top of page

Like pizza and Instacart, your internet can now be delivered to your doorstep, same-day

  • 7 hours ago
  • 2 min read
xfinity
This story is sponsored by Comast

 

It was a chaotic cacophony of screeching, hissing, static, and rapid buzzing. That was how the internet sounded in the beginning, when it was new and not widely used. Oh, how the times have changed.

 

“Today, the internet is an essential service, something that everybody needs to have,” said Tom Henchal, director of customer experience and product management for Comcast Midwest Region.

 

According to the Pew Research Center, 90% of adults use the internet daily, and the average user spends 6.5 hours online each day.

 

“The average Xfinity customer has 36 connected devices in their home,” added

Jill Hornbacher, senior director, public relations, Comcast Midwest Region. The demand for urgent connectivity is why Xfinity, Comcast’s consumer brand, is spreading the word about being the first major wired internet provider to offer same-day Wi-Fi connectivity.

 

“I mean, could you live without the internet for 5 days?” Henchal was referring to the time it can take to get internet set up in your home, if you move, for example. The timeframe may have worked 10 years ago, but not now, as approximately one-third of Minnesota's workforce, over 900,000 people, work from home, according to the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development.

 

“In a world where almost everything is instant, home Internet shouldn’t be an exception,” said Eric Jagher, senior vice president & general manager, connectivity at Comcast. During an announcement at Comcast’s Xfinity store in Edina, company leaders explained how Xfinity’s same-day Wi-Fi works. New customers now have the option to choose from same-day pick-up at over 15 Xfinity stores statewide or, if available, same-day delivery to their home. Customers have this option after signing up for Xfinity online, and, if they’re eligible and do it before 3 p.m., their internet equipment is delivered to their doorstep the same day.

 

“You’ll get a text message saying the driver has picked up your order and they’re on the way,” Henchal said. “It’s kinda of like a DoorDash experience.”

 

Customers then self-install and activate service, which Henchal says takes just minutes.

 

The option is attractive, especially to the nearly 30,000 new residents who moved to the Twin Cities in the past year. “People used to have to wait days for someone to come out, install, and make sure everything is connected properly,” said Rachel Langsjoen, a real estate agent with Coldwell Banker. “It’s like the Amazon of Wi-Fi, and it’s what people expect nowadays, to be able to get their keys, move into their new home, and start working right away,” Langsjoen added. She attended the Xfinity event in Edina with fellow Coldwell Banker real estate agent Carmen Cyrzan, who emphasized the work-from-home element of the on-demand need for internet. “So many of my clients work from home now. They get very stressed if it’s not ready when they move in.”

 

Once signed up, customers also have access to Xfinity’s 23 million secure Wi-Fi hotspots, and if they are also an entertainment customer, they can access the Xfinity Stream app. Learn more at: https://www.xfinity.com/learn/internet-service/same-day-wifi

 


bottom of page