Sunday, February 24, 2013

Pricing a T1 Line



Pricing a T1 Line
              When it comes to creating a high speed computer network for a business one would look at buying a T1 line. A T1 line offers some of the highest speed internet browsing for multiple computers to share bandwidth from. This is essential to getting any business going and so the pricing can vary. In this article we will look at what determines the pricing of a T1 line and who gets the better deals.
              The first and main thing that determines the cost when pricing a T1 line is the location! It is no different than grocery stores in the middle of nowhere or in the city. The harder it is to get the proper material and equipment to the locations that need them, the higher the prices to cope with these lines will be. If you live in a rural farming country and are setting shop up, you can expect nothing but highly inflated prices. 
              Corresponding to location, the current number of subscribers matters.  This is simple economics at this point. Supply and demand is what runs the world. If there is a low demand the prices will be higher to compensate the cost of running the network (no one is willing to lose money when pricing a T1 line). At the same time if there is a lot of demand for a T1 line in say a city then there is more money to make profit and take some dollars off the consumer is pockets. This can drive new consumers in at the same time so the companies do not really care at this point.
              Once again intertwined with location and subscriber number is the cost of the infrastructure needed to maintain the entire system. How much does the network cost to run, how much are the home servers, how much are the employees being paid? All of this matters. In the end the company is trying to make a profit, not just breakeven but a huge surplus in income for the executives and higher ups. This translates to pricing. Smaller companies tend to be pricing a T1 line cheaper as they have less people to pay and can focus most of their revenue on system infrastructure. This is obviously different than bigger companies for the reasons outlined above.
              Concluding we see that pricing a T1 line is really dependent on three criteria that are all intertwined together: location, current subscribers, and infrastructure needed to maintain the company and network. All of these together create a synergistic effect on the overall pricing.