
Verizon has decided it’s a good time to remind consumers just how hard its engineers and others work to give consumers top-quality wireless service.
It’s just debuted an ad
called “Giving It All” showing Verizon engineers and the company’s response team working to restore or improve service in cold, hot,
snowy weather and scary terrains.
As the scenes reveal themselves, an updated, sort of punkish, version of Frank Sinatra’s “My Way” plays in the
background.
Verizon is also touting a batch of consumer-oriented awards it has been gathering. Last week, in the new J.D. Power Wireless Network Quality Performance
Study, consumers rated Verizon first in every category including calls, messages and data connection experiences.
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That was a day after Verizon publicized that it had just
received top marks from RootMetrics, for overall performance for the 12th consecutive time. It also recently copped top honors from Nielsen for best video streaming experience and Ookla, P3 and
OpenSpace for various internet speed honors.
“Our competitors may be getting tired of Verizon constantly winning awards for the nation’s most reliable network
experience, but these industry-leading results never get old for our consumer, small business, first responder and enterprise customers,” stated Heidi Hemmer, Verizon vice president, network and
technology, after Verizon got the good word from J.D. Power.
“We’re Here To Get You Reconnected” says a big red sign on the side of a Verizon repair truck
in the new ad, so you get the point.
It may just be happenstance, but the ad debuts on social media just as reports began to surface that the Justice Department, at long
last, is about to approve the merger between T-Mobile and Sprint, perhaps as early as Wednesday.
That would result in a newly competitive wireless world that would pit Verizon versus AT&T versus the new T-Mobile on more equal terms, just as the 5G rollout begins. (And, reportedly,
the merger would also create a new fourth wireless network run by satellite TV operator Dish.)
Top awards are typical occasions for back-patting commercials, but Verizon and other
wireless operators may feel they need to impress consumers as new 5G antennas begin going up all over the nation.
The antennas have to be spaced closer together than old
towers, and a new Federal Communications Commission rule reduces the right of cities to change those rules. San Diego is one city among several considering ways to bend those new regulations, which
some residents feel would ruin the aesthetics of the area, according to
the San Diego Union-Tribune.