This chart from the Wall Street Journal shows how Verizon is changing its bundling and plan 
offerings in favor of more flexibility but eliminating the cheapest plans
This graph compares the costs of three Verizon cellular plans: a newly developed one (designed 
to help users save money), a current 2GB/monthly plan, and a currently available unlimited 
one. The following information is presented for one smartphone. For unlimited voice and text, 
2GB/month under the new plan costs the user $100. For 450 minutes of voice calls without a 
texting plan, 2GB/month under the current cheap 2GB/monthly plan costs the user $70. For unlimited 
voice and text, 2GB/month under the current unlimited plan costs the user $120. The following 
information is presented for a plan that covers three smartphones. For unlimited voice and 
text, a shared 6GB/month under the new plan costs $200. For 450 minutes of voice calls without 
a texting plan, 2GB/month per phone under the current 2GB/month plan costs $170. Finally, 
for unlimited voice and text, 2GB/month per phone under the current unlimited plan costs $290. 
In general, the graph shows that the newly developed unlimited plan is successful in saving 
users money while offering the same amenities.
The image depicts Verizon's new approach to pricing by restructuring some of their current 
plans, while also eliminating other cheaper plans altogether.
This chart illustrates Verizon's new approach to pricing including changing the types of plans 
and eliminating smaller plans.  It compares new plans to current cheapest and current unlimited 
plans.
The picture describes the various products and services by verizon for a new plan; current 
cheapest plan and current unlimited plan. The new plan has unlimited voice and text, though 
it is the most expensive. The second most expensive is the current unlimited plan.
This chart from the Wall Street Journal shows how Verizon is overhauling its cell phone plan 
bundles to eliminate the cheapest option but allow customers to find a plan that costs less
The image depicts Verizon's new pricing strategy as reducing prices on some current plans, 
while also eliminating other cheaper plans for new smartphone users.
This article is about how Verizon new plan will help people save money but also take away 
even cheaper plans. Then they compare the new plan with the current cheapest plan, and the 
unlimited plan. 
This graph represents Verizon's new approach to pricing with plans that will save subscribers 
money.  This graph highlights the savings between one phone vs. up to three on a data plan.
In this study from the Wall Street Journal- from data obtained from Verizon- we see that it 
is more affordable with a family plan than an individual plan. There are savings to be had. 
This is a chart showing Verizon's new idea for plans. It is a plan that helps some subscribers 
save money but eliminates some cheaper plans which other customers use. The chart compares 
these two.
This is a graphic that is meant to illustrate new billing strategies being implemented by 
Verizon Wireless. These plans are meant to help some subscribers save money.
The figure presented is titled Top Billing.  The figure is a representation of the statistical 
data for Verizon's new approach to pricing plans that help save money.