Whole-home Wi-Fi specialist introduces new offering tailored for service providers that features Wi-Fi 6 hardware and a mix of network analytics and security features.

Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor

October 6, 2020

4 Min Read
Amazon's Eero takes aim at ISPs

Eero, the mesh Wi-Fi company acquired by Amazon in early 2019, is ramping up its service provider strategy.

After initially focusing on the retail market and signing a few deals with ISPs along the way, Eero has been investing more heavily in analytical and network monitoring tools in recent months. That work has been wrapped into a new product set tailored for cable operators, telcos and other broadband service providers.

Figure 1: Eero's offering for service providers includes its recently launched Wi-Fi 6-capable hardware. (Source: Eero) Eero's offering for service providers includes its recently launched Wi-Fi 6-capable hardware.
(Source: Eero)

The initial release of that new offering, called Eero for Service Providers, is set to launch next month in the US and Canada, with plans to add enhancements and additional capabilities to it in December and into 2021. Eero is also starting to ramp up expansion plans in other international markets, including Europe and the Asia- Pacific region.

Eero began to reach out to ISPs with its Wi-Fi mesh products and technologies in a more limited way starting in 2017. That less focused effort has generated agreements with several small and midsized cable operators, including RCN, Wave Broadband, Grande Communications, Sonic, TDS, WideOpenWest, Shentel, Blue Ridge Communications, Hotwire, MetroNet and Canada-based Eastlink. All ISPs in that group will have the option to transition to the Eero for Service Provider offering, according to Mark Sieglock, Eero's GM of software services.

Sieglock estimates that ISPs now make up about a third of Eero's customer base. Since March, when stay-at-home orders started to wash over the nation, Eero has seen a 50%-plus increase in customers delivered through ISP partners.

ISPs "have been racing to keep up with the demand" for new managed, in-home Wi-Fi products that deliver more speed, reliability and coverage as people continue to work and school from home, Sieglock said. "We think the trends … are here to stay."

Eero's new service provider-focused product comprises three primary pieces:

  • Eero Insight – A premium addition that builds on Eero's existing Remote Network Management software, it collects and aggregates anonymized data that can help an ISP predict and jump on customer problems before they escalate. Eero believes that the system – which provides historical speed tests, outage detection, alerts and a fleet-level view – can result in a 30% reduction in time spent resolving Wi-Fi issues and help to reduce truck rolls and other operating expenses.

  • Eero Secure: A set of security, privacy and parental features that, for example, can be used to block malware, spyware and unwanted ads. Eero's software also lets users manage their in-home Wi-Fi network, including the ability to "pause" access to the network and set up guest credentials.

  • Eero's new 6 Series Wi-Fi hardware equipped with Wi-Fi 6 and a built-in Zigbee smart home hub.

Figure 2: Eero says its 'Insights' system gives ISPs a fleet-level view of Wi-Fi performance, including dashboards and tools that keep tabs on outages and potential outages, bandwidth utilization audit logs. (Source: eero) Eero says its 'Insights' system gives ISPs a fleet-level view of Wi-Fi performance, including dashboards and tools that keep tabs on outages and potential outages, bandwidth utilization audit logs.
(Source: eero)

Crowded market

Eero's increased emphasis on the service providers signals stiffer competition for home Wi-Fi hardware and software suppliers that are squarely focused on that part of the market – a group that includes AirTies, Plume, Assia, Minim and CommScope, among others.

Comcast is also a player in this segment with "xFi," its Wi-Fi/smart home management platform, as well as its next-gen lineup of xFi Pod extenders. Technology syndication partners such as Cox Communications, Rogers Communications, Shaw Communications and Videotron are among the major North American cable operators that have tapped into Comcast's mix of video and broadband products.

Comcast has also developed a home cybersecurity platform that is now offered for free to millions of high-speed Internet subscribers that use qualified, operator-supplied gateways. Comcast originally launched that product, called xFi Advanced Security, for an additional $5.99 per month.

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— Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor, Light Reading

About the Author(s)

Jeff Baumgartner

Senior Editor, Light Reading

Jeff Baumgartner is a Senior Editor for Light Reading and is responsible for the day-to-day news coverage and analysis of the cable and video sectors. Follow him on X and LinkedIn.

Baumgartner also served as Site Editor for Light Reading Cable from 2007-2013. In between his two stints at Light Reading, he led tech coverage for Multichannel News and was a regular contributor to Broadcasting + Cable. Baumgartner was named to the 2018 class of the Cable TV Pioneers.

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