Voyager Makes VDSL a No-Brainer for Business
6th June 2013
Voyager Internet, one of the first providers in New Zealand to offer VDSL, has today announced some *significant* price
reductions to the product, which now make upgrading from standard ADSL Broadband a "no-brainer" for any business,
because the pricing of both services is now almost exactly the same.
VDSL is the next-generation of DSL broadband technology, and is around 5 x faster than ADSL for downloads, and 10 x
faster for uploads than ADSL. VDSL can reach speeds of 70 Mbps downloads, and 10 Mbps uploads - which is actually
significantly faster than the entry level plan on the Governments UFB Fibre Network.
Seeby Woodhouse, CEO of Voyager says: "While the Government's $1.5B UFB network is fantastic, and is going to change the
way that Kiwi's access the Internet and connect to the rest of the world, it is taking some time to roll out. It will
likely take until 2019 before 75% of NZ's population has access to the new UFB network. However - Voyager VDSL is
available to around 65% of the homes and businesses in NZ right now, and can provide massive speed and productivity
increases over conventional ADSL broadband"
Voyager has today reduced the price of their entry level VDSL plan by 33% to just $50/mth + GST, and is also including
free connection and wiring for every customer to make it easy to upgrade to the service. (Customers will need a new VDSL
modem to replace their ADSL modem).
Woodhouse adds "We have been trailing VDSL with businesses all over NZ for the last year and a half, and we have found
that businesses experience *significant* productivity gains whilst using the product. Downloads are almost instant, and
cost-savings by using VoIP and Cloud Services can be fully realised. We had one customer whose web-design business was
almost crippled because they had several staff sharing an ADSL connection, and it was simply too slow. By moving to VDSL
they were able to work as though every staff member had their own personal fibre connection, even though the business
isn't due to get fibre for another two years".
For more information, please see the Voyager website
ENDS