DELIVERING THE BRIGHTEST OF FUTURES
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Brightspeed COO Tom Maguire, and procurement and supply chain VP Brenda Rapp, discuss how a build plan lay behind an overnight success.
n the opening dayās business at the fifthlargest incumbent local exchange carrier (ILEC) in the US, Brightspeedās customers barely noticed the transition from their former provider, says COO and executive VP Tom Maguire.
āPeople went to sleep one day as a customer of Lumen Technologies and woke up the next as customers of Brightspeed ā which is good news!ā says Tom, explaining it was the culmination of three years of hard work behind the scenes. Looking forward, Brightspeed will offer many of those customers stateof-the-art fibre optics networks in a service territory made up of rural and suburban communities across 20 states.
Tom, who has 40 years of experience in the telecoms business, was brought on board early in the process with fellow founding Brightspeed leaders, chief administration officer Chris Creager and chief executive officer Robert (Bob) Mudge. Tom talks through how they were approached by investors Apollo Global Management with an interesting proposition.
āApolloās leaders had a hypothesis where, if they invested in a company that had a copper infrastructure, they could turn around the fortunes of the company by moving everyone over to fibre,ā says Tom. He goes on to reveal that Apollo put together a $7.5billion fund and invited the trio initially to do due diligence and identify a property that fitted the bill, and then stay on to make the process work.
Brenda Rapp, who was then Lumenās senior director of global network equipment and technology procurement, was one of the Lumen employees who came onboard with the deal.
The territory Brightspeed acquired runs across the Midwest, Southeast, and parts of Pennsylvania and New Jersey, but has no major metropolis.
āWe cover roughly 6.5 million households, a million or more of which use us for their residential and small business telecom needs,ā says Tom. Though the objective was to bring innovation into their customersā lives and make the business profitable, Tom emphasises that there was another key priority ā service of the kind that rural communities rarely had access to.
Brenda, newly promoted to vicepresident of procurement and supply chain, says until now the focus has been on stabilising what existed and making sure that the new company has all it needs to ensure legacy business runs smoothly and good customer experience is maintained.
āThe Brightspeed Fibre product is a fairly new architecture with a new suite of operational and building support systems. Thatās the start-up piece of the equation and things are going wellā
Tom Maguire COO
āWe are doing that by getting critical spares to the field quickly. A lot of my focus right now is on our supply chain. Tomās team put together a five-year build plan, which makes it a lot easier for us to plan for equipment, supply and everything else we need. With a build plan in place for 2023 to 2027, we know exactly what locations, markets, and wire centres Tomās teams plan to build. We have standard architecture, standard equipment bill of materials and we can provide accurate forecasts, put purchase orders in and get the deliveries to support the fibre build teams,ā explains Brenda.
Tom likens the process to an iceberg, where only a tip is visible. The biggest part of the preparation to make such a deal work lies below the waterline, unseen.
Running the fifth-largest ILEC in the US clearly gives Tom a buzz. Delighted with the transition he says, āWe pulled all of this off despite being in the middle of a pandemic when the vast majority of our teams were never in the same room.ā He has never lost his enthusiasm for telecoms.
āItās an interesting industry,ā he says. āIt involves legal, regulatory
Central Office
⢠Calix OLTs
⢠Network Routers
⢠Backhaul Network
How Brightspeed is rolling out fibre to its copper-connected customers
and supply chain and itās a highly integrated, highly diverse business.ā
Tom goes on to detail how Brightspeed is running its new network. āThe Brightspeed Fibre product is a fairly new architecture with a new suite of operational and building support systems. Thatās the start-up piece of the equation
and things are going well,ā Tom continues, adding that the whole enterprise is feel-good. The planned architecture includes a āplug-and-playā model to minimise the expense associated with traditional fibre splicing.
āReducing our cost per location allowed us to do more build,ā
āWith a build plan in place for 2023 to 2027, we know exactly what locations, markets, and wire centres Tomās teams plan to buildā
says Tom, highlighting that on top of the $7.5bn Apollo paid to set up the company, it invested another $2bn to roll out the fibre infrastructure that Tom says will be transformative.
āThere are a lot of studies around peopleās educational or business opportunities, but I talk to customers living in rural America whose lives depend on really strong connectivity that just doesnāt exist in the copper world,ā says Tom.
Brenda says that the new procurement, purchasing and supply chain organisation involved collaborating with 35 fellow professionals while negotiating and executing more than 450 supplier contracts. As Tom puts it, you canāt just go to a local hardware store to pick up telecoms company supply needs, so he credits the early faith of partners such as Calix with being part of that enablement. āCalix
is providing our OLTs or optical line terminals and ONTs, optical network terminals, and wifi-6 mesh towers,ā he says.
āWe standardised on things because of supply chain issues, especially relating to fibre infrastructure. Thereās a lot of demand for electronics associated with fibre, so about a year before the transaction [with Lumen] closed we went
āCalix is providing our OLTs or optical line terminals and ONTs, optical network terminals, and wifi-6 mesh towersāBrenda Rapp, Supply Chain VP
to major providers and told them what we wanted,ā Tom continues. āThere are only a few manufacturers and we had certain criteria for who would work best for our planned fibre build.ā The pandemic led to the decision to near-shore and avoid transportation issues that were dogging existing providers. āWe wanted to stick with certain companies and manufacture in North America as much as possible,ā he says. Having a long employment history in the industry, Chris, Bob and Tom already knew many suppliers.
āWe sat down with them and told them what we were looking for,ā he says. āWe were trying to build as quickly as possible and we are still looking to ramp things up,ā says Tom. The same kind of process is in place with partner Corning. āWe told them what we needed and how much we thought we would need, and they said they could support us as well.ā
Having made the transition between Lumen and Brightspeed herself, Brenda emphasises that in her area of work good planning is a key to
success. āIt is refreshing to know that the investment for growth is here,ā she says. āThe company culture, financial backing and management support to execute and place orders far in advance, to ensure that we have what we need when we need it ā well, that doesnāt happen in a lot of companies.ā
Brenda says, āItās really nice to go to work for a company that has a higher purpose rather than one that focuses just on making money and putting products āout thereā. Thereās a higher mission in terms of delivering high speed internet and infrastructure based on investment in infrastructure that these underserved areas havenāt seen previously.ā
A former New Yorker who now lives in Florida, Tom admits he had assumed everybody in the US had cell phone connectivity, laughing
as he adds: āEven my 87-year-old mother has a cell phone!ā On a more serious note, Tom points out that in his experience his motherās demographic has embraced online and side lined old-style voice service. āThey shop, and they donāt worry about getting to a store because they click on something and order it, and it just shows up!ā he says.
Brenda is quick to credit Brightspeedās partners for helping the company provide such customers ā existing and future āwith the right equipment to make interconnectivity the stuff of the everyday. To illustrate, Tom pulls up a graphic showing the fibre network running in parallel with the copper network. He highlights Zyxel as a key partner in this.
āZyxel has been around a long time and is very reliable in supporting our legacy business,ā he says. āEven once we are done with the initial fibre plan, assuming that we donāt add to it, we can only build out to about half of the households that we have and that means some customers will still be served with copper, so itās important to me that we maintain relationships with them,ā he says. Even with capital made available through the US
ā
Zyxel has been around a long time and is very reliable in supporting our legacy businessā
government and grants from the Broadband Infrastructure Fund, a copper-based service will continue for many households for some time, Tom predicts.
āWe are still investing in our legacy copper and Nokia is our ethernet core edge equipment provider. They also provide some software to monitor our copper network
territory, there could be miles between households.ā
That vastness is one of the reasons Brightspeed has found IQGeoās geospatial software solutions for telecoms and utilities invaluable. Tom says engineers used to take days and weeks to accomplish what IQGeoās engineering platform can do in minutes.
in our legacy copper and Nokia is our ethernet core edge equipment provider. They also provide some software to monitor our copper network adequately and make sure we run that as efficiently as we can for customers who remain on copperā
adequately and make sure we run that as efficiently as we can for customers who remain on copper,ā says Tom.
A recent first visit to Europe brought home to Tom just how vast the territories in the US could be. āI went to Venice, and it struck me there was a lot of water, but every household had fibre,ā says Tom. āVenice is a densely populated area, however, in our
āOutside plan engineers make records and keep databases of where telephone poles and cables are, where the rocks and manholes are. Typically, it was a manual process for an engineer to go out there and over time, some records were maintained more accurately than others,ā Tom says.
āWe started working with IQGeo, a company that draws information from golden sources
āWe are still investing
and databases and uses satellite imagery. As itās an electronic platform, when people are actually doing the physical work associated with the engineering design, they can make changes and edits on a tablet while they are out and that will trigger equipment and materials orders necessary for that particular build. It helps us from an inventory management perspective because we know how many āwidgetsā are out in the field,ā says Tom. In addition, outside plan contractors who
IQGeoās network management software is helping innovative ļ¬ber operators like Brightspeed to rapidly and e ciently deliver vital broadband services to homes and businesses. Our award-winning enterprise solutions are used around the world to plan, construct and maintain the networks of the future.
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āIQGeo is an electronic platform, when people are actually doing the physical work associated with the engineering design, they can make changes and edits on a tablet while they are out and that will trigger equipment and materials orders necessary for that particular buildā
complete certain segments of the build get paid more quickly because all the invoicing is triggered electronically, as well.
He explains that the information gathered also helps Brightspeed secure funding. āIn North Carolina, for example, we received $90million in grant funding, which sounds like a lot of money but when you are
building infrastructure it is not,ā says Tom.
āThe reason we're able to do this innovation is because when we took over this particular territory, it didn't have a lot of fibre; we were effectively starting from scratch. That allows us to do things differently and it's actually a strength of our business.ā
The spirit of service is still an important ethos for the people who work for Brightspeed.
Tom is quick to bring up the name of Angus MacDonald, the legendary US lineman who epitomised employee devotion to maintaining telephone connectivity during the snowstorms of 1888. Tom also points out that Angus would not have the snowshoes, flashlight, rope and equipment to get his job done without procurement teams, and that fact has not changed. āItās the people in Brendaās side of the business
that enable us to carry on,ā he says, adding, āI was talking to somebody in the wireless world one day and he mentioned a big storm was coming and that everybody in his wireless business was going to work from home thanks to technology and connectivity. And I said, āYeah, well, we'll be out there making sure your connectivity works,ā and sure enough, despite weather issues, the next day our team all showed up for work.ā
For further information on Brightspeed, visit www.brightspeed.com