fbpx
Wikipedia

O2 (brand)

O2 (typeset as O2) is a global brand name owned by the Spanish telecommunications company Telefónica. The company uses the O2 brand for its subsidiaries in the United Kingdom and Germany. Since 2018, it is also used as an online-only flanker brand in Spain.[1]

O2
Product typeTelecommunication
OwnerTelefónica
CountryUnited Kingdom
Introduced2001; 23 years ago (2001)
Related brandsMovistar
Vivo
MarketsCzech Republic
Germany
Slovakia
Spain
United Kingdom
Websitetelefonica.com

Formerly, all European branches of Telefónica were managed by Telefónica Europe plc, a broadband and telecommunications company. The company originated as a collection of worldwide telecommunications companies, known in the later half of the 1990s as BT Wireless, and a global mobile data business known then as Genie Internet, both subsidiaries of British Telecommunications. As part of a reorganisation of Telefónica in 2014, Telefónica Europe's holdings and operations became direct subsidiaries of its parent: Telefónica S.A.[2]

Telefónica Europe provided mobile telephony operations in the United Kingdom and Germany, and licensed its brand to former operations in Ireland, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia. O2 has additionally established a joint venture with Tesco Mobile in the United Kingdom, Ireland and in Slovakia, and the Tchibo Mobilfunk network in Germany.

History edit

1985–2001: BT Wireless era edit

United Kingdom edit

 
O2 store in Banbury, England

Cellnet was launched in January 1985 as a subsidiary of Telecom Securicor Cellular Radio Limited, a 60:40 venture between British Telecommunications and Securicor respectively.

In 1999 (1999), BT purchased Securicor's shares in Cellnet for £3.15 billion. The company was later rebranded as BT Cellnet, and it became a part of BT Wireless, a group of subsidiary companies owned by BT.[3] BT invested £2 billion in BT Cellnet, and in 2000 (2000), BT Cellnet had over 6 million customers.[4]

In October 2001 (2001-10), at a general meeting held in Birmingham, 4.297 billion BT shares voted in favour of BT Cellnet's demerger from BT, with 0.67 million shares voting against.[5] In 2001, BT Cellnet demerged from BT as mmO2 plc, and was relaunched on 1 May 2002 using the O2 brand. The company changed its name from mmO2 to O2 plc in March 2005.[6] In 2021 it merged with Virgin Media to form Virgin Media O2.[7][8]

Ireland edit

Digifone was created in 2000, as the demerged mobile business of the prior Esat Digifone which had just been purchased by BT. Esat Digifone was originally a joint venture between Esat Telecom and Telenor. After the acquisition of Esat Telecom by BT the Telenor share in Esat Digifone was also acquired by BT. Subsequently, the fixed operations, Esat Telecom later became BT Ireland and the demerged mobile operations, rebranded without the Esat name as Digifone, became a part of the newly formed separate company, mmO2 plc. Digifone became O2 Ireland in 2001 as a subsidiary of mmO2 plc following the demerger from BT. O2 Ireland became a subsidiary of Telefónica in 2006, after its parent company O2 in the United Kingdom was purchased. In June 2013, Hutchison Whampoa announced it would acquire the Irish arm of O2 for €780m.[9] O2 was merged into Hutchison Whampoa's subsidiary Three Ireland in March 2015.[10]

Germany edit

 
Telefónica Germany headquarters in Munich

Viag Interkom was created in 1995 as a joint venture of the German power supply firm VIAG (45%), British BT Group (then called British Telecommunications) (45%) and Norwegian Telenor (10%) in order to compete for official licence to provide services in the rapidly liberalising German (fixed and mobile) telecommunications market at that time. In 2001 BT acquired VIAG's share (owned by German energy company E.ON)[11] for €11.4 billion following the German UMTS licence auction the previous year. Viag Interkom's mobile operations were transferred into the BT Wireless family and the fixed business became BT (Germany) GmbH & CO. Viag Interkom became O2 Germany as a subsidiary of mmO2 plc in 2001, following the demerger from BT.

The Netherlands edit

Telfort was created in March 1997 as a 50:50 joint venture between BT and Nederlandse Spoorwegen (the Dutch national railways operator) and headquartered in Amsterdam. Telfort was awarded a licence by the government of the Netherlands to provide fixed telecommunications services in November of that year, and a mobile licence was awarded the following year. In 2000, the mobile operations of Telfort became a part of the BT Wireless family. Telfort became O2 Netherlands as a subsidiary of mmO2 plc in 2001, following the demerger from BT.

In 2003, O2 sold the company to Greenfield Capital Partners which reverted the company back to the Telfort name. Telfort eventually became a wholly owned subsidiary of KPN.

Isle of Man edit

Manx Telecom was demerged from BT as part of the mmO2 flotation in 2001. Unlike some of the company's counterparts, the fixed and mobile arms of Manx Telecom were not split prior to the demerger, which meant that Manx Telecom was the mmO2 group's only fixed operation at the time.

After the demerger from BT in 2001, Manx Telecom continued to trade under its brand as a subsidiary of mmO2 plc.

On 4 June 2010, Manx Telecom was sold to UK private equity investor HG Capital (who were buying the majority stake), alongside telecoms management company CPS Partners. HG Capital indicated that the enterprise value of the deal was £158.8 million ($232.5 million).[12]

Genie Internet and Genie Asia edit

 
Genie Internet logo

Genie Internet Ltd and Genie Asia were created as autonomous but wholly owned subsidiaries of BT in 2000. By the time it became a part of the BT Wireless family of companies in 2001, Genie had mobile portal operations in the UK, Germany, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands, Hong Kong and Japan, and an Internet MVNO operation in UK called Genie Mobile. Prior to the demerger of O2 from BT, Genie scaled back its global operations in order to align with the mobile businesses demerging with it; namely UK, Germany, Ireland and the Netherlands. The Genie Asia business continued portal operations in Asia.

After demerging from BT in 2001, the European Genie business became the basis of a central products and services division called 'Products O2' and the Genie Mobile business was rebranded to 'O2 Online' which continues in the UK as a mobile communications service provider tied to the O2 UK network. The Genie portal properties were rebranded O2 Active in UK, Germany, Ireland and the Netherlands, and Genie Asia became O2 Asia. O2 Asia became a subsidiary of O2 UK for governance purposes.

2001–2005: mmO2 plc era edit

Following the demerger of British Telecommunications plc in 2001, mmO2 plc was created as the holding company for BT's former mobile network assets and was split from the rest of the company, now named BT Group plc. During this period, O2 Netherlands was sold to Dutch investment group Greenfield Capital Partners in 2003.[13] mmO2 plc was later renamed O2 plc[14] before being taken over by Telefónica.

2006–present: Telefónica subsidiary edit

On 31 October 2005, O2 plc agreed to be taken over by Telefónica, a Spanish telecommunications company, with a cash offer of £17.7 billion, or £2 per share.[15] According to the merger announcement, O2 retained its name and continued to be based in the United Kingdom, keeping both the brand and the management team. The merger became unconditional on 23 January 2006.

Following the completion of the acquisition in February 2006, Telefónica undertook a corporate organisational change that saw the merging of its fixed and mobile businesses in Spain, and the transfer of Telefónica's non-Spanish European telecommunications properties into the O2 brand. Thus, the Český Telecom and Eurotel operations in the Czech Republic as well as the Telefónica Deutschland business in Germany were brought into the governance of O2, which retained its UK registered public company status with its own board of directors and corporate governance structures and processes.

Telefónica chose to keep their existing mobile phone operations in the rest of the world under the brand Movistar. This name is used in Spain and in most Latin America countries, operated by a separate management team.

Telefónica sold its O2 Asia subsidiary in a management buyout in 2007. O2 Asia, headquartered in Singapore, operating in Far East, South Asia, Middle East, and Australasian countries, for a short time developed and marketed a range of wirelessly connected PDA and smartphone products branded Xda for both the Asian and European markets, and further such products under the "MWg" brand, short for Mobile & Wireless Group.[16]

In 2015 there were talks for Li Ka-shing, owner of the rival UK network Three, to buy the company.[17] The following year, the European Commission blocked the takeover.[18][19]

Operations edit

Telefónica operates its businesses under the O2 brand through its subsidiaries Telefónica UK and Telefónica Germany. Telefónica Spain uses Movistar as its flagship brand, while O2 is a secondary low-cost brand.

Area 2G licences 3G licences 4G licences DSL
United Kingdom
  • LTE 800/1800/2100/2300
Germany
  • LTE 700/800/900/1800/2100/2600

Telefónica owns the Giffgaff MVNO in the United Kingdom, which uses the O2 network.

In May 2020, it was reported that Telefónica and Liberty Global plan to merge the UK operations of O2 with Virgin Media, a pay-TV and broadband provider in that country, owned by Liberty Global.[20]

Former operations edit

Ireland edit

Telefónica Ireland was providing broadband and telecommunications in Ireland under the O2 brand. O2 Ireland was previously called Esat Digifone when it was owned by Esat Telecommunications (and Telenor) from 1997 to 2006. O2 Ireland became part of Telefónica in 2006 as part of its purchase of O2 in the UK.

In June 2013, Hutchison Whampoa announced it would acquire the Irish arm of O2 for €780m.[9] In March 2015, the company was merged into Hutchison Whampoa's subsidiary Three Ireland.[21]

Czech Republic edit

Český Telecom was the new name given to a company previously known as SPT Telecom which was formed from the splitting off of the Czech Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications into postal and telecom sides in 1993. The company was renamed to Český Telecom in 2000 and remained a government-controlled company until its complete privatisation in 2004. Along the way, rapid modernisation of the network occurred with the help of funding and expertise of the Dutch and Swiss consortium called TelSource.

In parallel to the evolution of Český Telecom, the Eurotel mobile phone business was established in 1990 in a joint venture between what was then known as the Czechoslovak telecom ministry, Bell Atlantic and US West. In 1996, GSM services were introduced, and in 2003 Český Telecom acquired full control of Eurotel.

The Czech Republic government sold its remaining stake in Český Telecom (along with its Eurotel subsidiary) to Telefónica in 2005 which renamed it to Telefónica O2 Czech Republic and since 2006 started to use the O2 brand for both fixed and mobile services. In 2011 company was renamed to Telefónica Czech Republic.

In 2013 was announced that Telefónica would sell its stake in the company to PPF. Under the terms of the sale, the company would continue to use the O2 brand for a maximum of four years.[22] The agreement was later extended, and the company continues under the O2 brand as of January 2024.

Slovakia edit

In 2002 Český Telecom founded Czech Telecom Slovakia, its subsidiary in Slovakia. The company was providing services for large corporations only. In 2006 the company was renamed Telefónica O2 Slovakia and won a tender for the 3rd mobile phone operator in Slovakia. On 2 February 2007, Telefónica O2 Slovakia started providing services in Slovakia for first customers "O2 Jednotky". On 28 February O2 launched classic services and opened first shop in Slovakia (in Bratislava on Obchodná street). In 2013 it was announced that it would be sold with its parent company to PPF.[22]

Marketing edit

Branding edit

The BT Cellnet consumer brand was renamed O2 – the chemical symbol for unbound oxygen – as were all the group's other businesses (other than Manx Telecom). The re-branding was designed by the Lambie-Nairn design agency, which developed the idea of the company supplying services that were essential, much the same as oxygen is essential for life. With this, the company logo and associated graphics were designed, using air bubbles to present this.

Sponsorship edit

 
An O2 Irish rugby union advertisement

O2 currently sponsor the England rugby team, and in 2003 launched a mobile video service allowing customers to download or stream video content related to the 2003 Rugby World Cup. In 2005, Telefónica O2 extended their involvement in rugby union, signing a new deal with the England rugby team and the Rugby Football Union, as well as O2 rugbyclass and Premier Rugby Ltd for the English Premiership.

Telefónica O2 also had a long-standing relationship with Arsenal F.C., being their shirt sponsor from 2002 to 2006. In 2005, a three-year deal was signed that saw Telefónica O2 become the team's exclusive Mobile Communications Partner.

From 2005 to 2008, O2 sponsored the Wireless Festival, a music festival held annually in London (and near Leeds in 2006 and 2007).

Telefónica O2 was the sponsor of the Cork GAA Football and Hurling teams and the Irish rugby team. The partnership with Irish rugby went interactive in 2006, when Ireland fans were offered access to daily updates from head coach Eddie O'Sullivan. In 2009, O2 launched their 'BeTheDifference' integrated advertising campaign[23] where fans had the chance to have their names included on the O2 Rugby posters and on the Irish Rugby players' jerseys.[24] The integrated campaign was created by O2's two Irish advertising agencies: McConnells (above-the-line) and Brando (below-the-line).[25] The interactive campaign won an award at the 2009 Kinsale Sharks.[26]

Naming rights edit

On 31 May 2005, Telefónica O2 acquired the naming rights for the redeveloped Millennium Dome in London from Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG). The Dome is therefore now officially known as 'The O2'. The company extended their relationship with music venues in 2008 when all Academy Music venues became known as 'O2 Academies', replacing Carling as venue sponsors.

For short time, the naming rights arrangements with AEG also apply in Germany, with large sport and concert venues known as O2 World in Berlin and Hamburg.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Telefónica. "Our brands (O2)".
  2. ^ "Parent and Subsidiaries". Telefónica. September 2014. Retrieved 8 December 2014.
  3. ^ "BT gobbles up Cellnet". BBC News. 1999-07-27. Retrieved 2010-05-01.
  4. ^ "BT Cellnet Provide Innovative Wireless Solutions To Americans Traveling To The U.K." BNET. 1999-11-15. Retrieved 2010-05-15.[dead link]
  5. ^ "BT approves mobiles spin-off". BBC News. 2001-10-23. Retrieved 2010-04-01.
  6. ^ "MMO2 offers small investor buyout". BBC News. 12 January 2005. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
  7. ^ Kanter, Jake (2021-05-20). "UK Approves $44B Merger Between Liberty Global-Owned Virgin Media & Mobile Company O2". Deadline. Retrieved 2021-09-22.
  8. ^ "Virgin Media and O2 aim to provide better bundle deals and new technology for customers". Uswitch. Retrieved 2021-09-22.
  9. ^ a b Mulligan, John. "3 Ireland network fails on day of €780m O2 deal". Irish Independent. Retrieved 2013-06-24.
  10. ^ . Hutchison 3G. Archived from the original on 6 December 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  11. ^ Riedel, Donata (2001-01-17). "E.On Sells Its Viag Interkom Stake To British Telecom for $6.9 Billion". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2021-09-16.
  12. ^ "Telefonica sells Manx Telecom to private equity". Reuters. 4 June 2010. Retrieved 8 December 2014.
  13. ^ "MMO2 sells Dutch subsidiary". BBC News. 14 April 2003. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  14. ^ Richardson, Tim (12 January 2005). "mmO2 dials up change for small investors". The Register. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  15. ^ "Telefonica bids £18 billion for U.K.'s O2". BBC News. 31 October 2005. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  16. ^ . The Unwired. Archived from the original on 8 May 2008. Retrieved 9 April 2008.
  17. ^ "Li Ka-shing in talks to buy O2 for £10bn - BBC News". BBC News. Retrieved 2016-03-27.
  18. ^ "EU blocks Three's takeover of O2". BBC News. 11 May 2016. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  19. ^ "EU blocks Three's takeover of O2" (Press release). European Commission. 11 May 2016. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
  20. ^ "Liberty's Virgin Media and Telefonica's O2 to merge in the UK in $39B deal". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  21. ^ O'Hora, Ailish (2 March 2015). "O2 becomes Three as major mobile rebrand kicks in". Independent.ie. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  22. ^ a b . Telefonica.cz. 2013-11-05. Archived from the original on 2014-02-20. Retrieved 2016-03-27.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on June 3, 2009. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  24. ^ Vincent Hogan (2009-02-28). "Favourite tag weighs heavy on Irish Grand Slam dreams". Independent.ie. Retrieved 2016-03-27.
  25. ^ . bethedifference.ie. Archived from the original on 9 February 2009. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  26. ^ "TellyPass Authentication" (PDF). Sharkawards.com. Retrieved 2016-03-27.[permanent dead link]

External links edit

  • Official website

brand, this, article, about, european, telecommunications, company, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challen. This article is about the European telecommunications company For other uses see O2 disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources O2 brand news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message O2 typeset as O2 is a global brand name owned by the Spanish telecommunications company Telefonica The company uses the O2 brand for its subsidiaries in the United Kingdom and Germany Since 2018 it is also used as an online only flanker brand in Spain 1 O2Product typeTelecommunicationOwnerTelefonicaCountryUnited KingdomIntroduced2001 23 years ago 2001 Related brandsMovistar VivoMarketsCzech Republic Germany Slovakia Spain United KingdomWebsitetelefonica wbr comFormerly all European branches of Telefonica were managed by Telefonica Europe plc a broadband and telecommunications company The company originated as a collection of worldwide telecommunications companies known in the later half of the 1990s as BT Wireless and a global mobile data business known then as Genie Internet both subsidiaries of British Telecommunications As part of a reorganisation of Telefonica in 2014 Telefonica Europe s holdings and operations became direct subsidiaries of its parent Telefonica S A 2 Telefonica Europe provided mobile telephony operations in the United Kingdom and Germany and licensed its brand to former operations in Ireland the Czech Republic and Slovakia O2 has additionally established a joint venture with Tesco Mobile in the United Kingdom Ireland and in Slovakia and the Tchibo Mobilfunk network in Germany Contents 1 History 1 1 1985 2001 BT Wireless era 1 1 1 United Kingdom 1 1 2 Ireland 1 1 3 Germany 1 1 4 The Netherlands 1 1 5 Isle of Man 1 1 6 Genie Internet and Genie Asia 1 2 2001 2005 mmO2 plc era 1 3 2006 present Telefonica subsidiary 2 Operations 3 Former operations 3 1 Ireland 3 2 Czech Republic 3 3 Slovakia 4 Marketing 4 1 Branding 4 2 Sponsorship 4 3 Naming rights 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit1985 2001 BT Wireless era edit United Kingdom edit Main article O2 UK nbsp O2 store in Banbury EnglandCellnet was launched in January 1985 as a subsidiary of Telecom Securicor Cellular Radio Limited a 60 40 venture between British Telecommunications and Securicor respectively In 1999 1999 BT purchased Securicor s shares in Cellnet for 3 15 billion The company was later rebranded as BT Cellnet and it became a part of BT Wireless a group of subsidiary companies owned by BT 3 BT invested 2 billion in BT Cellnet and in 2000 2000 BT Cellnet had over 6 million customers 4 In October 2001 2001 10 at a general meeting held in Birmingham 4 297 billion BT shares voted in favour of BT Cellnet s demerger from BT with 0 67 million shares voting against 5 In 2001 BT Cellnet demerged from BT as mmO2 plc and was relaunched on 1 May 2002 using the O2 brand The company changed its name from mmO2 to O2 plc in March 2005 6 In 2021 it merged with Virgin Media to form Virgin Media O2 7 8 Ireland edit Main article O2 Ireland Digifone was created in 2000 as the demerged mobile business of the prior Esat Digifone which had just been purchased by BT Esat Digifone was originally a joint venture between Esat Telecom and Telenor After the acquisition of Esat Telecom by BT the Telenor share in Esat Digifone was also acquired by BT Subsequently the fixed operations Esat Telecom later became BT Ireland and the demerged mobile operations rebranded without the Esat name as Digifone became a part of the newly formed separate company mmO2 plc Digifone became O2 Ireland in 2001 as a subsidiary of mmO2 plc following the demerger from BT O2 Ireland became a subsidiary of Telefonica in 2006 after its parent company O2 in the United Kingdom was purchased In June 2013 Hutchison Whampoa announced it would acquire the Irish arm of O2 for 780m 9 O2 was merged into Hutchison Whampoa s subsidiary Three Ireland in March 2015 10 Germany edit Main article Telefonica Germany nbsp Telefonica Germany headquarters in MunichViag Interkom was created in 1995 as a joint venture of the German power supply firm VIAG 45 British BT Group then called British Telecommunications 45 and Norwegian Telenor 10 in order to compete for official licence to provide services in the rapidly liberalising German fixed and mobile telecommunications market at that time In 2001 BT acquired VIAG s share owned by German energy company E ON 11 for 11 4 billion following the German UMTS licence auction the previous year Viag Interkom s mobile operations were transferred into the BT Wireless family and the fixed business became BT Germany GmbH amp CO Viag Interkom became O2 Germany as a subsidiary of mmO2 plc in 2001 following the demerger from BT The Netherlands edit Telfort was created in March 1997 as a 50 50 joint venture between BT and Nederlandse Spoorwegen the Dutch national railways operator and headquartered in Amsterdam Telfort was awarded a licence by the government of the Netherlands to provide fixed telecommunications services in November of that year and a mobile licence was awarded the following year In 2000 the mobile operations of Telfort became a part of the BT Wireless family Telfort became O2 Netherlands as a subsidiary of mmO2 plc in 2001 following the demerger from BT In 2003 O2 sold the company to Greenfield Capital Partners which reverted the company back to the Telfort name Telfort eventually became a wholly owned subsidiary of KPN Isle of Man edit Main article Manx Telecom Manx Telecom was demerged from BT as part of the mmO2 flotation in 2001 Unlike some of the company s counterparts the fixed and mobile arms of Manx Telecom were not split prior to the demerger which meant that Manx Telecom was the mmO2 group s only fixed operation at the time After the demerger from BT in 2001 Manx Telecom continued to trade under its brand as a subsidiary of mmO2 plc On 4 June 2010 Manx Telecom was sold to UK private equity investor HG Capital who were buying the majority stake alongside telecoms management company CPS Partners HG Capital indicated that the enterprise value of the deal was 158 8 million 232 5 million 12 Genie Internet and Genie Asia edit nbsp Genie Internet logoGenie Internet Ltd and Genie Asia were created as autonomous but wholly owned subsidiaries of BT in 2000 By the time it became a part of the BT Wireless family of companies in 2001 Genie had mobile portal operations in the UK Germany Spain Italy the Netherlands Hong Kong and Japan and an Internet MVNO operation in UK called Genie Mobile Prior to the demerger of O2 from BT Genie scaled back its global operations in order to align with the mobile businesses demerging with it namely UK Germany Ireland and the Netherlands The Genie Asia business continued portal operations in Asia After demerging from BT in 2001 the European Genie business became the basis of a central products and services division called Products O2 and the Genie Mobile business was rebranded to O2 Online which continues in the UK as a mobile communications service provider tied to the O2 UK network The Genie portal properties were rebranded O2 Active in UK Germany Ireland and the Netherlands and Genie Asia became O2 Asia O2 Asia became a subsidiary of O2 UK for governance purposes 2001 2005 mmO2 plc era edit Following the demerger of British Telecommunications plc in 2001 mmO2 plc was created as the holding company for BT s former mobile network assets and was split from the rest of the company now named BT Group plc During this period O2 Netherlands was sold to Dutch investment group Greenfield Capital Partners in 2003 13 mmO2 plc was later renamed O2 plc 14 before being taken over by Telefonica 2006 present Telefonica subsidiary edit On 31 October 2005 O2 plc agreed to be taken over by Telefonica a Spanish telecommunications company with a cash offer of 17 7 billion or 2 per share 15 According to the merger announcement O2 retained its name and continued to be based in the United Kingdom keeping both the brand and the management team The merger became unconditional on 23 January 2006 Following the completion of the acquisition in February 2006 Telefonica undertook a corporate organisational change that saw the merging of its fixed and mobile businesses in Spain and the transfer of Telefonica s non Spanish European telecommunications properties into the O2 brand Thus the Cesky Telecom and Eurotel operations in the Czech Republic as well as the Telefonica Deutschland business in Germany were brought into the governance of O2 which retained its UK registered public company status with its own board of directors and corporate governance structures and processes Telefonica chose to keep their existing mobile phone operations in the rest of the world under the brand Movistar This name is used in Spain and in most Latin America countries operated by a separate management team Telefonica sold its O2 Asia subsidiary in a management buyout in 2007 O2 Asia headquartered in Singapore operating in Far East South Asia Middle East and Australasian countries for a short time developed and marketed a range of wirelessly connected PDA and smartphone products branded Xda for both the Asian and European markets and further such products under the MWg brand short for Mobile amp Wireless Group 16 In 2015 there were talks for Li Ka shing owner of the rival UK network Three to buy the company 17 The following year the European Commission blocked the takeover 18 19 Operations editTelefonica operates its businesses under the O2 brand through its subsidiaries Telefonica UK and Telefonica Germany Telefonica Spain uses Movistar as its flagship brand while O2 is a secondary low cost brand Area 2G licences 3G licences 4G licences DSLUnited Kingdom GSM GPRS EDGE 900 1800 UMTS 900 2100 HSDPA HSUPA HSPA DC HSPA LTE 800 1800 2100 2300Germany GSM GPRS EDGE 900 1800 UMTS 900 2100 HSDPA HSUPA HSPA DC HSPA LTE 700 800 900 1800 2100 2600 ADSL ADSL2 VDSLTelefonica owns the Giffgaff MVNO in the United Kingdom which uses the O2 network In May 2020 it was reported that Telefonica and Liberty Global plan to merge the UK operations of O2 with Virgin Media a pay TV and broadband provider in that country owned by Liberty Global 20 Former operations editIreland edit Main article O2 Ireland Telefonica Ireland was providing broadband and telecommunications in Ireland under the O2 brand O2 Ireland was previously called Esat Digifone when it was owned by Esat Telecommunications and Telenor from 1997 to 2006 O2 Ireland became part of Telefonica in 2006 as part of its purchase of O2 in the UK In June 2013 Hutchison Whampoa announced it would acquire the Irish arm of O2 for 780m 9 In March 2015 the company was merged into Hutchison Whampoa s subsidiary Three Ireland 21 Czech Republic edit Main article O2 Czech Republic Cesky Telecom was the new name given to a company previously known as SPT Telecom which was formed from the splitting off of the Czech Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications into postal and telecom sides in 1993 The company was renamed to Cesky Telecom in 2000 and remained a government controlled company until its complete privatisation in 2004 Along the way rapid modernisation of the network occurred with the help of funding and expertise of the Dutch and Swiss consortium called TelSource In parallel to the evolution of Cesky Telecom the Eurotel mobile phone business was established in 1990 in a joint venture between what was then known as the Czechoslovak telecom ministry Bell Atlantic and US West In 1996 GSM services were introduced and in 2003 Cesky Telecom acquired full control of Eurotel The Czech Republic government sold its remaining stake in Cesky Telecom along with its Eurotel subsidiary to Telefonica in 2005 which renamed it to Telefonica O2 Czech Republic and since 2006 started to use the O2 brand for both fixed and mobile services In 2011 company was renamed to Telefonica Czech Republic In 2013 was announced that Telefonica would sell its stake in the company to PPF Under the terms of the sale the company would continue to use the O2 brand for a maximum of four years 22 The agreement was later extended and the company continues under the O2 brand as of January 2024 Slovakia edit Main article O2 Slovakia In 2002 Cesky Telecom founded Czech Telecom Slovakia its subsidiary in Slovakia The company was providing services for large corporations only In 2006 the company was renamed Telefonica O2 Slovakia and won a tender for the 3rd mobile phone operator in Slovakia On 2 February 2007 Telefonica O2 Slovakia started providing services in Slovakia for first customers O2 Jednotky On 28 February O2 launched classic services and opened first shop in Slovakia in Bratislava on Obchodna street In 2013 it was announced that it would be sold with its parent company to PPF 22 Marketing editBranding edit The BT Cellnet consumer brand was renamed O2 the chemical symbol for unbound oxygen as were all the group s other businesses other than Manx Telecom The re branding was designed by the Lambie Nairn design agency which developed the idea of the company supplying services that were essential much the same as oxygen is essential for life With this the company logo and associated graphics were designed using air bubbles to present this Sponsorship edit nbsp An O2 Irish rugby union advertisementO2 currently sponsor the England rugby team and in 2003 launched a mobile video service allowing customers to download or stream video content related to the 2003 Rugby World Cup In 2005 Telefonica O2 extended their involvement in rugby union signing a new deal with the England rugby team and the Rugby Football Union as well as O2 rugbyclass and Premier Rugby Ltd for the English Premiership Telefonica O2 also had a long standing relationship with Arsenal F C being their shirt sponsor from 2002 to 2006 In 2005 a three year deal was signed that saw Telefonica O2 become the team s exclusive Mobile Communications Partner From 2005 to 2008 O2 sponsored the Wireless Festival a music festival held annually in London and near Leeds in 2006 and 2007 Telefonica O2 was the sponsor of the Cork GAA Football and Hurling teams and the Irish rugby team The partnership with Irish rugby went interactive in 2006 when Ireland fans were offered access to daily updates from head coach Eddie O Sullivan In 2009 O2 launched their BeTheDifference integrated advertising campaign 23 where fans had the chance to have their names included on the O2 Rugby posters and on the Irish Rugby players jerseys 24 The integrated campaign was created by O2 s two Irish advertising agencies McConnells above the line and Brando below the line 25 The interactive campaign won an award at the 2009 Kinsale Sharks 26 Naming rights edit On 31 May 2005 Telefonica O2 acquired the naming rights for the redeveloped Millennium Dome in London from Anschutz Entertainment Group AEG The Dome is therefore now officially known as The O2 The company extended their relationship with music venues in 2008 when all Academy Music venues became known as O2 Academies replacing Carling as venue sponsors For short time the naming rights arrangements with AEG also apply in Germany with large sport and concert venues known as O2 World in Berlin and Hamburg See also editO2 AirwaveReferences edit Telefonica Our brands O2 Parent and Subsidiaries Telefonica September 2014 Retrieved 8 December 2014 BT gobbles up Cellnet BBC News 1999 07 27 Retrieved 2010 05 01 BT Cellnet Provide Innovative Wireless Solutions To Americans Traveling To The U K BNET 1999 11 15 Retrieved 2010 05 15 dead link BT approves mobiles spin off BBC News 2001 10 23 Retrieved 2010 04 01 MMO2 offers small investor buyout BBC News 12 January 2005 Retrieved 15 September 2017 Kanter Jake 2021 05 20 UK Approves 44B Merger Between Liberty Global Owned Virgin Media amp Mobile Company O2 Deadline Retrieved 2021 09 22 Virgin Media and O2 aim to provide better bundle deals and new technology for customers Uswitch Retrieved 2021 09 22 a b Mulligan John 3 Ireland network fails on day of 780m O2 deal Irish Independent Retrieved 2013 06 24 Three and O2 are combining Hutchison 3G Archived from the original on 6 December 2014 Retrieved 30 November 2014 Riedel Donata 2001 01 17 E On Sells Its Viag Interkom Stake To British Telecom for 6 9 Billion The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 2021 09 16 Telefonica sells Manx Telecom to private equity Reuters 4 June 2010 Retrieved 8 December 2014 MMO2 sells Dutch subsidiary BBC News 14 April 2003 Retrieved 25 September 2021 Richardson Tim 12 January 2005 mmO2 dials up change for small investors The Register Retrieved 25 September 2021 Telefonica bids 18 billion for U K s O2 BBC News 31 October 2005 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Buyout Telefonica O2 sells O2 Asia to the Management The Unwired Archived from the original on 8 May 2008 Retrieved 9 April 2008 Li Ka shing in talks to buy O2 for 10bn BBC News BBC News Retrieved 2016 03 27 EU blocks Three s takeover of O2 BBC News 11 May 2016 Retrieved 4 April 2017 EU blocks Three s takeover of O2 Press release European Commission 11 May 2016 Retrieved 15 March 2019 Liberty s Virgin Media and Telefonica s O2 to merge in the UK in 39B deal TechCrunch Retrieved 2020 05 07 O Hora Ailish 2 March 2015 O2 becomes Three as major mobile rebrand kicks in Independent ie Retrieved 24 March 2015 a b Press center Press releases Telefrnnica Agrees the Sale of Telefrnnica Czech Republic to PPF for 2 467 mln euros O2 Czech Republic Telefonica cz 2013 11 05 Archived from the original on 2014 02 20 Retrieved 2016 03 27 Be the Difference Archived from the original on June 3 2009 Retrieved February 9 2016 Vincent Hogan 2009 02 28 Favourite tag weighs heavy on Irish Grand Slam dreams Independent ie Retrieved 2016 03 27 O2 be the Difference bethedifference ie Archived from the original on 9 February 2009 Retrieved 13 January 2022 TellyPass Authentication PDF Sharkawards com Retrieved 2016 03 27 permanent dead link External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title O2 brand amp oldid 1195162085, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.