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Verizon Weekly Pulse

Podcast by Rohit Mangal

English

Business

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About Verizon Weekly Pulse

Verizon Weekly Pulse is your source for the latest updates, strategic insights, and competitive analysis on Verizon, all in a concise weekly format. Stay ahead with our expert analysis on the company's news, market moves, and what it means for the future of telecommunications. This briefing stands as an independent resource and is not affiliated with Verizon, ensuring unbiased analysis for our audience. Published weekly and produced by Apisod, a platform that specializes in crafting company-specific audio briefings for a professional audience. For more information, visit apisod.com/company/verizon

All episodes

20 episodes

episode FCC OKs Verizon $1B Airwaves artwork

FCC OKs Verizon $1B Airwaves

Verizon’s comeback play is in high gear: shares are up nearly 18% this year as the company doubles down on network upgrades, trims costs, and nudges prices higher. The FCC just greenlit Verizon’s $1 billion spectrum grab from Array Digital, giving it fresh low- and mid-band airwaves to quickly boost indoor coverage and ease congestion. It’s a fast-track move to defend premium service tiers and justify higher prices—but with $172 billion in debt, Verizon’s execution speed is critical. If the new spectrum isn’t live in more markets by year’s end, the risk is stalled revenue and rising customer churn. But here’s the catch: Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile are teaming up on satellite-powered “direct-to-device” coverage, aiming to kill dead zones and set the standard before Starlink can dominate. The joint venture looks united, but there’s no launch date, no confirmed spectrum bands, and regulatory questions linger. All eyes are on whether the Big 3 can deliver specs and real coverage—or just slow down the competition. Inside, we unpack CEO Dan Schulman’s strategy, Verizon’s latest price hikes, and the high-stakes bet on AI-driven automation. Based on reporting from Rolling Out, The Verge, Fierce Network, and direct commentary from Schulman at MoffettNathanson. Powered by Apisod.com

18 May 2026 - 6 min
episode Verizon Cuts Jobs, Locks Rates artwork

Verizon Cuts Jobs, Locks Rates

Verizon is shaking up its playbook—slashing “several hundred” jobs nationwide, launching a new Total Wireless lineup with a five-year price lock, and betting on AI-driven network recovery. The cost cuts aim to please investors and sharpen margins, but there’s tension: will trimming HQ roles and duplicative functions boost efficiency or risk customer service? After last year’s 15,000-role downsizing, the latest moves are incremental but signal a continued shift toward a leaner, more digital operation. The real test is whether customer satisfaction and key metrics like churn and queue times hold steady as operating expenses drop. But here’s the catch: Verizon’s value push with revamped prepaid plans—some as low as $25 a month with “unlimited” 5G—puts pressure on its premium postpaid business. A five-year price guarantee and perks like Disney+ could lure switchers and defend against rivals like Metro by T-Mobile and Cricket, but if too many customers trade down, average revenue per account (ARPA) could slip. At the same time, Verizon faces capital crunches, juggling investments in network resilience—think drones, satellite backhaul, and AI for faster storm recovery—while keeping fiber expansion and high-profile sports partnerships in play. Featuring insights from Reuters, Total Telecom, BW People, RCR Wireless, Fierce, Sahm, and Light Reading. Powered by Apisod.com

11 May 2026 - 7 min
episode Verizon Ends Q1 Postpaid Drought artwork

Verizon Ends Q1 Postpaid Drought

Verizon just posted its first positive first-quarter postpaid phone customer gain since 2013, flipping a 289,000 loss last year into a 55,000 gain and raising its full-year guidance. But the momentum comes with a catch—service revenue growth fell short of targets, and average revenue per account dipped, partly blamed on credits issued after January’s major wireless outage. The big question: can Verizon keep adding customers without sacrificing profit, or is it just buying growth at lower margins? Here’s the twist. While business lines drove the gains, consumer postpaid phones still lost 35,000 customers. Verizon is betting its “no more free lines” strategy—focusing on higher-value, multi-line accounts and cross-selling broadband—will pay off. Only one in five wireless customers also takes broadband, but those who do churn less and spend more, making convergence the next battleground. Meanwhile, new value bundles and cheaper home internet options could help fend off cable and AT&T, but risk cannibalizing premium revenues if not managed carefully. Featuring insights from CEO Dan Schulman and deep analysis from Morningstar and New Street, this episode breaks down whether Verizon’s growth is real or just a well-packaged pivot—and what happens next if wireless revenue doesn’t bounce back. Powered by Apisod.com

4 May 2026 - 7 min
episode Verizon Preps 2026 Value Reset artwork

Verizon Preps 2026 Value Reset

Verizon’s at a crossroads. CEO Dan Schulman is making big admissions: network excellence alone isn’t cutting it as Verizon keeps losing ground to AT&T and T-Mobile, forcing 13,000 layoffs and a looming reset of how it sells to customers. The next big test? A new value proposition, simpler plans, and a push for flawless service—all by the first half of 2026. But here’s what’s on the line: short-term pain hits margins, and only if Verizon wins on experience and fiber-fueled “convergence” will it slow churn and keep customers from jumping ship. But there’s a catch—competition is getting fiercer, not easier. T-Mobile is already touting next-gen 5G-Advanced tech and edged out Verizon on brand image in the latest surveys. Meanwhile, regulatory scrutiny is heating up, with the FCC probing whether Verizon is living up to contractor and fiber build commitments made during its $20 billion Frontier deal. Any delays or cost spikes threaten Verizon’s entire strategy, especially as cities eye public broadband alternatives and cable giants keep stealing wireless customers without the headache of running towers. Based on reporting and insights from Bloomberg.com, Light Reading, Telecompaper, GlobeNewswire, and inside commentary from industry execs including Dan Schulman and FIFA’s tech director. Powered by Apisod.com

20 Apr 2026 - 6 min
episode Verizon Outages Rattle Enterprise Renewals artwork

Verizon Outages Rattle Enterprise Renewals

Verizon sells itself on rock-solid reliability, but January’s nationwide wireless outage—and a fresh local disruption in April—sent shockwaves through its biggest customers. Nearly 60% of large enterprise clients told Recon Analytics they’re now more likely to shop around when their contracts come up. That’s a big deal: with awareness and frustration highest among the most valuable accounts, pressure mounts for Verizon to defend its premium pricing and service-level guarantees, especially as rivals use the outage as a rallying cry in new sales pitches. But switching isn’t simple—enterprise contracts are notoriously sticky, with device commitments and complex setups. The real risk is in renewal negotiations, where customers may demand price cuts, credits, or dual-network solutions to hedge against future blackouts. Legal headwinds add more drama: while Verizon just fended off a T-Mobile ad complaint, analyst surveys show T-Mobile edging ahead on brand perception for the first time. Meanwhile, upstarts like US Mobile and Mint Mobile are bundling multiple carriers and even Starlink home internet, pushing the industry toward multi-path redundancy and threatening the single-network advantage. Based on reporting from PhoneArena, Fierce Network, Recon Analytics, and Telecompaper. Powered by Apisod.com

13 Apr 2026 - 7 min
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