Q&A: Cary Tengler on the New — and Next — Normal
Above: Comcast Business’s Cary Tengler, a self-described “telecom road warrior” has adapted to working remotely, no doubt due in part to being able to enjoy a panoramic view of the Rocky Mountains from his home office.
By Craig Leddy
Cary Tengler is well known among channel partners as executive director, national partner programs at Comcast Business – Solutions Provider Program. He’s been sheltering in place in the Colorado mountains, working remotely and taking occasional breaks to go mountain biking. In the following interview, Tengler offers personal observations and updates about partner relationships in the new normal and his thoughts about the future and what he calls “the next normal.”
How has sheltering in place affected the way you conduct business?
From a personal standpoint, the impact of no travel, cancelled events and no F2F meetings has been the biggest adjustment to my schedule and my day’s activities. Like many other telecom road warriors, I usually travel over 100,000 miles a year, so working remotely and utilizing a variety of communications tools (IM, text, email, mobile phones, conference calls, WebEx, etc.) is second nature.
However, now that we are all homebound and deskbound, the use of video conferencing via Teams, Zoom, Google Hangouts, LogMeIn and Amazon Chime has skyrocketed, at least over the last three to four weeks. I’ll be curious to see if this continues at such a high volume or if it starts to slow down over the next couple of weeks as the novelty of the technology wears off.
Channel Partners’ “Cable Connection” column focuses on cable provider developments in business services and channel-partner relationships. |
At Comcast, like many others, we’ve turned into Microsoft Teams enthusiasts for both internal and external meetings. The collaboration tools and tight integration with Outlook, Word, Excel, and OneDrive has made it our primary tool for internal comms.
How have things changed in your channel partner and business customer relationships?
Aside from the shift to more video conferencing and virtual meetings, many of our partner conversations have pivoted to addressing mission critical or “business threatening” situations.
One example of that would be a 24-hour emergency install (now completed) on several high speed 1-10 Gbps fiber connections to enable a large equity trading company to maintain operations as they transitioned to a remote/WFH environment over a weekend. Another example (ongoing) is a plan to help several of our call center partners migrate to a WFH model.
We’re also interacting with partners on a more personal level and seeking to keep everyone’s spirits up. Our amazing channel marketing leader, Dalyn Wertz, recently published a “Cooking with Comcast Business” cookbook of favorite recipes and we’re producing Work From Home Wednesdays Network Crew Video of the Week (see What Do I Do at Comcast?)
What steps has Comcast taken to support its business customers?
We’ve implemented a variety of COVID-19 related support programs for economically impacted businesses in an effort to keep them connected and communicating. And for our partners’ and customers’ employees who have been impacted by the pandemic, either working from home or now unemployed, we just bumped up broadband speeds and are offering two free months of our Internet Essentials service. We, and the other cablecos, also have been pushing more self-install kits for new service turn-ups to limit F2F exposure of both our tech ops teams and our customers, to keep everyone safe.
And finally, recognizing that a very high percentage of our customers – and partners – are SMBs, we’ve just launched a special cloud promotion offering a variety of free SaaS services (some exclusive) to get them through the pandemic period (see FYI: Tools & Services to Help You Stay Connected).
How will the new normal change the business services environment in the future – “the next normal”?
This is what is really interesting to consider. While the next several months are going to be very challenging from a sales and installation standpoint, I’m seeing a lot of optimism that we’ll see increasingly stronger sales in late Q3 and Q4 as our customers get back to work. In particular, we’ll see companies accelerate their UCaaS, SD-WAN, video conferencing and connectivity purchases as the value of these particular services is more evident than ever before.
I suspect we’ll also see fewer in-person events through the end of 2020 and maybe well into 2021 as people will remain cautious about large gatherings. This will necessitate a shift in sales and marketing strategy toward more digital and social media demand gen…
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