It really is interesting watching John Legere's impact on T-Mobile. T-Mobile was doing meh when he came in around 2012, turned it into the best of the big three, was wildly successful in both expanding the network and subscriber counts, and then left in 2020.
Mike Sievert has been slowly undoing all of John Legere's reforms rolling back to pre-2012 T-Mobile that was a middling network on the downswing. This is just yet another example of the enshittification of T-Mobile back to irrelevancy at Mike Sievert's hands.
PS - It wasn't all rainbows and sunshine under John Legere. He definitely had a "move fast and break things" approach, and broke a lot of things, often with stores hearing about promotions after customers. Plus the network had multiple break-ins during his tenure.
> ”T-Mobile will never change the price you pay for your T-Mobile One plan”
> T-Mobile also published an FAQ that answered the question, "What happens if you do raise the price of my T-Mobile One service?" It explained that the only guarantee is T-Mobile will pay your final month's bill if the price goes up and you decide to cancel
Mike Sievert has been slowly undoing all of John Legere's reforms rolling back to pre-2012 T-Mobile that was a middling network on the downswing. This is just yet another example of the enshittification of T-Mobile back to irrelevancy at Mike Sievert's hands.
PS - It wasn't all rainbows and sunshine under John Legere. He definitely had a "move fast and break things" approach, and broke a lot of things, often with stores hearing about promotions after customers. Plus the network had multiple break-ins during his tenure.