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AT&T Cuts Consultant Liaison ProgramAT&T Cuts Consultant Liaison Program

AT&T's actions are not totally unique, because several major enterprise communications systems suppliers--Avaya, Nortel, and Siemens--also reduced their consultant staffs this year/

Allan Sulkin

December 26, 2008

1 Min Read
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AT&T's actions are not totally unique, because several major enterprise communications systems suppliers--Avaya, Nortel, and Siemens--also reduced their consultant staffs this year/

AT&T recently sent an email letter to consultants that it will "no longer continue to provide a dedicated Consultant Liaison support team." The program was praised by AT&T, saying it "delivered high quality service to the Consultant community over the years." AT&T did not clearly state the reason it is cutting the program, although the act was foreshadowed when it previously cut team membership from two to one. AT&T's actions are not totally unique, because several major enterprise communications systems suppliers--Avaya, Nortel, and Siemens--also reduced their consultant staffs this year, although no one else totally eliminated their dedicated program like AT&T.Through this year's third quarter, AT&T's net income was a mere $10.463 billion on revenues of almost $93 billion. Something to think about: ShoreTel revenues for the same time period were about one thousandth (0.001) the AT&T figure, and net income stupendously less than $10.463 billion, but they are able to finance a dedicated consultant support program.

What will AT&T eliminate next, live operators and customer service agents? Oh that's right, almost all of them are already gone. Since the stock price is down 35% during the past year how about they downsize some high salaried executives. What do you think?AT&T's actions are not totally unique, because several major enterprise communications systems suppliers--Avaya, Nortel, and Siemens--also reduced their consultant staffs this year/

About the Author

Allan Sulkin

Allan Sulkin, president and founder of TEQConsult Group (1986), is widely recognized as the industry's foremost enterprise communications market/product analyst. He is celebrating 30 years telecommunications market experience this month and has consulted for many of the industry's leading vendors participating at Enterprise Connect. Sulkin has been a long time Contributing Editor to Business Communications Review and its current online incarnation No Jitter, and has served as a Program Director and featured tutorial/seminar presenter for VoiceCon since its 1991 inception. Sulkin is the author of PBX Systems for IP Telephony (McGraw-Hill Professional Publications) and writer of the PBX chapter in the McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology.