abhishreshthaa
Abhijeet S
MCI, Inc. is an American telecommunications subsidiary of Verizon Communications that is headquartered in Ashburn, unincorporated Loudoun County, Virginia. The corporation was originally formed as a result of the merger of WorldCom (formerly known as LDDS followed by LDDS WorldCom) and MCI Communications, and used the name MCI WorldCom followed by WorldCom before taking its final name on April 12, 2003 as part of the corporation's emergence from bankruptcy. The company formerly traded on NASDAQ under the symbols "WCOM" (pre-bankruptcy) and "MCIP" (post-bankruptcy). The corporation was purchased by Verizon Communications with the deal closing on January 6, 2006,[1] and is now identified as that company's Verizon Business division with the local residential divisions slowly integrated into local Verizon subsidiaries.
MCI's history, combined with the histories of companies it has acquired, echoes most of the trends that have swept American telecommunications in the past half-century: It was instrumental in pushing legal and regulatory changes that led to the breakup of the AT&T monopoly that dominated American telephony; its purchase by WorldCom and subsequent bankruptcy in the face of accounting scandals was symptomatic of the Internet excesses of the late 1990s. It accepted a proposed purchase by Verizon for US$7.6 billion.
For a time, WorldCom (WCOM) was the United States's second largest long distance phone company (after AT&T). WorldCom grew largely by aggressively acquiring other telecommunications companies, most notably MCI Communications. It also owned the Tier 1 ISP UUNET, a major part of the Internet backbone.[citation needed] It was headquartered in Clinton, Mississippi, before being moved to Virginia.
Strengths
* Brand equity - Can you hear me now?
* Strong network
* Strong financial performance
* Growth in its Verizon Business unit
* Good reputation for Customer Service
* 3G Coverage
* Android lineup of VZW's is 50%of google sales
Weaknesses
* Geographic concentration - only in the US
* Declining access lines
* Limit to ***
Opportunities
* Further consolidation in the industry
* Acquisition of smaller, regional operators
* Expansion of audio-conferencing access
* Expansion into markets outside of the US
* New phone - the Droid
Threats
* Intense competition in the wireless space
* FCC regulations
* VoIP directly competes with wireless business
* Relationship between union and management (ie contract negotiation)
MCI's history, combined with the histories of companies it has acquired, echoes most of the trends that have swept American telecommunications in the past half-century: It was instrumental in pushing legal and regulatory changes that led to the breakup of the AT&T monopoly that dominated American telephony; its purchase by WorldCom and subsequent bankruptcy in the face of accounting scandals was symptomatic of the Internet excesses of the late 1990s. It accepted a proposed purchase by Verizon for US$7.6 billion.
For a time, WorldCom (WCOM) was the United States's second largest long distance phone company (after AT&T). WorldCom grew largely by aggressively acquiring other telecommunications companies, most notably MCI Communications. It also owned the Tier 1 ISP UUNET, a major part of the Internet backbone.[citation needed] It was headquartered in Clinton, Mississippi, before being moved to Virginia.
Strengths
* Brand equity - Can you hear me now?
* Strong network
* Strong financial performance
* Growth in its Verizon Business unit
* Good reputation for Customer Service
* 3G Coverage
* Android lineup of VZW's is 50%of google sales
Weaknesses
* Geographic concentration - only in the US
* Declining access lines
* Limit to ***
Opportunities
* Further consolidation in the industry
* Acquisition of smaller, regional operators
* Expansion of audio-conferencing access
* Expansion into markets outside of the US
* New phone - the Droid
Threats
* Intense competition in the wireless space
* FCC regulations
* VoIP directly competes with wireless business
* Relationship between union and management (ie contract negotiation)