AT&T hitting the resale trail
nwfusion.com
By David Rohde Network World, 08/31/98
Basking Ridge, N.J. - Move over, all you Cisco resellers, IBM integrators and Novell VARs. Say hello to a new concept in data-networking sales and service: the AT&T value-added reseller.
Marking a sea change in its sales philosophy, AT&T has since early this year been quietly recruiting a nationwide army of local network integrators. The resellers have been training on AT&T's data services so they can sell them along with routers, switches and hubs.
The move means users will be able to get core AT&T services from local VARs and network integrators that also offer integrated LAN/WAN management services. AT&T has never used VARs or resellers except to provide service to a handful of very large accounts.
Once the quintessential direct sales house, AT&T has given its managers marching orders to find new channels for the company's four principal data services: frame relay, private lines, the WorldNet Managed Internet Service (MIS) dedicated Internet access offering, and the new WorldNet Virtual Private Network Service (VPNS).
Currently the AT&T initiative consists of two separate programs. Under the AT&T Data Sales Agent Program, AT&T is recruiting local VARs that sell a significant amount of WAN equipment. Once accepted into the program, they are authorized to sell AT&T frame relay and private line services for a commission.
Under the AT&T Alliance Program, the company is recruiting integrators that specialize in helping users build IP intranets. Those companies become agents selling term contracts for WorldNet MIS and VPNS.
Ironically, AT&T traditionally has not only operated using a direct sales force but also has been actively hostile to resale of its services via other channels. AT&T frequently has battled in court with telecom resellers that buy AT&T services in bulk, mark them up and sell them to small businesses and consumers.
But AT&T officials emphasized their new program is aimed at a different class of reseller - network integrators experienced in installing LANs and desktops as well as routers and switches. And they are upfront about why they're taking this approach - because the company's CEO is demanding more revenue.
"Mike Armstrong's mantra is top-line selling growth," says AT&T's Director of Global Channel Management Keith Olsen. Not only is AT&T looking for more sales outlets, but the company also wants to find VARs to take over the installation chores once the sale is made. "Anything we can do to increase the amount of selling time of our direct sales force is good," Olsen says.
The move is applauded by many in the industry who say traditional carriers still lack the full range of data expertise and contacts they need to meet their potential.
"There are certain user organizations that are more inclined to buy from those channels," says one AT&T partner who asked not to be identified. "Now the telecom industry is trying to build off the model in the computer industry."
Case in point: SportRack Automotive, a supplier of vehicle luggage racks and other automotive supplies in Royal Oak, Mich., has an AT&T frame relay network it purchased through AT&T sales agent Ideal Technology Solutions U.S. SportRack is now converting to WorldNet VPNS from an earlier AT&T intranet offering with Ideal Technology's help.
"I'm on the phone with these people all the time. They know my operation - they're right down the street from me," says SportRack MIS Manager Bill Olzak.
In addition, Olzak doesn't face the dilemma of shelling out more money to purchase one of AT&T's managednetwork options and then worrying about integrating it with LAN and desktop support. He purchases his WAN maintenance services from Ideal Technology instead of AT&T.
"It's included in my monthly bill for the rest of the network support," Olzak says. "Our plan was to keep things as lean as possible, and now I have one support agreement for my LANs, WAN and hardware."
The Novell evolution
AT&T's VAR programs did not just appear out of thin air. Of the Alliance Program's 375 members, many are Novell Gold and Platinum VARs that AT&T originally contacted when it was seeking help selling its now-defunct NetWare Connect Service.
Those relationships continued when NetWare Connect evolved into the AT&T WorldNet Intranet Connect Service supporting both IP and Novell IPX traffic, the forerunner of today's AT&T WorldNet VPNS service.
But according to VARs, the reseller-recruitment effort has taken off this year as AT&T realized that even its frame relay, private line and straight Internet access could benefit from outside help.
"AT&T from the direct sales force does not have the expertise on the inside of the wall," says Bob Skinner, vice president of Ideal Technology.
"There were some areas where the AT&T people were not as expert on the data side as they were on the voice side," says Larry Lane, vice president at Atlanta Datacom, a Norcross, Ga., integrator that belongs to both the Data Sales Agent and Alliance programs.
Besides, Lane adds, "It's an extremely low cost of marketing for them."
Another factor forcing AT&T to seek indirect sales: Armstrong's drive to reduce employees as he whittles away at AT&T's gargantuan overhead. "A significant number of direct sales people were affected by [this year's] early retirement program," Lane says.
What's more, AT&T has its eye on the pending entry of regional Bell operating companies into the long-distance market. Most of the RBOCs have long operated via sales agents because their direct sales forces cannot possibly cover their entire territories.
"AT&T is in a catch-up mode," says Manny Quevedo, vice president of marketing for the communications group at Inacom, a large distribution house based in Omaha, Neb. "They were concerned with losing pace with the RBOCs, and considering where the RBOCs may end up, they had to act."
Sharing the wealth
But AT&T is not just counting on VARs to replace lost opportunities. One of the most unusual aspects of the programs is that AT&T not only is asking VARs to generate leads, but it's also giving some of its own direct sales leads to the VARs.
ADCom's Lane says AT&T is offering a dual-compensation system under which the AT&T salesperson and the VAR receive commissions for a sale if they both had a hand in it. Although neither AT&T nor the VARs would disclose the exact compensation percentages, AT&T's Alliance Web site promises the potential of $20,000 to $35,000 worth of commissions for a three-year WorldNet MIS contract and $30,000 to $40,000 for a WorldNet VPNS contract.
The integration of the direct and indirect sales forces goes beyond that. "We sit on all their national advisory councils for frame relay and IP services," says Ideal Technology's Skinner. And support for the two agent programs is due to be consolidated next month at a special agent-support center in Kansas City, Mo.
But the agents do not get completely free rein. For example, most of the pricing work is tightly controlled by AT&T. Agents send prospective WAN designs to data-network account executives in Kansas City, who come back with a proposed price after asking some questions.
"Upfront they'll say, 'Who's the competition?' If there's no competition, we start off with the best available tariff," Lane says. "But if there is competition, they massage it and come back with new pricing."
Other agents insisted that users should not fear that price negotiations are out of their hands. "We have the ability to go get the negotiated special pricing here," Skinner says. "[AT&T's] been very good coming back to us with aggressive pricing when we need it." He adds: "You're not going to be able to play the direct sales force off of us."
Still, some users with long-time relationships with the AT&T direct sales force are leery of this arrangement. They say they're unlikely to move their WAN-services buying to equipment vendors.
"Any time that you cut out the middleman, you're going to save yourself some money," says Stan Miller, manager of telecommunications for Pier One Imports, a retailer based in Fort Worth, Texas. "They've got to pay their bills, and the only way they can do that is to make their money off of you."
Even some agent prospects for the program are skeptical about the pricing. "The problem with all these long-distance companies is they want to tell you what to quote, and that's not acceptable to us," said one WAN-oriented network integrator who asked not to be identified.
After-sales service and support is a crucial issue, too. "I don't want to lose my network and not be able to talk directly to the vendor that's responsible," Miller says.
Certifying the deal
As an alternative for large users seeking managed contracts that go beyond the WAN side of the router and don't require dealing with indirect channels, AT&T Solutions later this year is expected to introduce a standard LAN-management offering (NW, April 6, page 1). And AT&T said that customers of sales agents will still be able to deal with AT&T for routine service matters.
But the need for service and support opens up opportunities for VARs that offer their own network-management programs, says Mark Nighbor, general manager of the data-agent program. Instead of selling AT&T's own Managed Network Solutions, VARs can roll their own remote-management offer-ings into the sale.
For that reason, AT&T is even considering a certification program similar to those offered by Microsoft and Novell, though on a much more selective basis.
Currently, the company offers a two-day training program, code-named Base Camp, that tours the country, hitting spots twice a month for two days at a time.
Analysts say such certifications could help boost VARs in the eyes of users who are weary of split responsibility for their managed LANs and WANs.
"All these network integrators appear to have an incredible number of LAN certifications, but when it comes to wide-area networks, it becomes extremely fuzzy," says Kitty Weldon, a senior analyst at The Yankee Group in Boston. "So customers rightly ask, 'How can you really be a one-stop shop?' " |