Peter Radizeski is Founder and President of RAD-INFO INC. He is an accomplished blogalyst, speaker, author and consultant. He has helped many service providers with sales training, marketing, channel development and business strategy. He is a trusted source of knowledge about the telecom sector. His honest and direct approach make him a refreshing speaker.

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How Will the Consolidation Affect Sales?

If everyone did integration in a similar fashion to the XO-Verizon deal, it would be great. Slow and steady. It isn’t a sprint; it is a marathon. No confusion or chaos. The channel folks even seemed happy about it, but that might have been the effects of Stockholm under Icahn.

What happens with Broadview Networks under Windstream? Windstream is only midway through its integration of EarthLink. It will now have 8 UC platforms.

  1. Broadsoft used for Hospitality and 1M SIP Trunks
  2. Acquired EarthLink (Metaswitch shop for Virtual & HPBX)
  3. Allworx (owned by Paetec and forgotten till recently)
  4. Now the Broadview home brew platform.
  5. MITEL
  6. Cisco
  7. Avaya
  8. ShoreTel

That isn’t too confusing to all of the sales channels. Eight to choose from! WIND should be a one stop shop for everything UC and SIP at this point. [Similar to VARs hitting up a VAD like SYNNEX for many of these same vendors.] To do that, WIND would have to hire in some name brand SIP Experts to start beating that drum – loud, clearly and often. Currently, the message is a new flavor of UC every webinar. No over-arching

The noise about T-Mobile and Sprint merging is getting louder. Here’s the problem: Recall the mess that the Nextel-Sprint integration was. This will be worse. Why? T-Mobile didn’t even really integrate MetroPCS. What synergies are there really? It would simply be to get bigger, not to be a better competitor. For at least 24 months, VZW and AT&T would simply kick its ass – and they wouldn’t be able to do anything about it.

That sums up the Level3-CenturyLink merger as well. That is scheduled to start in September if California and a couple other states don’t derail it. This will be a mess for customers and partners alike. The product set is so different. Level3 is wholesale VoIP, international, transit and transport. CenturyLink is consumer, small business, mid-market, broadband, voice and some cloud. Very different sales skills.

Both exited data center, but CenturyLink has acquired many cloud and security companies in the last few years. They haven’t done much with it because they don’t really sell to Enterprise like they would need to. Plus Branding. Plus confusion over at Savvis after that acquisition.

None of that factors change post merger. None. One problem with many of these telcos is that they don’t bring in fresh blood. Frontier just hired from Verizon for VP of sales and retention. Pull in someone from outside telco. The biggest hurdle: Culture. Culture eats Strategy for lunch.

Most of the major CLECs are gone: XO, EarthLink, Level3. Others are transitioning: TPX, AireSpring, Birch, Mettel to try to figure out what business looks like with network resale and managed services. It is a different world.

Everyone was betting on UC, but most couldn’t get over the deployment headaches. Then when the price war started, they not only weren’t prepared for the war, but couldn’t or didn’t get into it. The latest top 10 leader board for UC doesn’t look too much different than 2015 or 2016. Next year it will for certain.

Windstream and Charter should look different in 2018.

Cisco’s Spark revamp at EC17 coupled with its latest acquisitions and lay offs might have an effect on Cisco UC seats later this year. Or the acquisition of West Corp by Apollo Management for $5B and change might stall sales. Some of Cisco’s other partners – like FLTG in NY – also got acquired. Integration after acquisition always affects sales (and retention).

AT&T and VZ look to be big winners while the CLECs shift and transition. Some of the other players in the space – like Zayo and GTT – also made acquisitions. But are they really replacements for Ma and Pa Bell or even WIndsream, Level3 and C-Link? They have a window of opportunity that is for sure.

Zayo grabbed ELI and Integra. All of the press is about fiber to the tower, so I am thinking that will not be a C-Link or WIND alternative.

Comcast will pick up some business. At $6B in CLEC business revenue now, it almost surpasses most of the CLECs in revenue. They need to take some friction out of the quoting and ordering process. (Charter too! Unbelievable that at its size, it is so arduous to process quotes and orders.)

Until the next merger is announced this is what it will look like. The channel often went to CLECs because of channel friendly attitude as well as suitable product set. This time round the channel will be looking at companies NOT in the midst of turmoil. Ease of doing business will be relative. Just another reason businesses like using channel partners: so they don’t have to deal with it!

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    What Happened to LinkedIn?

    This week there have been two posts on my feed about “We can connect but don’t spam me!” The discussion was the same on booth threads: “that is cold calling / social selling”. Well, no it isn’t. If you did the exact same thing at a face to face event, no one would come near you.

    Show some creativity AND Patience. Spamming is just lazy. (So are auto-DMs on twitter. Just because you can automate doesn’t mean you should.)

    One of the congratulations messages that came in to me was a solicitation to advertise for $15K. Not only unsolicited — off target. And I know this person IRL.

    The feeds on LinkedIn look more and more like Facebook. People if you can’t separate business from personal this might explain your work/life balance issues. It also might explain why you can’t get work done in a timely matter. Time Management at its core is about focus.

    Recently, LinkedIn sent me a notice about only connecting to people I know. That’s funny because if that was the case we would all have less than 400 connections. Also, that notice flies in the face of most users AND how LinkedIn makes money!

    And what happened to discussion on LI? The groups are dead.

    I examined at least 35 posts on three groups (UC Insights and Channel Partners and Telecom Professionals). Engagement is Rare!

    Engagement is demonstrated mostly by Likes, rarely a comment on these groups. However, all of the posts are just headlines from articles or blog posts. It is all just click-bait. And that is annoying to everyone.

    On the UC group, CommsTrader, AT&T and other corporate communicators just blast stuff here (and elsewhere) hoping for clicks and likes. CommsTrader actually tweets to the group. (His tweets post to the LI group.) It is awful.

    Overall it has become nothing more than an online Rolodex (contact management tool). I think recruiters – who were the customer target for Reid Hoffman – started abusing it, but then Marketers got involved and those lazy bums ruined it for everyone.

    LinkedIn-Sucks-3d-Cover-300.png

    SIDE NOTE: LinkedIn explained in memes.

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    If Starting Today as an Agent

    competitive-advantage.jpg

    If I was starting my telecom agency today, what would I do?

    When I started in 1999, I was selling basically one product (Wholesale DSL to ISPs). That was my entry drug of choice. It led to frame relay, ATM, IP Transit, DS1/DS3 and PRIs. But it was a single offering to a very targeted market. Most of those clients from 1999-2001 are still with me!

    Certainly an agent starting out is going to be offering bandwidth in all its colors. However, I would build a multi-vendor bundle to sell to a specific audience. I am a big fan of vertical sales. Anyone can be a Generalist, but being a Specialist pays better. How many GPs (general practitioners) are left in medicine or law?

    And being a Specialist doesn’t mean that you have to turn away other business that comes to you, it just means that you have Focus. You have a target to aim at. You have an audience that you can get to know and develop a message for.

    It is far easier to market a specific bundle aimed at a target vertical than it is to create a marketing message aimed at the generic masses.

    Targeted marketing is cheaper. Easier to send email or postcards to every ISP in the BellSouth region than to target every SMB in a state.

    One bundle I have been working on is the Verizon Wireless One Talk service with 4G backup, a Cradlepoint router, FiOS and a Square POS (point of sale) system. It is a targeted package – Retail. It allows for add-on sales: smartphones, video surveillance, email or Office365 and web hosting. You could also offer credit card processing and PCI DSS Compliance via EarthLink. You could go bigger with managed wi-fi. There are many add-ons, but the original 4 component bundle is where to start.

    The bundle contains the essential ingredients of a small retail shop: broadband, backup (because retail can’t make money without 100% uptime on the Internet for credit card processing and digital phone service), wireless network, phone system and cash register. Signing up with SYNNEX and any of the Alliance Partners would get you all the access you need to bundle that – and make commissions.

    Anyway that is how I would start today. Chasing Verticals with a multi-vendor solution that I designed for them.

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    A Look at the Future of Wireline

    The news out of small ILECs like TDS and Cincinnati Bell is that fiber to the home is selling well but more importantly is increasing retention and lowering churn. (Customer acquisition costs are very high in flat product segments like consumer broadband, cellular service and TV.)

    Even Fairport, acquired by RLEC Consolidated, is upgrading its network for higher speeds. Some of this is due to the fact that cable is winning the broadband war. Some of it is powered by USF Reform whereby broadband is the metric for dollars. Add in the Connect America Funds (CAF) and other federal and state incentives for broadband and middle mile fiber deployment. AT&T, Verizon, Windstream and CenturyLink have all talked about upgrading the broadband infrastructure. (BTW, this flies in the face of the new FCC Chairman’s claims that investment went down after Title II.) It comes down to revenue – and DSL was not cutting it.

    Fiber deployment is tough (just ask Google). Many providers use a mix of technologies. TPX (formerly known as TelePacific), Windstream, XO and Google Fiber use fixed wireless for broadband. Thousands of WISPs in America have been utilizing wireless to deliver broadband for years. The bigger guys are now jumping on the bandwagon. To be fair, the technology is not only better, but cheaper.

    This : (from Sail Internet in Fremont California) “George Ginis used Mimosa’s super Wi-Fi to connect a customer a customer with 435.74 down, 331.83 up, and 4 ms ping. 5 GHz Mimosa is designed like a mmWave network but a heck of a lot cheaper than 28 GHz. Interesting alternative.”

    DSL Prime has an ad from Sckipio about Virtual fiber. “Extend your fiber with 100-300 meters of single-port G.fast. It can save expensive trenching for cell towers, small cells, basement fiber, commercial customers and others. A very thin management layer allows operators to keep their existing GPON management layer. Sckipio makes it effortless to add G.fast to any GPON network.” G.fast uses copper like VDSL2. We’ll see if it gets adopted in the US like it is in Europe.

    Also on the copper side is trials by ASSIA for Terabit DSL. See here. Companies are at work to extend the life of wireline broadband to satisfy the consumer appetite for downloading videos. On the business side, the same technologies will be used to feed the business appetite for cloud apps – fixed wireless, 4G/LTE-A/5G, DSL/T1, cable modem and fiber. SD-WAN will be layered on top for metrics, failover/resilience and more. Interesting times.

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    Tidbits (Part 2456)

    BroadSoft Adds PaaS to Cloud Portfolio. Funny, I thought that BroadCloud was their version of PaaS. NoJitter blames this launch on the acquisition of VoIP Logic, a white-label customer that Broadsoft bought for $13M in 2016. As one BSFT client stated it, “BSFT will force every customer to be on their cloud platform at some point.” Yeah, it wasn’t what they signed up for but BSFT has to feed the Wall Street beast.

    RC did have some wins last quarter: RC “closed six deals with TCV north of $1 million dollars up from five in Q4. One of these wins was at Hyatt Hotels Corporation. Hyatt will be replacing legacy Avaya system at their headquarters with RingCentral Office.”

    Some factors that are shaking things up: Avaya bankruptcy; 8×8 and Shoretel hiring bankers for strategy; and Toshiba leaving the North American market.

    RC states: “For each dollar invested in sales and marketing, we continue to see $9 of revenue and $7 of gross profit over the projected life of an Office customer. ” A number of UC providers should take note of that stat.

    In the last 15 years, 52% of the S&P 500 have disappeared.

    According to the CDC, “more than half of Americans have cut their traditional phone line and now only get wireless phone service.” The other half is paying more and more for POTS service.

    Verizon sold its data centers. It also sold its cloud services unit to IBM .

    CenturyLink sold its data centers to a coalition of PE firms that also bought a collection of cyber-security firms. The new company will go by the name Cyxtera Technologies and it will be run by the former CEO of Terremark.

    Gary Testa left Polycom last March to become President of Star2Star. That lasted 11 months, then he quietly exited telecom. Michelle Accardi has his position now. I am guessing the IPO is on hold.

    John Oliver took on the new FCC Chair (former VZ lawyer btw) and net neutrality again. Want to comment on the FCC proceeding ironically named Restoring Internet Freedom (Docket 17-108) head over to the domain www.gofccyourself.com

    I tried to explain this to several security people. Thankfully now there is a study. “More than 70 percent of SMB IT managers say budget considerations have forced them to compromise on security features when purchasing endpoint security,” according to a survey by VIPRE.

    All these Rapid Expansion press releases are funny. Yeah, you are following the Long Channel Strategy of signing up everyone you can. No idea how that pans out for most since it is a million dollar cash deal. Each of those master agencies will need co-marketing dollars just like the multitude of vendors that signed up with the likes of Jenne, Tech Data and other VADs. At some point, the cost to get a sale may be too high.

    VZW has a co-sale model for One Talk. AT&T has co-selling. But RingCentral is taking this further. There is the partner, a channel manager and a SME from RC involved in each sale – from 1 seat to a million according to the release. All three getting 100% of commission. That will get expensive quick.

    I would like to stop seeing ridiculous numbers in the press releases: “over 2,200 sales partners are now offering our services” and “we have more than 4,000 partners” and “300 Master Agents signed up” and the best: “8 Master Agents, providing 200,000 sub-agents”. STOP!

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