Broadband Wars
When Fiber finally landed into the East African region it was expected that the end user would really benefit from reduced costs. It never happened. Its even worse to see that ISP’s have not even heated up the competition.

Its now been 6 months since Kenya finally went digital, and in these six months all I have seen is a gimmick – “Doubled your bandwidth for free”.
Dear ISP,
We are the customer! We are not stupid.
I have noted that there are only four major player in the industry at the moment – KDN, Access Kenya, Orange & Safaricom. They all provide the end user with internet access in one way or the other.
My main stress has been internet access for home users & SOHO’s
Safaricom - Safaricom’s main strength in the data market has without a doubt been the 3g modems that they have been selling for as little as 2000shs ($27). Almost everyone has a Safaricom line, and Safaricom banked in on this and started selling the 3g modems at a throw away price. They have provided bundles that are soft on everyone’s pocket in terms of cost of bundle but not usage. The more the use the more you pay. That is a major disadvantage as safaricom have really fast bandwidth and you may get carried away with your usage.
3g coverage is scattered and inconsistent. Safaricom customer support is extremely difficult to get through to.
Access Kenya – Access Kenya had always set their sights on corporate clients, but when the fiber was close to completion they decided to move into the home user market with the introduction of access @home. @home is a WiMax based connection that has a lot of connectivity issues once the base station you are connected to starts getting saturated. Why am I telling you this? Because Access Kenya are known to saturate their base stations. At 6000shs +VAT ($80) for 512kbp/128kbps and an additional cost of equipment & installation at 15000shs +VAT ($200), the average home user would never go for this because its too steep.
Access Kenya will really need to up the ante if they want to get into the home market big time. They may have broken their customer targets 2 months earlier, but the home users that are connected to their service are an extreme minority.
Access Kenya @home support team is much better than that of the corporate team and beat any of their competition hands down at providing good support.
KDN – KDN have for long been corporate solution providers, providing service through WiMax. They came up with the much scanty butterfly product for individuals on the move. KDN are still focused to providing corporate solutions and not really in a hurry to move into the home market.
KDN support is a major fail and their recent two awards are nothing compared to their image. KDN really need to review their customer support & sales team and how they work.
Orange Kenya – When Orange was Telkom Kenya, they had been the BIG boys solely because they were the monopoly. That is in the past now, and Telkom Kenya is now Orange Kenya and they are trying to come back into the market with a bang. Orange are finally connected to TEAMS Fiber and speeds are blazing. Orange Kenya have the real vision towards broadband roll out to home users via old copper cables and the use of a livebox with inbuilt Wi-Fi. At 4000shs ($54) for 512kbps/256kbps and additional cost of 3500shs ($47) for the livebox, Orange Kenya have almost got it right, they need to reduce the costs further and increase the bandwidth. Most of us still have the traditional phone lines and would not mind moving onto the service
Orange Kenya have re-vamped their Customer support who at least answer their phones now, but who really need to be taught a lot more on their products. Technical team has also been really improved and downtimes are a thing of the past.
New Players
Tangerine Broadband – With what they have been advertising as – for as little as 649shs ($8), they have a sales team that do not know what they have for sale. Not much information means they have nothing to sell.
Zuku – Double play package providers, providing TV & broadband from wananchi online. At 4500shs ($60) and additional setup cost of 3000shs ($40) with free equipment, Zuku may just have the chance to sneak in front of the competition. What really puts Zuku off is the poor sales follow up and the poor support. Complaints of extremely slow speeds (6kbps-15kbps) are also plenty.


This post has 11 comments
December 3rd, 2009
I read in a local daily that they (the isp’s) are recovering costs of investing into the optic cables. Our prices are still ridiculously high for the bandwith we’re getting as compared to Asia or Europe. Realistically speaking it will be another year or two until we see improvements.
December 3rd, 2009
But if you read one of my earlier blog posts http://onlinemasai.com/what-is-it-with-isps/ you will see how i stressed about doing a turn over business with new products. However these investors feel the need to get their returns over night.
December 3rd, 2009
Spot on! Failed to understand their logic!? If there was any used,it’s better to earn from many slowly than bleed out a few, one is more sustainable than the other.
Anywho, spoke to access yesterday when I had downtime, about the infinitieth time this month! God I’m tired of sending mail after mail. Their guys at support are on point though, would even recommend a few for citations.
Forgive me, I digress, I asked them what they were going to do cause Zuku seems to be major moves in the right direction, he’s reply was that they can never ever compete with zuku.
Therefore expect @home to be shut very soon
December 3rd, 2009
Access is screwed on the SOHO market. They can’t compete with Safaricom for reach…
December 3rd, 2009
@coldtusker safcom’s game and business strategy for home users is totally different to that of AK and Zuku. You cannot compare the two.
@iamkenei I do not think @home will close down, they cannot afford that sort of thing happening. They will review their products. Just not now. And on turnover basis i see them earning a lot more a lot faster
January 25th, 2010
Currently useing Access, which I am very unhappy with at the moment.
Thinking of moving to either the Orange 3g modem or Zuku.
Not sure which to go for
February 10th, 2010
Internet shopper. I tried Orange 3G+ and it seems to be limited to a maximum download speed of 300kbps – at least where I am. So pretty poor by comparison with Safaricom (even if the data price is usually half the price). However Safaricom has become a lot more unstable with the new unlimited weekly offer for 1,000 bob – I presume the base stations are getting overloaded.
Orange Nyumbani (ADSL over a landline) is good until your landline is stolen – ours went two months ago and haven’t been replaced. Guess Orange is giving up.
March 3rd, 2010
Currently use Safaricom 3G & it really flies (except sometimes during this 1k weekly-offer). Now my gripes are the costs & the fact I can not share the connection unless some expensive investments e.g. Safaricom Router, etc.
I used to be on Telkom ADSL & that used to work fine with a Linksys ADSL router albeit slow back then & like above poster, suffered from the constant cable vandalism. Now, when I heard of Orange’s Broadband (ADSL) Nyumbani I quickly went to their offices only to be told that I need to purchase the LiveBox. I know its not an expensive purchase but you see I’d already invested in a router/setup that I’m happy with. My question is, has anyone on Orange managed to get it working on another ADSL router other than the LiveBox?
March 3rd, 2010
@warmMalt, you can easily share the safaricom 3g internet connection.just set up an Adhoc computer to computer wireless connection.You can do this from start-control panel-network connections,then click on set up a home network,or something like that.
Then, after you have setup the adhoc network,just go to network connectons,and share the sfaricom connection.Any other user within 35 feet of your laptop will be able to see the new wireless connection you have set up,then he or she can connect to it,then start surfing.
I am also wondering if it is possible to set up a wireless home network using my router rather than using the orange livebox.that would save me about 4000kshs.
March 3rd, 2010
@kenny: Thanks but tried that & it works then after awhile the other computers fail to connect to the internet – still troubleshooting. Also, I’m currently researching on sharing the connection using the router I mentioned above instead.
Another thing is I don’t like how the ISP each need to have their own equipment which is either difficult or expensive to incorporate in an existing (network) setup and or ends up being useless if you want to move over to another supplier!
May 7th, 2010
AccessKenya services are good, but the price … my ohh my. Another thing about acess@home is the ridiculously low speeds during the day(by design). Im moving to Orange adsl mostly cause of cost vs bandwidth i just hope i dont regret it.