The ‘World’s-First’ App-Based Broadband Provider
Does the ‘World’s-first’ app-based broadband provider set for UK launch ‘have the potential to make existing network technology obsolete’?
- Challenger brand raises £660,000 in the first round of funding with scalability potential that has attracted VC firm Fuel Ventures
- Broadband service unlocks the potential of full fiber to build user profiles automatically optimized for how their broadband is used
- Justin Fielder – one of the key technicians behind Sky Broadband – joins as CTO and says technology will be to broadband ‘what streaming was to DVD rental’
- Pioneering app-based technology is designed by customers for customers to shake up an industry dominated by profit over people
The creators of the ‘world’s first’ app-based broadband provider, Brillband, have revealed how its pioneering technology has the potential to completely transform the broadband industry.
Brillband is set for launch in the UK in July following a £660,000 fundraising round backed by London-based venture capitalists Fuel Ventures, as well as private investment from renowned bankers and industry experts.
The £3 million-valued challenger brand – described as ‘Starling Bank for the broadband industry’ – features app-based technology specifically designed for full-fiber networks that enable users to run their entire broadband service from their mobile phone or tablet device.
The patent-pending software technology uses the direct connection between the provider and customer to enable the service to build individual usage profiles which automatically optimize the service according to how it’s used, for example for gaming, streaming, working from home, or downloading content.
Brillband’s native consumer-centric features also include 1GB speeds with no entry price points; up-to-the-minute network diagnostics and updates via push notifications; malware detection capability and built-in security software; and round-the-clock access to local customer service teams all at customers’ fingertips.
The state-of-the-art service is the brainchild of entrepreneur and Brillband CEO Duncan Di Biase, who set out to disrupt the sector after becoming infuriated by substandard services offered by major broadband players focused more on profit than the people using them’.
With the average UK home already estimated to contain more than 10 connected devices – which industry experts predict will rise to more than 50 as early as next year – Di Biase built Brillband on the principle that connectivity is a 21st Century commodity on a par with electricity and water in its significance, yet it is still seen as a luxury by many.
Di Biase, the serial entrepreneur, business development expert, and co-founder of investment consultancy Raising Partners, said: “Connectivity is one of the most important commodities in our lives yet too many people have accepted substandard service from existing providers that aren’t set up to meet their needs. People pay exorbitant fees for speeds they don’t receive, and it amazes me that nobody seems to question it.
“They wouldn’t accept it from any other service, so why should they put up with it for their broadband? I was sick of endless calls to customer service lines, frequent dropouts, and speeds that don’t represent what’s being paid for usually at rates far in excess of what new customers receive. I just thought – there must be a better way.
“Brillband’s technology is what sets us apart. To our knowledge it’s a world-first – nobody else has it or can copy it – and its beauty lies in its simplicity. It removes the obstacles that so many people associate with broadband providers, but it’s only there when people need it. It takes the friction out of broadband.”
Brillband’s world-first technology has been developed by some of the brightest brains in broadband, including Chief Technology Officer Justin Fielder, a former Sky Network Director whose successes include building Sky Broadband.
It will initially operate on the CityFibre network, although the software technology has the capability to be plugged into any fibre broadband network in the world – scalability that has attracted backing from Fuel Ventures, the leading early-stage VC firm.
Fielder, who played an important role in the creation of the UK broadband market as we know it, said: “The vision Brillband has reflects the early days of broadband, namely doing something that will truly change the market. Nothing will be done the traditional way, and everything will be built from the ground up placing the customer at its core with technology that is there because it delivers value to our customers, not because of 20+ years of legacy technical decisions.”
Fielder, who has built more than 10 high-profile networks during his 25-year career, says the industry as it exists is out of date, ineffective, and harming the planet, one of the key motivators for doing things differently.
He added: “The broadband industry as we know it was built on outdated analog technology that had to make huge technical compromises which created many issues then, and certainly isn’t fit for purpose now. It’s the way the industry has grown up and it’s wrong – and I know, I was part of it. It creates huge amounts of waste through proprietary hardware building layer upon layer of switching and routing, uses criminal amounts of power to run, and means customers don’t get the service that they deserve.
“With Brillband we have been able to say, ‘hang on, this doesn’t work, there is a better way, and start again. Those who truly innovate are the misfits, those who don’t accept the way it’s always been. They are the outspoken who challenge the way things are done – they’re the ones who generate and innovate completely new approaches, and that’s what we’re on a mission to do, and we’re very proud of it.
“Before Uber, nobody thought they needed to see their vehicle coming – now they can’t do without it; before Starling or Monzo, nobody knew they needed to track transactions, now it’s a staple of banking; and before Brillband, nobody knew they needed to control their broadband use in this way – they won’t be able to do without it.
“Any service provider that isn’t doing what we’re doing pretty quickly is going to have serious problems. We are going to prove the model that shows this is the way to do it. This will have the same impact that streaming had on the DVD rental – anybody who doesn’t adopt it will be left behind.”
Brillband – which will be initially rolled out to a test group of hundreds of app and network customers across Glasgow and Renfrewshire later this year – aims to have 10,000 customers and a team of 20 by the end of 2023, rising to 40,000 customers by the end of 2024. Mr Di Biase estimates the firm will have 120,000 customers by 2025. Vodafone is currently the fifth largest broadband provider in the UK with one million customers.
Di Biase chose Scotland as the launchpad for Brillband after falling in love with the country when moving to Glasgow with partner Helena Murphy, also an entrepreneur and investor. He said the warmth and approachability of Scots were exactly what he wanted to build his team around.
Di Biase, who said he experienced the very worst in customer and staff treatment while working for one of the UK’s largest gym providers, also wants to build a brand based on values customers and staff can believe in, paying employees more than the market rate, providing equity in the company for employees, and providing a flat fee for all customers receiving the same high-speed service.
As a statement of Di Biase’s intent, Brillband customer service operatives will be paid an average salary of £25,000. The average wage for a customer service operative in the UK broadband industry is £20,000 per year.
Di Biase said: “The potential is limitless. We can be incredibly agile. We can go after any city in the world with what will be a tried and tested proven method. We can utilize any privately owned Full Fibre network enabling us to take Brillband to any city in the world where a network exists. I genuinely want Brillband to become Europe’s most loved broadband provider – but it all starts here in Scotland. It would be impossible for an incumbent to do what we’re doing.”
Brillband’s Alpha test phase will begin across Glasgow and Renfrewshire in July. Those interested in joining the trial can sign up, and find out more about Brillband here.