Analysis: The latest analysis of wireless networks from RootMetrics ranks Verizon No. 1, but the communications provider is relying on much more than network quality for growth. Technology Business Research says Verizon is doubling down on investments outside its network to drive growth.

HAMPTON, N.H. – ​By acquiring Yahoo, Verizon will become a more aggressive competitor against Facebook and Google in the digital advertising space as the communications giant remains focused on maintaining position as a premium wireless service provider.

Verizon endured a challenging quarter in 2Q16 as consolidated revenue decreased year-to-year for the first quarter in over five years (even when excluding the Frontier divestiture) due to declines across its traditional lines of business. Verizon was also negatively impacted by the recent labor strikes, causing the company to lose net subscribers across all of its FiOS segments in 2Q16.

Verizon was also unable to increase wireless revenue in the quarter as the bulk of Verizon’s postpaid net additions remain from lower-value tablets as the carrier is being outperformed in the phone segment by T-Mobile’s and Sprint’s more competitive offers. Verizon’s postpaid net additions in 2Q16 comprised of 356,000 tablets and 86,000 net phone additions as the carrier’s smartphone additions were largely offset by basic phone subscriber losses.

A strong point for Verizon in 2Q16 was the company boosted wireless OIBDA margin by 360 basis points to 47.5% through its disciplined pricing strategies and move from subsidized postpaid contracts. The company is more focused on preserving ARPU and profitability than gaining lower-value subscribers, highlighted by the raise in price points of its postpaid service plans in July. Verizon is targeting higher-value customers who would rather pay for more expensive service plans to receive superior network coverage.

Though Verizon will continue to trail T-Mobile and Sprint in postpaid phone net additions in 2H16, the carrier will maintain the highest wireless margins in the U.S. by holding to its conservative pricing strategies.

TBR believes the carrier’s revamped Verizon Plan strikes a fine balance of adding value for customers while also positioning Verizon to improve service revenue, which Verizon expects to return to year-to-year growth by the end of 2017. Through the programs, Verizon is meeting subscriber demand for incentives including Canada and Mexico roaming coverage and unlimited throttled data to avoid overages.

But unlike its competitors, Verizon is monetizing these offerings by providing them as value-added services for a fee. The higher price points of the new Verizon Plan will also help the carrier boost ARPU while offering customers a greater overall value proposition by providing larger data allotments than previous programs.

By acquiring Yahoo, Verizon will become a more aggressive competitor against Facebook and Google in the digital advertising space

Verizon generated $713 million in revenue from AOL in 2Q16 and the carrier is pursuing additional acquisitions to build its media segment to offset revenue declines.

The addition of Yahoo’s platform means Verizon will reach an estimated average of 1 billion consumers each month through a variety of owned and operated content as well as content partners; monetization of owned and operated content will be the primary revenue component in the short term, while monetization of partner content represents a high-growth revenue opportunity in the long term.

Verizon’s platforms and data assets will deliver personalized content and advertising based on registered subscribers or known individuals, not proxies such as cookies or device IDs. The ability to thread together consumer profiles while respecting consumer privacy will be critical.

TBR believes if the acquisition goes through, the Verizon-AOL-Yahoo Hydra will be a staunch competitor to Facebook and Google, as well as adjacent players vying for digital advertising (e.g., SAP) or data to drive advertising (e.g., Oracle).

(C) TBR