Prøve GULL - Gratis
Britain's full-fibre alternative Richard Tang, Zen
PC Pro
|June 2025
Zen Internet CEO Richard Tang wants to bring Britain's disparate fibre networks together
-
Britain’s full-fibre networks have become a patchwork quilt of more than 100 different providers. Zen Internet boss Richard Tang wants to do something about that.
As an ISP, striking wholesale deals with different fibre providers is a pain. Different contracts, different pricing, different APIs. So Tang wants Zen to become an “altnet aggregator”, connecting to several different altnets and then allowing channel partners or even rival ISPs access to all those different networks via Zen. One contract, one API, much less hassle.
The curious thing is that even Tang believes that the vast majority of these altnets won't be around in as little as five years' time. A predicted wave of consolidation will see the full-fibre market dwindle down to only a handful of different networks, Tang predicts. So why does he want to become their champion? We sat down with the Zen boss to find out.
PC Pro: Tell us more about your plans to become the altnet aggregator.
Richard Tang: This is something that’s been in the thinking for about a year, 18 months. We signed the [wholesale broadband] deal with CityFibre back in 2022, that’s going really well, but we'd not thought much of going beyond CityFibre. And then 12-18 months ago we were thinking the other altnets are making good progress. Is there an opportunity?
If you look at Zen today, we supply 215,000 broadband lines out of a UK total of something like 28-29 million. So that means we've got 0.7% of UK market share.
Let’s say we could expect 1% or 2% market share on CityFibre [because there's less competition - no BT Broadband, for instance]. Well, that means with 4 million circuits, we could expect maybe 40,000 circuits, up to 80,000 circuits on the current footprint. That’s a lot of circuits. That’s really worthwhile.
Denne historien er fra June 2025-utgaven av PC Pro.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA PC Pro
PC Pro
LG UltraFine 6K Evo
Thunderbolt 5 connectivity and a 6K resolution both impress, but at this price we want OLED technology
3 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
Motorola signature
One of the most stylish phones in the universe, but that comes with a matching price and two compromises
3 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
Geekom X14 Pro
The CPU may be ageing, but Geekom's debut laptop delivers in every other area - if you can find it for sale
3 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
Asus Zenbook Duo (2026)
With a next-gen processor and numerous design improvements, this is the best dual-screen laptop yet
3 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
Dell UltraSharp 52 Thunderbolt Hub Monitor
A superb choice for anyone who currently finds themselves with three or more monitors sitting on their desk
5 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
Investors may still believe in Elon Musk, but Jon Honeyball isn't buying any of it
My day started badly. Still bleary-eyed at 6am, with a bucket of coffee sitting untouched beside me, I dropped the SIM-removal tool into my keyboard.
3 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
Green cloud
Don't entrust your jobs to dirty, energy-hungry servers:
2 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
"I've said it before, and I'll say it again: the biggest obstacle to security is inconvenience"
Have you seen those password books on Amazon? They're not a cybersecurity abomination, despite what you may think
7 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
"Cyber resilience is now treated as a matter of governance rather than pure technical compliance"
Rule Britannia, Britannia waives the rules... or why the shoulder-shrugging Cyber Security and Resilience Bill causes such problems for UK businesses
6 mins
April 2026
PC Pro
"Not to point any fingers here; I seriously doubt the fault lies with our esteemed editor"
Whether it's PDFs from PC Pro's editor, Outlook messages or his partner's photos, space is at a premium for Steve this month
9 mins
April 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

