Alltel Essays

  • The Wireless Of Sprint Corporation

    1972 Words  | 4 Pages

    A wireless carrier which at one point was the largest wireless cell phone carrier and throughout the years it has diminished is the Sprint Corporation. Sprint has had many up and down but it had made its mark not to become irrelevant. Sprint Corporation which is also Sprint is a telecommunication company that is all around America. They provide internet carrier and wireless services. It has become the fourth largest wireless network provider. The company headquarters in Kansas. Sprint came from the

  • Sprint's Competitive Analysis

    512 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sprint Corporation was established in 1899 as a holding company named Brown Telephone Ltd. It changed the name to Sprint in 1989 after filing for bankruptcy. Since then, the company has grown steadily during the 1970s and 1980s to become one of the largest independent telephone providers in the United States. The company distributes wireless and wireline communication products and services locally and internationally. It provides wide range products and services to more than 50 states through its

  • Justin Beiber Concert Observation

    553 Words  | 2 Pages

    attended the Florida Georgia line concert she was 17. I attended the concert with my Grandma, nana, my cousins, Addy and Madison, and my two little sisters, Shelby and Brea while she attended it with a close friend of hers. We went all the way to the Alltel Arena now known as the Verizon Arena in Little Rock Arkansas, this is the same place that her concert took place. There is a lot of differences between our concerts before, during, and after we finish out concert. Before the concert she stopped and

  • Threat And Vulnerability Assessments: A Case Study

    682 Words  | 2 Pages

    observed. The locations I determined to have the highest likelihood score assessment value in Jacksonville were: Interstate I-95 Bridge over the St. Johns River with a likelihood score of 5; Water treatment facility with a likelihood score of 4; and Alltel Stadium with a likelihood score of 4. For Miami Dade: Interstate I-395 Bridge over Biscayne Bay with a likelihood score of 5; Miami International Airport with a likelihood score of 5; and

  • Business Ethics Case Study: Verizon

    571 Words  | 2 Pages

    trading on the New York Stock Exchange and trading on NASDAQ on March 10, 2010. In 2004, Verizon Communications was added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Verizon has shown growth through acquisitions. The larger acquisitions were MCI Inc. in 2006, Alltel Corp. in 2009 and AOL Inc, in 2015 and these have made Verizon a leader in wireless technologies.

  • Mobile Communication Essay

    930 Words  | 2 Pages

    The History of Mobile Communications (Aundrea) The history of mobile communications has made a huge impact on how we live our lives on a day to day basis. Who would have thought that a small piece of equipment, had great influences in our society and the world. This all began in the 1940 's, when Bell Laboratories introduced the United States and Canada to the idea of cellular technology. One of the largest communication companies, Motorola was the first company to embark on this technology

  • Advertising In Baseball Stadiums

    1687 Words  | 4 Pages

    Introduction Baseball is considered to be America’s favorite pastime and has become popular all over the world. This sport is watched by millions of people every time there is a game played. People will go to the stadiums to watch and a lot of fans will watch the game on television. Since there are so many people watching these games, advertising has become more and more apart of every baseball stadium due to the amount of exposure a company can receive by using the many types of ads found in a baseball

  • Advertising Privacy

    1963 Words  | 4 Pages

    Intrusive Advertising and Privacy Concerns The concept of consumer privacy encompasses a consumers ability to limit the collection and usage of certain types of data relating to a specific transaction (Sheehan & Gleason, 2001). Today marketers and advertisers have engaged in what I feel to be somewhat questionable behavior in regards to consumers privacy. As technology becomes more sophisticated marketing becomes is a bit more complicated and more intrusive to its customers. In our highly

  • The National Market for Cellular Phone Service

    2925 Words  | 6 Pages

    2003 annual revenue of $22.5 Billion and a base of 40.4 Million customers. Sprint PCS, T-Mobile, and Nextel also have growing nationwide networks. Many competitors, although well known, only have coverage areas in sections of the United States. Alltel, for example, only offers service in the south and midwest. Until recently, Cingular had coverage areas in only the southeast and western parts of the United States. Its recent merge with AT&T wireless, though, will expanded its network to what

  • Sports Stadiums And The Benefits Of Sports Stadiums

    2981 Words  | 6 Pages

    Benjamin Okner looked over data on 20 public owned baseball and / or football stadiums for the 1970-71 seasons. He figured out that when about three-quarters of stadium costs that are for debt are ignored, most stadiums earn enough revenue for the city to cover the variable costs and non-debt-related fixed costs. But when he included interest and amortizing principle, stadium revenues only cover 70% of stadium costs. Okner adds that publicly-owned stadiums do not collect property taxes, so when he

  • A Look into Tailgating

    3836 Words  | 8 Pages

    A Look into Tailgating I slouch back in my blue canvas-folding chair. My legs are crossed neatly in front of me, making a sturdy table for my notebook. I positioned myself between two tan RVs they both are decorated in their own special ways. My back was facing the Stone building, which is right on the edge of campus. The RV on my right has a garnet flag hanging on the back window with FSU sewn on in gold letters. The RV to my left chose a white a flag with the Seminole emblem, it was hanging