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The best Boost Mobile phone number with tools for skipping the wait on hold, the current wait time, tools for scheduling a time to talk with a Boost Mobile rep, reminders when the call center opens, tips and shortcuts from other Boost Mobile customers who called this number. Denominations that are not in the table below can be used to pay your bill or desired plan. DENOMINATIONS ANYTIME MINUTES TEXT DATA.
Private | |
Industry | Wireless telecommunications |
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Founded | August 1, 2000; 18 years ago / 2001 |
Founder | Peter Adderton |
Area served | Australia and United States |
Website | boost.com.au |
Boost Mobile is a wireless telecommunications brand used by two independent companies in Australia and the United States. Boost Mobile was originally founded in 2000 by Peter Adderton in Australia. In Australia, it is operated by Boost Tel Pty Limited using the Telstra wireless network, where as in the United States it's operated by Boost Worldwide, Inc, a Sprint Corporation subsidiary. Boost Mobile uses Sprint Corporation’s network to provide wireless service to its consumers in USA.
- 1History
- 2In the United States
History[edit]
Peter Adderton founded Boost Mobile in Australia and New Zealand in 2000.
Australian wireless provider Boost Tel Pty Limited offers mobile service under the Boost Mobile brand. Up until January 21, 2013, Boost branded services were provided by the Optus network. Optus has licensed the Boost brand since the brand's launch in 2000.
In 2012, Optus decided to end its business relationship with Boost Tel Pty Ltd. In response, Boost entered into a deal with network competitor Telstra.[1] After 20 January 2013, all existing Boost customers were converted to Optus customers and continued to receive services on the Optus network.[2] On March 7, Boost Tel Pty Ltd. began to offer products and services under the Boost Pre-paid Mobile brand as an MVNO hosted on the Telstra Next G network.[3]
Boost Mobile in New Zealand was a subsidiary of Telecom New Zealand. The Boost Mobile brand was discontinued in New Zealand as of November 2007.
Marketing criticism[edit]
In June 2010, Boost Mobile launched a viral marketing campaign that purported to identify text messaging disorders in order to bring attention to Boost Mobile's offer of 100 texts for one dollar. Australian television programme Media Watch criticized both the campaign itself and certain Australian media outlets that had failed to uncover the underlying marketing campaign, reporting the disorders as straight news.[4]The Age was one of the few publications to recognise that the campaign was a 'ruse ... to get the company's name mentioned in the media.'[5] As part of the campaign Boost Mobile cited an academic paper co-authored by Dr. Shari Walsh of the Queensland University of Technology. However, Dr. Walsh stated that her paper did not identify any texting disorders and that Boost Mobile was not accurately representing her research.[6]
In the United States[edit]
Subsidiary | |
Industry | Wireless telecommunications |
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Founded | June 23, 2001; 17 years ago |
Founder | Peter Adderton |
Headquarters | , |
United States | |
Products | Smart phones, wireless service |
Parent | Sprint Corporation (Sale to T-Mobile US pending) |
Website | boostmobile.com |
History[edit]
After founding Boost Mobile in Australia and New Zealand in 2000, Peter Adderton, Craig Cooper, and Kirt McMaster brought the Boost Mobile brand to the United States in 2001 as a joint venture with Nextel Communications. Using Nextel's iDEN network, Boost Mobile offered an unlimited push-to-talk service, marketed as only costing a dollar a day, at a time when cellphone plans offering unlimited talk were still rare. The service was initially exclusive to markets in areas of California and Nevada and was marketed towards urban minorities, often using urban slang in advertisements. Eventually, Nextel became the sole owner of Boost's United States operations in 2003. Nextel began to expand the brand elsewhere in the United States in late 2004.
Nextel Communications acquired Sprint Communications in 2006, leaving Boost Mobile as a subsidiary of the merged company, Sprint Nextel Corporation. Boost Mobile still continued to use the previous Nextel iDEN infrastructure for its service, but in 2006, began to offer a new Unlimited by Boost Mobile service in select markets using Sprint's CDMA network, offering unlimited talk, text, and internet. While the plans resulted in significant growth for Boost Mobile, Boost did not begin shifting to CDMA entirely.
To compete with unlimited offerings from competitors in the wireless industry, Boost Mobile announced on January 15, 2009, that it would launch a Monthly Unlimited Plan.[7] The plan was accompanied by re-focusing the brand towards a broader demographic than before. The new unlimited plan resulted in a net gain of more than 674,000 customers in about three months.[8] Despite this lift, Nextel overall suffered a gross subscriber loss of 1.25 million contract subscriptions.
The unexpected surge in popularity for the service caused significant strain on the Nextel iDEN network—as many customers reported long and sometimes week-long delays in receiving text messages. A Boost Mobile spokesman said that they did not anticipate the level of popularity for the new service and that efforts to improve the network had been implemented to help mitigate the problem.[9]
At the 2010 Consumer Electronics Show, Boost Mobile announced it would begin to offer a new unlimited plan using Sprint's CDMA network, costing $50 a month. For $10 more, Boost also offered an unlimited plan for the BlackBerry Curve 8830.[10] Sprint would also acquire fellow prepaid wireless provider Virgin Mobile USA in 2010—both Boost and Virgin Mobile would be re-organized into a new group within Sprint, encompassing the two brands and other no-contract phone services offered by the company.[11]
Boost Mobile's parent company decommissioned the iDEN network on June 30, 2013; most iDEN customers have been migrated to the Sprint CDMA network.
Released phones[edit]
In June 2010, Boost Mobile launched the Motorola i1 smartphone, Boost's first iDEN-based push-to-talkAndroid phone,[12] and in April 2011, they announced the Samsung Galaxy Prevail, the company's first CDMA-based Android offering.[citation needed]
In July 2012, Boost Mobile released the BlackBerry Curve 9310,[13] and in March 2013, they released the HTC One SV and the ZTE-made Boost Force smartphone, the company's first device using Sprint's 4G LTE network.[citation needed] In June that year, Boost Mobile released the LG Optimus F7, the company's first device with a removable Universal Integrated Circuit Card (UICC) for LTE network authentication/access, a new form of Subscriber identity module (SIM card).[citation needed]
In December 2014, Boost Mobile released the Lumia 635, its first smartphone using Microsoft's Windows Phone mobile operating system,[citation needed] and in July 2015, they launched the NETGEAR Fuse along with no-contract Wi-Fi Hotspot plans, its first Mobile Wi-Fi Hotspot device.[14]
Marketing[edit]
This independent retailer located in Manhattan offers products and services from several Sprint-owned prepaid brands, including Boost Mobile.
The Boost Mobile brand was initially marketed to the teen and young adult demographics, heavily focused on action sports, lifestyle and urban music. Boost Mobile's past American advertising campaigns featured Fat Joe, Master Shake, Eve, Travis Barker, Kanye West, Travis Pastrana, Ludacris, Richard 'Rip' Hamilton, Nick Cannon, and The Game and used the slang slogan 'Where you at?'[citation needed] In late 2007, a Boost Mobile commercial with Young Jeezy, Jermaine Dupri, and Mickey Avalon was released. The 'Where you at?' slogan referenced the walkie-talkie feature on all Boost Mobile phones and later evolved to highlight a social GPS application that was available on selected Boost Mobile phones.[citation needed] Boost have also used Indy Car driver Danica Patrick in a commercial. A 2005 episode of Adult Swim's Aqua Teen Hunger Force titled 'Boost Mobile' was an early example of native advertising within a regular television series.
Boost Mobile has also produced some regional campaigns, including providing live paper shredders at bus stops in Chicago and Boston, where several times an hour sample contracts from competing wireless service providers would be shredded into confetti.[15]
On January 20, 2010, according to the Wall Street Journal,[citation needed] Boost Mobile's parent company Sprint Nextel managed to secure some of the 1985 Chicago Bears players (including Jim McMahon, Willie Gault, and Mike Singletary) to re-create the team's famous 'Super Bowl Shuffle' rap song and music video as 'The Boost Mobile Shuffle' during the first quarter of the Super Bowl XLIV. The commercial was directed by comedy duo Tim & Eric.
Boost Mobile debuted a television campaign in June 2012 to promote the HTC EVO Design 4G, its first smartphone using Sprint's 4G WiMAX network. The ads feature comedian Faizon Love as the '4Genie', a genie who magically appears where cellphone users seek low-cost 4G.[16]
Boost runs the Boost Mobile Freestyle Motocross Tour/Team, which also makes stops at select NASCAR events throughout the country.
Sponsorships[edit]
The Boost Mobile-sponsored NASCAR stock car of Travis Pastrana in 2012
Boost Mobile regularly sponsors sports teams and sporting events.[citation needed] Boost Mobile have sponsored the RockCorps since 2005, have been marquee sponsor of the WNBA, sponsored the surfing event ASP World Tour until 2008, and sponsored the show Hot Import Nights.[citation needed]
Athletes sponsored by Boost include Kelly Slater, Makua Rothman, Jamie O'Brien, Dane Reynolds, Kolohe Andino, Sunny Garcia, Paul 'P-Rod' Rodriguez, Josh Hansen, Chad Reed, Keir Dillon, Danny Kass, Pierre-Luc Gagnon, Quinton 'Rampage' Jackson, Danica Patrick and Travis Pastrana.[citation needed]
As of 2019, the team is the naming-rights sponsor of Garry Rogers Motorsport in the Australian Supercars Championship.[17]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^McDonald, Stephanie (2012-10-24). 'Boost Mobile to resell Telstra's Next G network'. Computerworld.
- ^'Boost Mobile announcement clarification' (Press release). Telstra. 2012-10-26.
- ^'Telstra and Boost Mobile enter retail alliance'. Telstra. 2012-10-24. Retrieved 2012-10-24.
- ^'Diagnosis: Gullible'. Media Watch. 12 July 2010. Archived from the original on 2013-01-01. Retrieved 2010-07-16.
- ^'Teenagers text the love'. The Age. July 1, 2010. Archived from the original on May 10, 2019.
- ^Walsh, Dr. Shari (2 July 2010). 'Dr Shari Walsh replies to Media Watch'(PDF). Media Watch. Archived(PDF) from the original on 16 March 2017.
- ^'As More Wireless Consumers Are Adopting Flat-Rate Prepaid Plans, the Value of the New Boost Mobile Monthly Unlimited Plan Trumps MetroPCS and Cricket' (Press release). Boost Mobile. Marketwired. 2009-01-15. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
- ^Silver, Sara (2009-05-05). 'Sprint Posts Larger Loss'. The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
- ^Ankeny, Jason (2009-05-04). 'Boost Mobile to release text delay fix this week'. FierceMobileContent. Archived from the original on 2009-08-14. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
- ^Dolcourt, Jessica. 'Boost Mobile offering monthly unlimited plans for CDMA phones'. CNET. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
- ^'Sprint Nextel prepares a push to win pay-as-you-go customers'. Kansas City Business Journal. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
- ^Gray, Nick (2010-06-10). 'Boost Mobile's Motorola i1 launching on June 20th'. androidandme.com. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^'Boost Mobile takes BlackBerry Curve 9310 to the US, spices it up with $30 unlimited BBM, voice and text plan'. Engadget. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
- ^'Boost Mobile Netgear Fuse and new Wi-Fi Hotspot plans available now'. Prepaid Mobile Phone Reviews. 2015-07-14.
- ^Nudd, Tim (2009-04-02). 'AdFreak: Boost Mobile has bus-stop paper shredders'. Adweek. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
- ^'Boost Mobile ad pimps WiMax 4G'. CNET. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
- ^'GRM showcases Boost Mobile Racing Commodores'. Speedcafe.com. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
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