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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Slogans  





3 SFR TV  





4 SFR Sport  





5 RED by SFR  





6 See also  





7 References  





8 External links  














SFR






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


SFR
Company typeSociété anonyme
IndustryTelecommunications
Founded18 November 1987; 36 years ago (1987-11-18)
HeadquartersAltice Campus,
Paris
,
France

Area served

France, Réunion, Mayotte, Guadeloupe, Martinique

Key people

Matthieu Cocq (CEO)[1]
ProductsBox de SFR, Home by SFR, mobile phones
ServicesFixed-line internet, mobile internet, fixed-line and mobile telephony, IP television
Revenue€10.797 billion (2019)[2]

Operating income

€4.055 billion (2019)[2]

Net income

€2.898 billion (2019)[2]
OwnerAltice Europe

Number of employees

6,000 (2020)
ParentAltice France
SubsidiariesRED by SFR, SFR Business
Websitesfr.fr
sfr.re
sfrcaraibe.fr

SFR (French: [ɛsɛfɛʁ]; in full: Société française du radiotéléphone [sɔsjete fʁɑ̃sɛːz dy ʁadjotelefɔn]) is a French telecommunications company. It is both the second oldest mobile network operator and the second largest telecommunications company in France, after Orange.

As of December 2015, SFR had 21.9 million customers in Metropolitan France for mobile services and it provided 6.35 million households with high-speed internet access.[3]

SFR also offers services in the overseas departments of France, in the Caribbean islandsofMartinique, Guadeloupe, and in Guyane through SFR Caraïbe, and in the Indian Ocean, in Mayotte and the Réunion islands through SRR (Société Réunionnaise du Radiotéléphone; also branded as SFR Réunion).

SFR Belux operated in Belgium as a cable operator and MVNO in some communes of Brussels Region, and in some areas of Luxembourg (asSFR Luxembourg). The division was sold to rival Telenet (owned by Liberty Global) in December 2016.

History

[edit]

SFR was founded in 1987 in order for its then-parent company Compagnie Générale des Eaux (CGE) to start offering a 1G mobile phone service using the modified Nordic telecommunications standard NMT-F, to be operated in competition with the then-telephony incumbent France Télécom's Radiocom 2000 [fr] network. SFR also became the second French mobile network operator (after France Télécom) to launch 2G GSM services, which it did on 15 November 1992.

In 1996, CGE spun off SFR and all its other telecommunications activities into a new holding company called SFR-Cegetel (later just Cegetel [fr]), which also became a competiting provider of fixed-line telecommunication services, as well as a major ISP and a shareholder of the French operations of America Online (AOL), as part of AOL's European operations which AOL of the United States ran as a joint venture with the German conglomerate Bertelsmann.

Vodafone had a 44% share in SFR until April 2011, when it sold its entire share back to SFR's founding parent company Vivendi. SFR is a major partner network of Vodafone in France.[4][5]

Vivendi announced in March 2014 that it planned to sell its SFR division.[6] On 14 March, it announced that it would enter exclusive negotiations with Altice/Numericable, to the exclusion of Bouygues and Iliad.[6] Arnaud Montebourg, the French Minister for Industrial Renewal, triggered considerable concern when he stated that the Numericable/SFR deal was a certainty. Iliad lost 7.5% of its market value on that day.[6]

SFR having 28.6 million subscribers versus 1.7 million for Numericable and much more notoriety, Patrick Drahi announced that SFR will replace Numericable. In late 2015, Numericable Outremer became SFR Caraïbe. On 15 February 2016, Numericable was rebranded as SFR in Belgium and Luxembourg, with the launch of new packages and the SVOD service Zive.

In February 2016, Orange, SFR and Free announced the purchase of their competitor Bouygues Telecom. However, negotiations for the purchase agreement fell through a few months later.[7]

In December 2016, Altice sold SFR Belux to Telenet.[8] SFR was merged in Belgium with Telenet on 31 March 2019, and SFR Luxembourg merged with Eltrona on 1 April 2020.

Slogans

[edit]

SFR TV

[edit]

SFR TV is a television service accessible on La Box de SFR and La Box Fibre de SFR, which delivers television programs via the broadband internet telephone network (xDSL), high-speed internet (FTTHorFTTB fiber within Numericable). The service was also broadcast by satellite with SFR Sat available on the Astra 19.2°E satellite until October 2015.

The SFR TV package includes more than 200 channels, some pay-tv channels can be added as an option, by subscribing to a specific paid package, classified by theme (sport, youth, music, international ...).

On 17 November 2015, Numericable-SFR launched its SVOD service Zive, for the Power bouquet subscribers. Zive and Power packages became SFR Play in 2016.

Altice signed an exclusive agreement with Discovery and NBCUniversal in December 2016. The premium movies and series TV channel Altice Studio was launched on 22 August 2017.

The Numericable and SFR channels numbering were merged on 22 August 2017, and in 2019, the Numericable exclusive channels (MTV, Nickelodeon, J-One, Série Club, Cartoon Network...) were added to SFR ADSL offer. The brand Numericable disappeared.

SFR Sport

[edit]

RMC Sport (formerly SFR Sport) is a package of French TV channels (RMC Sport 1, RMC Sport 2, RMC Sport 3, RMC Sport 4, RMC Sport 1UHD) from the SFR Group devoted to sports. They are available for SFR, Canal+, My.T and OTT subscribers.

In 2016, Altice acquired the rights of many sports competitions (Premier League, Liga NOS, Champions League) to form its SFR Sport bouquet. MCS, MCS Extrême and Kombat Sport were rebranded as SFR Sport 2, SFR Sport 3 and SFR Sport 5 ; and SFR Sport 1 and 4K were launched. The SFR Sport bouquet became RMC Sport on 3 July 2018.

RED by SFR

[edit]

RED by SFR [fr] was launched on 11 October 2011 as SFR's online-only, lower cost flanker brand, in preparation for the launch of Free Mobile the following year.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Altice France CIO quits amid turmoil at group". Fierce Wireless. Retrieved 31 March 2024.
  • ^ a b c "Management's discussion and analysis Altice France for the year ended December 31, 2019" (PDF). altice.net. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  • ^ "Numericable-SFR regagne enfin des clients sur le marché mobile". 15 March 2016. Nextimpact.com, 15 March 2016
  • ^ "Vodafone and SFR strengthen strategic global alliance". Vodafone.com, 7 May 2014
  • ^ "Vivendi Selling SFR to Altice in $23 Billion Deal, Hard-Fought Win for Drahi". Bloomberg News. 7 April 2014. bloomberg.com, 7 April 2014
  • ^ a b c Poncet, Guerric (14 March 2014). "Numericable-SFR : "l'avenir commence aujourd'hui"". Le Point.
  • ^ "Échec des négociations pour la vente de Bouygues Telecom à Orange". Europe 1. April 2016.
  • ^ Kevin Hottot (22 December 2016). "Altice vend ses activités télécoms en Belgique et au Luxembourg pour 400 millions d'euros" (in French). Next Inpact, 22 December 2016
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=SFR&oldid=1228329446"

    Categories: 
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    This page was last edited on 10 June 2024, at 17:10 (UTC).

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