Boost Mobile

Boost is steadily growing every month. Hardly dead. We have Boost phone and/or sim delivery and setup work orders every day.


WAS WAS WAS. The more you post, the more I realize that you don't know WTH you're talking about

I don't understand this constant hatred for everything about Dish. If you hate Dish so much, why do you spend so much time in the Dish forum?
How can't you grasp the fact that Boost as an MNO is dead? They sold off their key spectrum, they are defaulting on their payments, people are reporting they can no longer connect to the native network. They are no longer a facilities based provider, they are an MVNO. The brand is not dead, but the network and spirit between the Dish Wireless experiment is dead.

Being your livelihood depends on Dish and Boost, I understand your biases and you're being blind to things. As as said, I had Boost Mobile and wanted to give them a fair shake, I want to see a fourth carrier for added competition, I pay over $110/month for HughesNet Internet and Voice as a back up connection. I am supporting the company that supports your livelihood and I wanted to see Dish Wireless succeed. So how me stating simple facts constitutes 'hate' is beyond me. How is me openly saying many times 'I wish Dish Wireless would have been a succuss' so-called 'hate'? Why did I spend hours on the phone, across multiple calls to get service from a company I 'hate'?

The world troll is so meaningless and laugh out loud funny. Troll = Anyone who disagrees or provides a differing opinion. I primary only post in threads related to Wireless as that's where my passion lies these days. The interest and willingness to learn I had with satellite TV 20 years ago has faded and I've moved on to wireless.
 
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Other than your blatant racism, we're setting up boost customers outside of "the ghetto" way more often than anywhere else. Every one of of these workorders I've been on have been in rural areas - where Dish is more prevalent, and newer suburban neighborhoods.
I have nothing against Habib, and am NOT being racist at all. Walk into any of these small cell phone stores, that are NOT AT&T, T-Mobile or Verizon, and they are all usually Chaldean, Indian, or Arabic owned. The exact same ethnic groups that run the corner liquor stores in the "Hood" run the small cell phone shops.

If you have ever worked or done business in the inner city, or live in a major metropolitan area such as Washington DC, Atlanta, Houston or Chicago you can relate to this.

The whole problem with Boost is that the name has a bad reputation with being associated with people who don't have good enough credit to get a real phone with AT&T, Verizon, or T-Mobile. They go to Boost because it was prepaid and didn't require a credit check. Boost used to sell the cheaper phones that none of us on this forum could ever imagine having to use on a daily basis.

First thing Dish should have done was change the name when the took it over. Dish wireless was not a good name either, as people would have associated the name with Dish, which lets face it Dish doesn't have a good reputation either because its associated with Satellite, just like nobody would buy a Directv branded iPhone. Echostar wireless would have been a better choice since nobody knows what Echostar is and that its associated with Dish.

Now as far as you going to the rural areas to setup Boost phones, lets get into this. First and foremost, what is your demographic of the typical Dish customer?

First your typical Dish customer usually lives in a rural area, mostly because the cable company doesn't service their area and they can't get internet. If they could get highspeed internet through the cable company, they would have left Dish years ago and would be in a bundle with the cable company.

Typical Dish customer is older, perhaps 55 years of age or older. They may be on a fixed income, and may subscribe to some of the cheaper plans that are not offered by Directv or even the cable companies.

These customers are all about saving what little money they have, and when seeing the inserts with their bill every month, screen saver advertisements and even direct mail advertisements advertising cell phone service for $15/Mo, its just what these customers are looking for. I doubt most of these customers even realize what they are signing up for, as all they see is Dish giving them a phone for $15

Now that you mention work orders, are you now hand delivering phones to people? Do they have you sitting down with these customers in their homes, setting up their new phone, transferring all their cat photos, and showing them how to use it?

I don't have the patients for that, but it seems like Charlie has you guys doing everything today except for installing satellites. He has got you guys selling and installing sound bars, selling screen cleaner, doing house calls for cell phone screen replacement, and I don't know if this is still going on, but didn't they have you running around as the Maytag repair man?

I totally get what Dish is trying to do offering $15 cell phone plans and holding customers hands throughout the entire process. It makes for a lot stickier customer, which is what Dish really needs right now. However I don't see very many new customers jumping on the Dish bandwagon so to speak to get in on this offer,

I don't see myself getting Boost unless I need a burner phone for something,
 
your typical Dish customer usually lives in a rural area, mostly because the cable company doesn't service their area and they can't get internet. If they could get highspeed internet through the cable company, they would have left Dish years ago

I live in a suburb of DC and I still have Dish. And Verizon FiOS.

…what's that fat broad next door bellowing out now?
 
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Years ago, I had Cingular, then AT&T up until about 2016. Was paying about $150 per month for 2 phones. Switched to Consumer Cellular, ended up with the same service. Added a phone for my daughter, and was paying about $100 a month.

I switched to Boost in October, 3 phones, $45.42 per month. Same AT&T towers.
But now, I have unlimited Talk Text, and unlimited DATA for that price.
I don't care that it's a MVNO. I don't care that EchoStar gave up their plan to offer their own service. It was easy to switch, and it costs way less.

I used to have to tell my daughter to watch her data use. Now, it does not matter.
 
I have been very satisfied with Dish Boost Mobile. I live in the country halfway between Plain City and Marysville Ohio (about 35 miles northwest of Columbus. I was paying over $50 per month for T-Mobile and my cell service was poor. I often had to go outside to get service.
I have had Boost Mobile since July 2025 paying $15.09 per month. I have 2 bars of service in my house and I never loose service when going to Plain City or Marysville. With T-mobile I would lose service along Darby Creek. In September we drove to Branson Missouri for vacation. During the drive I watched my connection and we seemed to always have cell service.
I have WiFi at home, Cub scouts, and church so I use very little data. Last months data usage was 7.70 GB and 333 KB roaming.
So I will continue to pay $15.09 per month and enjoy my Boost Mobile.
By the way the Boost Mobile store in Marysville is downtown in an excellent location. I don't consider Marysville Ohio to be the ghetto.


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The whole problem with Boost is that the name has a bad reputation with being associated with people who don't have good enough credit to get a real phone with AT&T, Verizon, or T-Mobile. They go to Boost because it was prepaid and didn't require a credit check. Boost used to sell the cheaper phones that none of us on this forum could ever imagine having to use on a daily basis.

True, and a lot of people still think like this and even lump T-Mobile into that category as well. It's such outdated thinking, it hearkens back to the days when the only way to buy a phone (Nokia candy bar or flip phone!) was through a carrier.

Now the smart people buy direct from Apple, Google, Samsung, Motorola etc. and use an MVNO.

I still shake my head at the people getting into payments on a phone and spending over $100 a month on a cell phone bill. So glad those days are behind us, if you want them to be.
 
I am 73 and have been doing Cub Scouts for 42 years. I now have dads with children in my pack that I was their leader in Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts. It keeps me young.


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It'd exhaust me into my grave.

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I have nothing against Habib, and am NOT being racist at all. Walk into any of these small cell phone stores, that are NOT AT&T, T-Mobile or Verizon, and they are all usually Chaldean, Indian, or Arabic owned. The exact same ethnic groups that run the corner liquor stores in the "Hood" run the small cell phone shops.

If you have ever worked or done business in the inner city, or live in a major metropolitan area such as Washington DC, Atlanta, Houston or Chicago you can relate to this.

The whole problem with Boost is that the name has a bad reputation with being associated with people who don't have good enough credit to get a real phone with AT&T, Verizon, or T-Mobile. They go to Boost because it was prepaid and didn't require a credit check. Boost used to sell the cheaper phones that none of us on this forum could ever imagine having to use on a daily basis.

First thing Dish should have done was change the name when the took it over. Dish wireless was not a good name either, as people would have associated the name with Dish, which lets face it Dish doesn't have a good reputation either because its associated with Satellite, just like nobody would buy a Directv branded iPhone. Echostar wireless would have been a better choice since nobody knows what Echostar is and that its associated with Dish.

Now as far as you going to the rural areas to setup Boost phones, lets get into this. First and foremost, what is your demographic of the typical Dish customer?

First your typical Dish customer usually lives in a rural area, mostly because the cable company doesn't service their area and they can't get internet. If they could get highspeed internet through the cable company, they would have left Dish years ago and would be in a bundle with the cable company.

Typical Dish customer is older, perhaps 55 years of age or older. They may be on a fixed income, and may subscribe to some of the cheaper plans that are not offered by Directv or even the cable companies.

These customers are all about saving what little money they have, and when seeing the inserts with their bill every month, screen saver advertisements and even direct mail advertisements advertising cell phone service for $15/Mo, its just what these customers are looking for. I doubt most of these customers even realize what they are signing up for, as all they see is Dish giving them a phone for $15

Now that you mention work orders, are you now hand delivering phones to people? Do they have you sitting down with these customers in their homes, setting up their new phone, transferring all their cat photos, and showing them how to use it?

I don't have the patients for that, but it seems like Charlie has you guys doing everything today except for installing satellites. He has got you guys selling and installing sound bars, selling screen cleaner, doing house calls for cell phone screen replacement, and I don't know if this is still going on, but didn't they have you running around as the Maytag repair man?

I totally get what Dish is trying to do offering $15 cell phone plans and holding customers hands throughout the entire process. It makes for a lot stickier customer, which is what Dish really needs right now. However I don't see very many new customers jumping on the Dish bandwagon so to speak to get in on this offer,

I don't see myself getting Boost unless I need a burner phone for something,
Yes, exactly, they are going to the home to set cx's up with mobile service. Presumably it's a full service like with setting up sat- programming phones, downloading apps, teaching use. Whether this would extend to in-home aftercare, IDK. As far as DiSH installers pushing ancillary items, that's been a thing for many years- as dealers charlie told us not to expect to profit from doing satellite but rather to view it as a door opener to profit from selling other stuff whilst there. I'm not making that up, btw. I guess that's how we were supposed to fill up those big money clips he handed out.
 
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I have a PIXELAK47 hooked up to what may be a MMVKGVO. I like hoods when it rains. Yesterday I drove by a place that said Boost on it - I probably wouldn't have noticed it if I hadn't read this thread. It looked fine, but so far I've set up my own phones. I suppose if they want to send someone, that's OK too. So far, Boost is sounding pretty good.
 
How can't you grasp the fact that Boost as an MNO is dead?
NO SH*T SHERLOCK!
How can't YOU grasp that idea ended months ago??
You're going on about something Dish abandoned when they sold off the Spectrum to AT&T.

And MY Bias?? You are nothing BUT biased against Dish. For years I've rolled my eyes over your Dish-does-nothing-right posts. Aren;t you a DTV guy?? WTH are they doing, besides dying on the vine?
It's friggin tedious, man.
 
I have nothing against Habib, and am NOT being racist at all. Walk into any of these small cell phone stores, that are NOT AT&T, T-Mobile or Verizon, and they are all usually Chaldean, Indian, or Arabic owned. The exact same ethnic groups that run the corner liquor stores in the "Hood" run the small cell phone shops.

If you have ever worked or done business in the inner city, or live in a major metropolitan area such as Washington DC, Atlanta, Houston or Chicago you can relate to this.

The whole problem with Boost is that the name has a bad reputation with being associated with people who don't have good enough credit to get a real phone with AT&T, Verizon, or T-Mobile. They go to Boost because it was prepaid and didn't require a credit check. Boost used to sell the cheaper phones that none of us on this forum could ever imagine having to use on a daily basis.

First thing Dish should have done was change the name when the took it over. Dish wireless was not a good name either, as people would have associated the name with Dish, which lets face it Dish doesn't have a good reputation either because its associated with Satellite, just like nobody would buy a Directv branded iPhone. Echostar wireless would have been a better choice since nobody knows what Echostar is and that its associated with Dish.

Now as far as you going to the rural areas to setup Boost phones, lets get into this. First and foremost, what is your demographic of the typical Dish customer?

First your typical Dish customer usually lives in a rural area, mostly because the cable company doesn't service their area and they can't get internet. If they could get highspeed internet through the cable company, they would have left Dish years ago and would be in a bundle with the cable company.

Typical Dish customer is older, perhaps 55 years of age or older. They may be on a fixed income, and may subscribe to some of the cheaper plans that are not offered by Directv or even the cable companies.

These customers are all about saving what little money they have, and when seeing the inserts with their bill every month, screen saver advertisements and even direct mail advertisements advertising cell phone service for $15/Mo, its just what these customers are looking for. I doubt most of these customers even realize what they are signing up for, as all they see is Dish giving them a phone for $15

Now that you mention work orders, are you now hand delivering phones to people? Do they have you sitting down with these customers in their homes, setting up their new phone, transferring all their cat photos, and showing them how to use it?

I don't have the patients for that, but it seems like Charlie has you guys doing everything today except for installing satellites. He has got you guys selling and installing sound bars, selling screen cleaner, doing house calls for cell phone screen replacement, and I don't know if this is still going on, but didn't they have you running around as the Maytag repair man?

I totally get what Dish is trying to do offering $15 cell phone plans and holding customers hands throughout the entire process. It makes for a lot stickier customer, which is what Dish really needs right now. However I don't see very many new customers jumping on the Dish bandwagon so to speak to get in on this offer,

I don't see myself getting Boost unless I need a burner phone for something,
Boost is no longer burner phones, and I've been in every Boost Store in Central IL, from Peoria to Danville, and every town in between. ZERO was Indian-owned. Not one. Your entire promise is old news.
$15 is only for Dish customers, so let's come back to the real world and talk about $25, which is NOT unique in the industry any longer.
Also, that's for bring your own, no contract, pay as you go, which is only a segment of the work orders.

Comparable low-rate plans (BYOP-friendly)

$15–$25 range (real bargains)

  • Visible: $25/mo base unlimited (taxes/fees included)
    Also currently running a promo at $19/mo for 26 months with code (if still active when you try).
  • Mint Mobile: often $15/mo for unlimited when you prepay multi-month (promo; not the forever price).
  • Cricket Wireless: $25/mo unlimited when you prepay $300 for 12 months (BYOP, single-line).
  • Straight Talk: advertises $25/mo "real unlimited" with BYOP (promo terms apply).
  • T-Mobile Connect: $15/mo (5GB) or $25/mo (8GB) (not unlimited, but dirt-cheap and straightforward).

Also worth a look (usually cheap, but plan varies)

  • Tello Mobile: customizable plans that can be very low depending on data; good if you don't need unlimited.
 
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NO SH*T SHERLOCK!
How can't YOU grasp that idea ended months ago??
You're going on about something Dish abandoned when they sold off the Spectrum to AT&T.

And MY Bias?? You are nothing BUT biased against Dish. For years I've rolled my eyes over your Dish-does-nothing-right posts. Aren;t you a DTV guy?? WTH are they doing, besides dying on the vine?
It's friggin tedious, man.
I do grasp that concept, you don't seem to as you push Boost since it makes you $$$. Yes, I have DirecTV along with Spectrum cable. Spectrum is my primary source or TV viewing, DirecTV for during power outages. I have no emotional attachment to DirecTV, I really don't care what happens to them. The service could go away tomorrow and it wouldn't be a big deal to me.

I skimmed though my posts and went back to the Fall of 2019, and with a couple of exceptions, pretty much the only time I've posted in the Dish Network forum is when it's wireless related. They did nothing right as far as becoming a wireless carrier is concerned, that is a true statement. You can deny all you want, but if they did something right, they would still have a network.

Again, I have HughesNet, I wanted to have a line on the Boost native network. If I am so biased, that wouldn't be the case.

When I got to the store locator on Boost's website and type in 14051, the zip code East Amherst, one of one of the more wealthier and snobbish areas of the Buffalo metro area as you know, this is the closest store. So welcoming, so inviting.

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This reminds me of a statement I read about computer companies back in the 1970s. It went something like: When people go to a mainframe company, they expect beautiful buildings, great lawns, no expenses spared on the decor or clothing, the mainframe company being made of money is comforting - it means they will always be there to take care of you.

When people visit a microprocessor company, they expect a cheap building in the middle of nowhere with old furniture and guys in cheap suits or jeans - which is comforting because they want to buy their microprocessors at rock-bottom prices.

And mini-computer companies are in the middle with nice but economical/sensible furniture.

I guess I buy my phones like microprocessors, and that building looks fine to me. I bought my dish system in 2000 from a company that operated out of the back of a building like that. No windows to even worry about back there.

When I was a kid dad was always taking me to places like that to save $50 so it seems perfectly normal to me.
 
I do grasp that concept, you don't seem to as you push Boost since it makes you $$$. Yes, I have DirecTV along with Spectrum cable. Spectrum is my primary source or TV viewing, DirecTV for during power outages. I have no emotional attachment to DirecTV, I really don't care what happens to them. The service could go away tomorrow and it wouldn't be a big deal to me.

I skimmed though my posts and went back to the Fall of 2019, and with a couple of exceptions, pretty much the only time I've posted in the Dish Network forum is when it's wireless related. They did nothing right as far as becoming a wireless carrier is concerned, that is a true statement. You can deny all you want, but if they did something right, they would still have a network.

Again, I have HughesNet, I wanted to have a line on the Boost native network. If I am so biased, that wouldn't be the case.

When I got to the store locator on Boost's website and type in 14051, the zip code East Amherst, one of one of the more wealthier and snobbish areas of the Buffalo metro area as you know, this is the closest store. So welcoming, so inviting.
Sigh E. Amherst.... figures..... I grew up in 14228.....
Regardless, I'm sick of the constant attack on Dish. I bought my house, pay my bills and feed my family with everything Dish does. All I care about is that every customer is happy when I leave, whether it's their TV, internet or phone service. And they are.
 

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