Worldline’s Unlimited High Speed Internet hits the road

Worldine's coming out party!

We’re everywhere!

In and around Ontario, the Worldline brand is starting to make a name for itself, like in this ad for our Unlimited High Speed Internet for only $29.95.

The folks in the back of the bus image are all your friendly neighborhood Worldline employees, like our VP of Product Development, Mike Brown, the head of HR, Amanda Little, and Social Media and Event Marketer Erin Wagner, (ya, that Erin Wagner of Twitter fame). The little kid? Sorry, he’s a Super Hero and therefore his identity has to be kept secret. (duh!)

This campaign is all about how a (relatively) small company like Worldline can make a BIG difference in the telecommunications marketplace. How we are trying to save as many of our fellow Canadians hundreds of dollars a year on their home phone and Internet bills that they are needlessly handing over to the big boys just because…well, because they haven’t heard about us yet.

Worldline – There’s a new hero in town.

BTW: In a couple of weeks we’ll be running a contest surrounding this new campaign launch and for the winner, they’re going to take home some serious swag! In the mean time, if you haven’t already, visit our Facebook page and enter the Great 50/50 Facebook Contest to win a 50″ HDTV before it’s too late!

Why is Worldline “Canada’s best kept telecom secret” anyway?

We say it all the time: “Worldline – Canada’s best kept telecom secret.”

So, ummm, why is that?

Why is that we have 300,000 folks across Canada using our services, yet when you ask pretty much anyone if they’ve ever heard of Worldline, the answer is, “ahhhh, nope!”?

Even the folks who work here have to spend an uncomfortable amount of time explaining to friends and family about where they work. Last month we had this in-house promotion for friends and family about the March Madness Pricing for the Unlimited High Speed Internet and Home Phone Bundle and I had to assure my brother-in-law that Worldline was “legit,” because he’d “never heard of them before.”

It’s a bit of a pain, and it is one guy’s fault really. This guy, John Stix, Worldline’s Chief Marketing Officer.John Stix

When John and Jody Schnarr founded Worldline ten years ago they launched their company in a very atypical fashion: essentially they gave away all the credit.

Their first ever telecom product was a service to provide free long distance between Kitchener and Stratford, Ontario. They couldn’t find enough people to sign up for the service to pay for it, so instead they latched onto a radio business model. Anyone who wanted to make a call would have to listen to a 30-second ad before their call went through.

A local car dealership owner, Gary Stockie, took the chance, and handed over the equivalent of the a month’s expenses, and the use of a car, and presto, the Worldline business model was born.

A local newspaper article talking about that their new company offering free calls between the two cities resulted in 4,000 customers basically overnight.

Stockie’s business went through the roof, and John and Jody parlayed that success story into free long distance call service for a whole host of companies like the Sun Media Group and Labbatt.

Tens of thousands of customers were using Worldline long distance and phone services, but they didn’t know it. They thought they were using the “Bud Phone” or “Sun Call” of the “London Free Press Call”. Worldline had more than 300 partners across the country taking all the credit for the services Worldline was providing.

Which was fine. The partners were offering all these great phone and Internet services, and Worldline could concentrate on building the best cross-country network possible and on excellent customer service, all without having to spend a dime on marketing.

Well, it worked well – up to a point, because now Worldline wants to grow faster.

Now we want to get the word out about us, not someone else. Now we want to let as many Canadians know about our great products and services because it’s great for them, and great for us.

Now we’re spending marketing dollars. Now we’re running advertising campaigns in specific markets in Canada. Now were promoting the company online and on social networks like Facebook and Twitter.

We’re introducing an entire new branding strategy that shows us for what we are; the young kid on the block looking to take on Big Telecom. Here’s a sneak peek:

Screen Shot 2013-04-15 at 4.54.04 PM

So look out everybody, here we come.

Canada’s best kept telecom secret no longer.

“No company does this. Nobody.”

Sam Sam Pajpani is the director of marketing for us here at Worldline and the company is very lucky to have him.

In telecommunications for years, Sam has worked at all the big players like Rogers, Sprint, and the granddaddy of us all, Bell, before coming on board here.

Over that time he has run probably a couple hundred new product launches in his career, so you’d think he would have seen it all by now.

Nope. At the beginning of this month Worldline did something that he’d never experienced before.

See, we dropped the price of our Digital Home Phone package from the already low $12.95/month  to just $9.95/month – the lowest price in the entire country.

Everyone in marketing was pretty thrilled about the price point to say the least. $9.95? What an easy number to bring to market! Then someone brought up the point, “What about our existing customers?”

Simple, The customer service team called up each and every one of them to let them know that we were dropping their rates.

His reaction?  “No company does this. Nobody.”

Those companies he used to work for? He told us not in a million years would they do something like that. Once someone has signed up with one of those guys, they sign a contract locking them in for the entire term. There are no price cuts. There are no deals.

The only time a customer might be able to get a deal is when they are nearing the end of their contract and they threaten to drop their provider.

We hear this all the time from new customers. When they dropped their service and came over to us, the first thing their old service provider does is to get in touch and, out of nowhere, offer them the same rate that we charge.

Not before. Only upon threat of leaving does a customer deserve a break.

Not so at Worldline.

Sam and the rest of us are committed to providing the best service and value possible for our customers.

We’ll even call you up to let you know all about it.

Get your #moneysavingtips

twitterWe here a Worldline know that if you are not with us, you are paying way too much for your Home Phone and Internet. That’s why we offer Canadians the best deal in the industry on these two crucial services.

It’s kind of what we’re all about.

Saving you money. But why stop there? There are other ways we can help save you money as well.

For example:

or

Those are just a couple of the hundreds of #moneysavingtips we post on our @worldlinecanada Twitter feed. Two or three times every day we provide our followers with some common sense (and occasionally bizarre) tips that help them keep a few extra dollars in their pockets.

We can never get enough, and since we’ve started pumping them out, a bunch of other folks have come up with their #moneysavingtips and a nice little Twitter community has been formed.

So, follow us @worldlinecanada for updates on Worldline products, specials, contests, like the one we had going on at Facebook for a 50″ HDTV for instance. And also for simple ways to avoid wasting your hard-earned dollars.

@worldlinecanada‘s #moneysavingtips:  they just make – dare we say it? – cents.

Oh, and if you have any tips that you use and like, pass them along. We’d love to share what you’ve come up with.

96 Years Ago

Vimy Ridge

(Veterans Affairs Canada) The battle of Vimy Ridge was the first occasion when all four divisions of the Canadian Expeditionary Force participated in a battle together and thus became a Canadian nationalistic symbol of achievement and sacrifice. A 100 hectare portion of the former battleground serves as a preserved memorial park and site of the Canadian National Vimy Memorial.

At Vimy, the Canadian Corps had captured more ground, more prisoners and more guns than any previous British offensive in two-and-a-half years of war. It was one of the most complete and decisive engagements of the Great War and the greatest Allied victory up to that time. The Canadians had demonstrated they were one of the outstanding formations on the Western Front and masters of offensive warfare.

Though the victory at Vimy came swiftly, it did not come without cost. There were 3,598 dead out of 10,602 Canadian casualties. Battalions in the first waves of the assault suffered grievously. No level of casualties could ever be called acceptable, but those at Vimy were lower than the terrible norm of many major assaults on the Western Front. They were also far lighter than those of any previous offensive at the Ridge. Earlier French, British and German struggles there had cost at least 200,000 casualties. Care in planning by the Corps Commander, Sir Julian Byng, and his right-hand man, Arthur Currie, kept Canadian casualties down.

Vimy Ridge

The Battle of Vimy Ridge, a painting by Richard Jack. Canadian War Museum.

The Canadian success at Vimy marked a profound turning-point for the Allies. A year-and-a-half later, the Great War was over. The Canadian record, crowned by the achievements at Vimy, won for Canada a separate signature on the Versailles Peace Treaty ending the war. Back home, the victory at Vimy, won by troops from every part of the country, helped unite many Canadians in pride at the courage of their citizen-soldiers, and established a feeling of real nationhood.

Brigadier-General Alexander Ross had commanded the 28th (North-West) Battalion at Vimy. Later, as president of the Canadian Legion, he proposed the first Veterans’ post-war, pilgrimage to the new Vimy Memorial in 1936. He said of the battle:

“It was Canada from the Atlantic to the Pacific on parade. I thought then . . . that in those few minutes I witnessed the birth of a nation.”

For more information on Vimy Ridge, go HERE