San Francisco Chronicle

How Google Fiber may help AT&T grow, and vice versa

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When it comes to broadband competitio­n, last week was big. AT&T announced plans to expand its highspeed fiber service, known as GigaPower, in three dozen markets, including San Francisco. A day later, Google Fiber said it is weighing whether to bring its ultrafast broadband to Chicago and Los Angeles.

For millions of Americans, it may mean finally getting access to gigabit speeds. That’s roughly equivalent to 1,000 Mbps, fast enough to download an HD movie in about seven seconds. That tremendous capacity will become even more important as they connect more smart, data-hungry devices to the Web. (What it will cost is another matter; AT&T has vowed to set prices that are “competitiv­e.”)

But the announceme­nts aren’t just an ordinary broadband milestone. Consider this: The number of cities where Google Fiber has actually been switched on can be counted on your fingers, whereas GigaPower is already running in some 20 metropolit­an areas. Where many of Google’s efforts are still in the discussion phase,

AT&T has made concrete — though critics might say “limited” — investment­s in many more markets.

“We’re not just announcing candidate cities,” said Jim Cicconi, a senior policy exec at AT&T. “We’ve made the decision, we’re investing the capital. We’re going in.”

In short, AT&T is out-building Google Fiber. That’s a sign of a broader shift in the industry. Google’s early lead in the fiber race is now being eaten away by AT&T’s traditiona­l advantage in building networks.

Though Google deserves much of the credit for jump-starting the competitio­n in the first place, not to mention blazing a trail for AT&T in important ways, AT&T is on pace to beat the Mountain View company to many cities in America.

AT&T is benefiting tremendous­ly from a chain reaction that Google initially began. By now, it’s a familiar story: Google went around to cities and basically got them to compete for Google Fiber, handing out a standard checklist to municipali­ties laying out all the things they could do to make themselves more attractive to the search giant.

In so doing, Google drew attention to many local regulatory processes that otherwise slow down investment­s in infrastruc­ture. Now, mayors everywhere are scrambling over each other to attract Google. And that has had benefits for AT&T, said Blair Levin, a former senior official at the Federal Communicat­ions Commission.

“It has both local teams and local rights already in place so that once Google establishe­s certain rights, AT&T can easily take advantage of those rights for their own upgrades,” said Levin.

In plain English, when Google gets a good deal, so can AT&T.

But getting the rights to dig up streets or string fiber along telephone poles is only part of the equation. Then there’s the matter of actually doing it. And it can take a long time — in Google’s case, as many as 18 months in Kansas City, according to Hunter Newby, chief executive officer of the company Allied Fiber. And in Austin, Texas, AT&T says it beat Google to the market by roughly two years, even though the two companies announced their projects within days of each other. Google declined to comment.

Part of what’s going on is that AT&T is leaning on decades of expertise in building networks. It has spent $140 billion to lay down fiber optic cables over the last six years, and it’s likely to spend even more as it expands to markets like Ashville, N.C., Louisville, Ky., and St. Louis.

“We’re pretty good at this, and we’ve had a lot of years to get good at it,” said Cicconi. But, he added, AT&T is well aware of Google’s enabling role when it comes to city relationsh­ips.

“We’ve been butting our heads against that wall for many years without a lot of success,” he said. “Because of Google’s image and PR skills, they’ve been able to help bring a lot of those barriers down, and frankly, raise awareness on the part of mayors and others.”

Many analysts say that Google aims to invest just enough into fiber to encourage more traditiona­l providers to build out their own networks. Then, when people subscribe to the better service and take heavier advantage of Google services, Google’s core business benefits. In that respect, Google isn’t so much going toe-to-toe with AT&T as nudging it to expand.

AT&T’s core business is building and operating communicat­ions pipes. While it took Google to make the initial push, AT&T’s second-mover advantage is giving it a major boost as it accelerate­s into a new phase of constructi­on.

What we’re seeing now is Google’s early lead in the fiber race being eaten away by AT&T’s advantage in building networks.

 ?? James Tensuan / Special to The Chronicle ?? AT&T Northern California Vice President Terry Stenzel (right) speaks after GigaPower arrived in Cupertino in March.
James Tensuan / Special to The Chronicle AT&T Northern California Vice President Terry Stenzel (right) speaks after GigaPower arrived in Cupertino in March.
 ?? Alberto Martínez / Statesman.com 2013 ?? Google executive Milo Medin talks about the company’s fiber service in Austin.
Alberto Martínez / Statesman.com 2013 Google executive Milo Medin talks about the company’s fiber service in Austin.

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