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“Peter possesses a keen sense and insight for turning telecom services and products into customers and dollars. He is passionate about this industry, his work and the people he serves. Visit his site, read his blog and sign up for his newsletter at marketingideaguy.com and you will discover what makes Peter a sought after marketing consultant.”

Cynthia de Lorenzi, CEO, Patriot Computer Group

TowerStream is Marketing 4G
NSP Strategist
Sunday, 23 January 2011 05:04
TowerStream is a sponsor of 4GWE in Miami Beach on Feb. 2. They are advertising 5 Mbps of Internet Bandwidth for $500 with free install and 1st and last months free on a 2 year contract. TowerStream emphasizes that it is Symmetric bandwidth, which makes me wonder how 4G ties in.On their website, they advertise 8 Mbps for $799 on a 2 year with fee install within 5 days. Service guarantee includes

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Nine Minutes About SEO
On Rad's Radar
Friday, 21 January 2011 08:54

TMC's Rich Tehrani joins me for a short discussion about Search Engine Optimization (SEO).

TMC logo

For me, the significant components of SEO are picking the right keyword (as Rich explains in the podcast) and great content that is kept current. An example of that would be a webpage with a headline (and proper URL) for a popular question like What is the difference between PAAS and IAAS? (The URL should be the headline, btw). Some people ask that in the search engines. It's highly relevant with keywords and hopefully a well written answer.

We didn't get into Lead Generation too much or landing pages or blogging or online marketing strategy or online-offline integration or even social CRM. But for the nine minutes we do explain that if your business wants help with Branding or Lead Gen, TMC's online communities can certainly be effective, as I have seen with clients who have used them.

Read more... [Nine Minutes About SEO]
 
The Winds of Change on The Channel
On Rad's Radar
Thursday, 20 January 2011 10:38

The last six months has seen many channels at the Channel Chief level at XO, Level3, MegaPath, and other carriers. Also, the M&A has resulted in a tumulus time for The Channel. Qwest and CentruyLink. Embarq and CenturyTel. New Edge Networks with One Comm. and Deltacom. CavTel and PAETEC. And on and on.

Meanwhile, the buzz of mobility and Cloud probably has you up at night. Shifting to selling cell phones and this thing called Cloud while wondering if your commission streams are going to stop or decrease or change is stressful.

Even the TCA is changing things up by introducing a certification program. Just one more thing for you to think about.

It seems like the carriers have ramped up the communication to the agents this past year too. So many notices of training, promotions, new services and the reminders that go along with it. How much time can you spend on training when the prices are dropping and you have to sell more to make less??

Then there's all that talk about social media. Should you be tweeting and facebooking and what do you do with that mess on LinkedIn? Should I be blogging? About what?

All those changes in a year. Amazing, huh? And I didn't mention Hosted PBX, UC, HD Voice, SIP over MPLS, Managed Security, UTM and the rest of the alphabet soup that tumbled our way via email, social media, webinars and news. What's an Agent to do?

Change is a constant. Don't bury your head in the sand. Schedule 20 minutes a week to read up on the changes. Take some quiet time to evaluate your business. Working smarter is a prerequisite for success today, but that doesn't preclude working harder too. Take time at CVX or CP to talk to other agents. It's the best part of the shows. (If you are a TCA member, you can network with other agents on our listserv or on a conference call.)

Read more... [The Winds of Change on The Channel]
 
Not So Shocking News
On Rad's Radar
Thursday, 20 January 2011 09:16
FCC

The FCC approved the merger of Comcast and NBCU (announcement pdf here) "with conditions and enforceable commitments", whatever that means, since its enforcement history has been simply laughable in fostering any competition at all.

"As part of the merger, Comcast-NBCU will be required to take affirmative steps to foster competition in the video marketplace. In addition, Comcast-NBCU will increase local news coverage to viewers; expand children's programming; enhance the diversity of programming available to Spanish-speaking viewers; offer broadband services to low-income Americans at reduced monthly prices; and provide high-speed broadband to schools, libraries and underserved communities, among other public benefits."

I agree with FCC Commish Copps, "But all the majority's efforts--diligent though they were--to ameliorate these harms cannot mask the truth that this Comcast-NBCU joint venture grievously fails the public interest. I searched in vain for the benefits." Haven't we seen enough Too-Big-To-Fail?? A cableco owning a lot of content will not be good for consumers or competition. Again I ask, why do we even have the FCC any more? Oh, wait I know.

The FCC is set to auction off 125 MHz of TV spectrum for mobile broadband. That means that the big 4 cellcos - T-Mobiel, Sprint, VZW and Ma Bell - can buy more spectrum. Of course, the TV broadcasters are fighting the FCC on taking their spectrum. It's not their spectrum any more than it is the cellcos spectrum. But whatever. If they auction off this spectrum, what happens to the unlicensed white spaces?

Meanwhile, the House Energy & Commerce Committee's Communications and Technology Subcommittee is set to hold a hearing on the Net Neutrality rules and "Abuse of Authority and Process". Should be fun. More fun than trying to fix things.

Read more... [Not So Shocking News]
 
It's the Content Stupid!
On Rad's Radar
Wednesday, 19 January 2011 21:15
content-is-king1.jpgAt a networking event on Monday night in Tampa, I ran into an SEO guy, who proceeded to explain that Google search results (SERPs) would be all paid soon. He didn't know the difference between an SEO strategy and managing a PPC (pay-per-click) campaign. (The Cranky Bastards discuss this on this week's podcast - and I will be discussing SEO and Lead Gen with TMC's Anthony Graffeo Friday).

I tried to explain that organic SEO will always work - meaning content like crack will beat any paid campaign. If I have the best, most relevant content that is updated regularly, I win the SERP war. Page 1 Baby!

It's always about content.

As we head into conference season with the ITEXPO East 2011 in Miami Beach, attendees will be seeing a change in the content from panels. Instead of each panelist presenting, each panel will be a conversation with heavy audience participation.

This shift started with a blog post from Scott Stratten that centers around providing the audience with crack-like content (in other words, content that they get addicted to).  TMC has a long history of providing not just industry news, but various viewpoints and analysis from many contributors in the Industry about our Industry. In a 2.0 world of UGC (user-generated content), it was time to incorporate as much interaction with the audience as we can.  It should be interesting. Content is still King!

I organize BarCamp Tampa Bay which is an UN-conference for techies and creatives with no agenda. Each morning anyone that wants to present can sign up for a slot to do so. Passionate people make great presenters because they have an enthusiasm for the topic that they are talking about. I love that. (You'll see that from me if you watch my Net-Head talk on the CVX Expo at 3:15 on 2/3.)

Watch Thomas Howe or Rich Tehrani talk - passion baby. Gary Vee style. It's something to aspire to if you are sitting on a panel, because if you just want to read me your brochure or your slides, you are boring (and probably bored!). Tell me what excites you about your company, your industry or your services.

Read more... [It's the Content Stupid!]
 
Cox Business on Hosted PBX Roll Out
On Rad's Radar
Wednesday, 19 January 2011 21:13
cox business hospitality

I recently interviewed Mike Bolognini, vice president of Cox Business and Hospitality Network in Las Vegas, about the planned rollout of Hosted PBX in Southern Nevada. Below are Mr. Bolognini's responses.

RAD: What is the biggest challenge you will face as you plan the rollout of Hosted PBX in Southern Nevada?

COX: The introduction of any new technology brings with it a learning curve. As applications and services are deployed online and into the hands of consumers, consumers are tasked with understanding how to navigate through the technology in order to get the most out of it. In the business world, premise-based PBX systems were managed by a dedicated operator so business owners could rely on that individual for systems management. But as new technology is made available and affordable for new business audiences - specifically the small and medium sized businesses that are such a big part of our clientele here in Southern Nevada - so too is the expectation that a certain learning curve will have to be mastered.
Hosted PBX has a myriad of advanced tools and features, and our goal is to help our clients learn how to use these successfully. But even though we'll offer our award-winning product support and training when we begin our rollout of Hosted PBX, everyone's learning curve is different. And even though our web management tools are fairly intuitive, we're hopeful our clients will break through the learning curve to become proficient users of this new, powerful and remarkably advanced product.

RAD: How will you manage customer deployments on more than 25 seats in so many metro areas?

COX: Hosted PBX deployments will be managed in the same way all other Cox Business products and features are managed--through our locally franchised commercial services operations. Cox Business is a facilities-based operator with a local presence in every market we serve including here in Southern Nevada. We have local business relationships and local account representatives while some of our competitors may only be providing sales and support through out-of-area offices. Our competitive advantage is and will continue to be a local presence. For this reason, deployments of 25 seats or more will be managed quite capably by our teams here in Southern Nevada. This is what we do and we're very good at it.

RAD: How are you approaching your rollout of Hosted PBX?

COX: Hosted PBX will put powerful telecommunications tools in the hands of some completely new audiences. That said, we're approaching the rollout of this new product in the same way we approach everything else: as trusted provider of communication and entertainment services in Southern Nevada. We have a great track record for customer satisfaction as evidenced by the many third-party awards and acknowledgements we've received, so we understand a thing or two about how to rollout new products and enhanced features. In Southern Nevada, we're creating a completely new full-time position to exclusively manage and monitor customer training for the rollout of Hosted PBX. Again, we're going to help our clientele master the learning curve.

RAD: That new person will be the difference between these Hosted PBX roll outs proceed smoothly for the customer or not. Hosted PBX is not a plug-and-play service. Lots of details to look at, plan for and provision.

RAD: What do you think 2011 will look like for Hosted PBX?

COX: I see a tremendous growth opportunity for Hosted PBX in Southern Nevada in 2011. Businesses have been delaying purchase and/or upgrade decisions due to the economy, but even so--there has not been a significant change in PBX/Key Systems technology since 2000. Phone systems are designed with a system life of about seven years and because of the economic downturn system life has stretched so some ten years now. Hosted PBX will give business owners an opportunity to replace their ageing phone systems without the traditionally high levels of capital. This situation will bode well for us and our clientele!

RAD: 2011 could be the year that Hosted PBX breaks 500K seats for one company. I certainly hope someone hits it out of the park.

Read more... [Cox Business on Hosted PBX Roll Out]
 
Google Voice LNP Available?
On Rad's Radar
Wednesday, 19 January 2011 19:01
Google Voice is now porting numbers for $20! According to Engadget, TechCrunch and Android Cantral, Google is now porting numbers. However, when I try to reach the URL for porting at GV, 404 error. Plus nothing official on the GOOG Blogs.

Read more... [Google Voice LNP Available?]
 
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