Actually we have found a company that provides both broadband as well as dial-up connections. You see, big companies are targeting those with broadband connections. The fact is that a lot of countries in the world have little or no Broadband Internet Service available, especially if you live in a third world country. So do we neglect those who aren't fortunate enough to have broadband connection? Definitely not. In fact the number of households that use dial-up connection in the world is more than the number of those with broadband internet. As of now, there are 825 million people on the Internet and 700 million of those people are dial-up Internet customers. That's a mind-boggling 85%.
So Why Isn’t Everybody Offering Dial-Up?
The obvious reason of all is that, the "big boys" in the telephone industry perceive broadband as the future of the Internet and dial-up is a shrinking market and not at all attractive to them. While this is true, what they've missed is that, later the dial-up market will be the key to success in a broadband world. Why is this so? Simply, a dial-up customer now will remain a customer when broadband becomes available to them.
That's where InteleFone comes in. They are providing the world with the capability to make free or low-cost phone calls via dial-up while leveraging the entry point to this absolutely huge market that everybody else seems to have missed.
It’s the key to domination of the international VoIP market.
Why InteleFone Is Positioned To Dominate The International Market
InteleFone has the proprietary technology that can make fast, crystal-clear connections on dial-up modems as slow as 28.8k. And until others catch up, InteleFone will be the ONLY solution for low-cost or free phone calls for dial-up.
But… it’s already TOO LATE for anybody to catch up.
Here’s why.
It’s very unlikely that the “big boys” will even want to compete in the dial-up arena. They’re focused on broadband. Their business models are based on growing markets… not shrinking ones like dial-up. They cannot change their business models easily because they have so much time and money invested in them.
As for the “little guys” or start-ups who are more nimble and flexible, they don’t have the resources to build a stable, reliable infrastructure in time to take advantage of the narrowing window of opportunity for dial-up.
The “big boys” and the “little guys” have missed the dial-up window of opportunity, this gives InteleFone an almostexclusive lock on a HUGE, hungry, untapped market.