted
operator behavior and caused operators to start focusing on converged services
and networks for cost efficiency – which, in turn, allows them to offer pricing
conducive to rapid growth. In addition, the Indian government has raised the
maximum foreign direct investment (FDI) limit from 49 percent to 74 percent
in Telecom Sector. The government also enacted the Access Deficit Charge
(ADC) policy, which requires that a share of call revenue be paid to the
government to assist in funding network expansion into rural areas.
With a strong population of over 1.1 Billion, India has become one of the most dynamic
and promising Telecom markets of the world. In recent times, the country has emerged
as one of the fastest growing telecom markets in the world. It has third largest telecom
network and the second largest wireless network in the world.
NETWORK EXPANSION
● The total number of telephones has reached 653.92 million telephone (landlines and
mobile) May 2010 .
● The Indian Mobile subscriber base has increased in size by a factor of more than one-
hundred since 2001 when the number of subscribers in the country was approximately 5
million to 617.53 million in May 2010.
● The tele density, as given in the following graph, has shown a sustained increase
during last few years.
It increased from 26.22% in March 2008 to 36.98% in March 2009.
BSNL, Bharti Airtel, Hutch, Idea, Aircel, Spice and MTL are the main GSM providers
in India. Reliance Communications and Tata Indicom are the main CDMA providers in
India.
Bharti Airtel
Reliance Communications
Reliance has both CDMA and GSM networks and total subscriber base of 29 million or
17% market share. It has GSM network in Assam, Bihar, Himachal Pradesh, Kolkata,
North East, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and West Bengal. Reliance has CDMA networks
in other states and cities.
BSNL is a state owned telecom company which has GSM presence in almost every
cities and towns. BSNL has 27 million subscribers with a market share of 16%.
Tata Indicom
Tata Indicom is a main CDMA provider in India with 16 million subscribers all over
India. Tata Indicom has presence in almost every states and cities in India
Airtel has more than 100 million subscribers and BSNL has half as much. But,
BSNL’s revenues was more than Airtel’s until now. For the first time Airtel has
surpassed BSNL to become country’s number one telecom operator in terms of
subscribers and revenues.
There is a drop of 0.4% in BSNL’s revenues when compared with the previous fiscal
year. Airtel has increased its revenues by 39.8% - a very impressive growth.
BSNL did not face the heat until now as the revenues weren’t dipping. That doesn’t
hold good any more and it has to buck up or revamp before it turns into an Air India.
BSNL doesn’t have the same kind of excuses of Air India as it operates in a lucrative
telecom market.
The other operator which has seen a drop in revenues is MTNL. This is in spite of all
the 3G spectrum and the leg-up both BSNL and MTNL got from the government.
Giving subsidies and special treatment doesn’t work after all.
Reliance saw a decent growth of 23.1% and its revenues are 22341 crores. It is 3rd in
line. The best growth in revenues was by IDEA Cellular at 50.7%.
Airtel and Reliance are the 2 India based operators to feature in the top 20 telecom
operators by subscribers.
Aircel began its outward expansion in 2005 and met with unprecedented success in the
Eastern frontier circles. It emerged a market leader in Assam and in the North Eastern
provinces within 18 months of operations. Till today, the company gained a foothold in
18 circles including Chennai, Tamil Nadu, Assam, North East, Orissa, Bihar, Jammu &
Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, West Bengal, Kolkata, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh,
Karnataka, Delhi, UP(West), UP(East), Maharashtra & Goa and Mumbai.
The Company has currently gained a momentum in the space of telecom in India post
the allocation of additional spectrum by the Department of Telecom, Govt. of India for
13 new circles across India. These include Delhi (Metro), Mumbai (Metro), Andhra
Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra & Goa,
Rajasthan, Punjab, UP (West) and UP (East).
Aircel has won many awards and recognitions. Voice and Data gave Aircel the highest
rating for overall customer satisfaction and network quality in 2006. Aircel emerged as
the top mid-size utility company in Businessworld’s ‘List of Best Mid-Size Companies’
in 2007. Additionally, Tele.net recognised Aircel as the best regional operator in 2008.
With over 25 million happy customers in the country, Aircel is a full-fledged national
operator.
MISSION STATEMENT
CUSTOMERS : Our customers are our most valued assets. We will strive to
exceed their expectations at all time by providing them with superior services
that embody value, innovation, quality and care.
PEOPLE : Our people are our greatest resources. we will attract, train and
retain the best. We will challenge them to develop their full potential in the
context of our company goals.
INTEGRITY : We will maintain and strive for the highest levels of personal
and professional integrity and honesty in all ours dealings. We will keep our
promises.
RESPECT : We will treat with respect & dignity all people we deal with.
QUALITY : The hallmark of our internal and external outputs and processes
will be quality. This will pervade every aspect of our functioning.
The Organization chart of Delhi & NCR circle is shown below:
Technical/networking Department
Commercial Department
Finance Department
Revenue Assurance Department
Human Resources Department
Administration Department
Vigilance Department
Value Added Services
VAS
Delhi & NCR
Voice Station
Subscription Services
Dialer Tunes
Live Astrology
Doctor On call
Non-stop downloads of your favorite stars' Wallpaper, latest Polyphonic Ringtones, MP3 tones, True
tones, Music Videos, Movie videos, Themes, Movie Themes and Mobile games only on Aircel
pocket internet.
What’s more, activating this service is free and browsing the portal is charged just @10p/10Kb.
Charges:
Tariff Plans:
Service Rate (Rs.)
Astro 5
Wall Papers 15
Polyphonic Ring tone 15
True Tones 20
Mp3 Tones 20
Animation 15
Videos 30
Themes 50
Movie Themes 30
Games 50 / 99 / 150
3.2 Voice Station
» Voice Station
Aircel 55500 service offers you a host of never before services - from music on your
mobile to tit-bits about celebrities. All you need to do is call 55500 from your Aircel
mobile and follow the simple instructions to enter a world of information and
entertainment. The service recognizes your voice and gives information based on the
command given by you.
Music Messaging and Ringtones
Prayers
Perform pooja from your Aircel mobile. Listen to an exhaustive collection of devotional
songs like Supbrapatham, Bhajans, Amman Songs, and Gayathri & Gurbani
.
Astrology Service
You can check your horoscope for the day, by entering your birth date. Astro info is
updated every day.
News
Get the latest news updates. Information is available across Regional, State, National and
International categories.
Subscription Services:-
Subscription
Service Send To Charges Alerts Time
Keyword
News Headline +
SUB NEWS 58000 Rs 7/week Twice a day 10:30 & 16:40
Breaking News
Cricket NEWS &
SUB CRI 58000 Rs 7/week Ball by Ball update 9:00
SCORES
Jokes Alert SUB JOKES 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 13:30
SUB ASTRO
Astro Pack 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 13:00
<SUNSIGN>
10:15 & 13:00 &
Stock Alert SUB STOCK 58000 Rs 7/week Thrice a Day
17:00
Though of the Day
SUB THO 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 9:30
Alerts
Mehfil-E-
SUB SHAYARI 58000 Rs 7/week Twice A day 13:00 & 14:55
Timepass/Shayari
Love Express SUB LOVE 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:15 & 14:00
Beauty Tips Alerts SUB BTIP 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 13:45
Health Tips Alerts SUB HTIP 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 17:30
Receipe Tips Alerts SUB RTIP 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 15:20
Fun Unlimited Alerts SUB FUN 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 10:00 & 14:45
Regional News Alerts SUB RNEWS 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 14:50
Ayurvedic Tips Alerts SUB ATIP 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 7:30
Amazing Facts Alerts SUB AF 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 12:30
SUM NUM1 TO
Numerlogy Alerts 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 13:45
NUM9
Guru Granth Sahib
SUB GURU 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 7:00
Alerts
Geeta Shloakas SUB Geeta 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 6:40
Holy Bible Alerts SUB BIBLE 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 6:40
Quran Alerts SUB QUR 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 8:45
Ram Charit Manas
SUB RAM 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 8:45
Alerts
Friendship Messages
SUB FRIENDS 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 14:00
Alerts
Career Guru Pack SUB CG 58000 Rs 7/week Twice a day 10:00 & 14:00
Fundoo Pack SUB FNP 58000 Rs.30/month Twice a day 11:00 & 16:00
Super Sports Pack SUB SSP 58000 Rs.30/month Twice a day 10:00 & 15:00
Word-a-Day SUB WORD 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 9:35
Bihar News SUB NEWSBH 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
News - Bengal SUB NEWSBN 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
News - Kerela SUB NEWSKER 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
News - Karnataka SUB NEWSKK 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
News - Maharashtra SUB NEWSMAH 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
News - NCR SUB NEWSNCR 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
News - North East SUB NEWSNE 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
News - Punjab SUB NEWSPUN 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
News - Rajasthan SUB NEWSRAJ 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
News - TN SUB NEWSTN 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 11:40
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News - J&K SUB NEWSJK 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 12:40
Aduilt Jokes SUB AJ 58000 Rs 7/week Once a Day 10:00
To unsubscribe from any of the services please contact Aircel Customer Care.
SMS Charges to 58000: Rs.3/SMS
3.3 Missed Call Alerts
Want to know who called you when your mobile was switched off or out of coverage
area?
Just subscribe to the Aircel Missed Call Alerts service (MCA). There are two simple
ways of doing it.
After subscribing to the monthly service, you will receive alerts on your mobile for all
the missed calls at no extra cost.
Aircel introduces Dialer Tunes! Get rid of boring Tring Tring and make your callers listen to latest
tunes. Dial 56565, Registration Rs.30/month, call Rs.6/min & Rs.15/song.. Song validity is for a
period of 90 days.
“Dialer tune” is a special service through which the calling party can hear a song or music instead of
the default "Tring Tring" tune.
In order to get the Dialer service activated the subscriber has to register with the Dialer Tune service
by calling 56565 and follow the instructions played by IVR. Once the user has registered for
DIALER TUNE service the calling party will hear the song instead of the default ringing tune ("Tring
Tring"). Subscriber will be confirmed with an SMS message of service activation.
To change the selected song or to dedicate a special song to another user the subscriber has to call
56565 and follow the instructions which will play by IVR, While selecting the song it will play,
whether to dedicate to all or a particular number. Through this the subscriber can dedicate a specific
song for a specific subscriber..
Whenever this subscriber calls, he or she will get to hear the special song dedicated to the calling
number. Select a new song and either assigns the song for all the callers or to particular caller so that
the previous song will be replaced with the newly selected song. Subscriber will be confirmed with an
SMS message of song change.
The user can deregister from the DIALER TUNE service by calling the short code 56565 and follow
the instructions played by IVR. Select the account details or profile management and can do
deregistration of a single number or all.
Once the subscriber is unregistered the calling party will not hear the song anymore and only the
default "tring tring" will be played. The User can also unsubscribe from this service, by calling Aircel
Customer care at 9858012345 or 121 from local Aircel numbeThe user can remove the song
dedicated for a particular subscriber by calling 56565 at Rs.6/Min and follow the instructions played
by IVR. Select the account details or profile management and can do deregistration of a single
number. After removing the dedicated song the particular subscriber will hear the default song
selected for all..
‘Doctor-on-call' provides access to quality medical advice from the comfort of your home/
office. Gets instant advice on medical/ health and wellness queries from a panel of doctors
specializing in various fields.
Details of charges :
The research process methodology consists of six steps and these steps
are as follows:
1. Problem definition.
2. Development of an approach to the problem.
3. Research design formulation.
4. Field work or data collection.
5. Data preparation and analysis.
6. Report preparation and presentation.
PROBLEM DEFINATION
To study how frequently the users of dialer tune change their dialer tune
To identify the factors which are keeping “AIRCEL” customers away from dialer tune
service.
These 6 W’s will help us to know the attitude of Aircel customers towards
dialer tune:
Q1. Who are the people that are using or not using dialer tune?
NOMINAL SCALE.
(e) FIELD WORK:- Our field force consists of 1 MEMBER only and our field
is Kathua district.
DATA ANALYSIS
The main objective of our study is to analyze the factors. The course of the
test is as follows:
In our survey
3.6% of
respondents are
using Aircel > 1
month
23% of
respondents are
using Aircel
from 2-6 months
36.8% of respondents are using Aircel from 6-12 months
36.6% of respondents are using Aircel < 1 year
96% customer recommend dialer tune service to others
4% customers did not recommend this service to others
Frequency Percent
1.00 21 19.6
2.00 54 50.5
3.00 22 20.6
4.00 8 7.5
5.00 2 1.9
Total
107 100.0
LIMITATIONS:-
No study is free from the limitations, so does ours. There are many
limitations that we encountered during the course of our study and
research process
By going through all the study there are some recommendations that can make the
study more effective as well as can create a good results for AIRCEL dialer tune
service. These recommendations are as follows:-
The price of dialer tune should be less so that more customers can use it.
Aircel should improve their visibility. During the survey period I found very
few shops and other, points where advertisement has been done.
ANNEXURE
QUESTIONNAIRE
Dear Respondent
I would be grateful to you if you could kindly spare some of your precious time and
a) Yes b) No
a) Yes b) No
a) Yes b) No
e) Poor
a)_______________________________________________
b)__________________________________________________
c)____________________________________________________
10. Please mention the other service also which you would want on your Aircel
mobile ?
a)_______________________________________________________
b________________________________________________________
c)__________________________________________________________
S. Q QUESTION Coding
NO NO. Instruction
1 Q1 SINCE HOW LONG YOU HAVE BEEN >1 Month :-1
USING AIRCEL? 2-6 Months :-2
6-12 Months :-3
>1 Month :-4
REFERENCES:
Websites:
• http:// www.trai.gov.in
• http://en.wikipedia.org
• http://www.aircel.com
• http:// www.ibef.com
• http://www.scribd .com
Book: