Thursday, October 15, 2009

Intelisys: Day Two "Super Vendor" Summary Day

(Scroll down to watch "video snippets" from the day's events)

Wow! That was a full day.

Intelisys bills itself as the master agent for "high performing agents" and I can personally attest to the fact that that's who I met at today's "vendor marathon" day. But before recapping all the vendor presentations (seventeen 15-minute presentations in all) I must take a moment to say that the most impressive thing about Intelesis is not so much the quality of their vendors (sure, they're great) but the quality of their agents.

I went out of my way to ask agents I met, "How did you get started, how are you selling and what are you selling?" I met three kinds of agents. The ones that have been doing it 20 years and have amassed 500 plus accounts and a score of employees. Those that have done it since 2001 and have half that. And I met a couple who've only just begun but have quite the fire in the belly. I didn't meet a single part-timer.

As for "How are they selling?" Two-thirds reported serious reliance on existing customers and referral partners but a full third had W-2 sales people under quota. As to "What are they selling?" The answer is data, Internet access and dial-tone. I did not find as many agents as I hoped to find selling add-ons like managed services, conferencing or one-offs like merchant services. Most reported that they're just too busy taking care of their base with renewals or circuit add-ons.

As to their vision of the future, most acknowledged concerns about encroachment into network services from their current lead partners (interconnects, applications guys & IT vendors) but they did not feel it was an immediate threat as most of their lead partners were pretty busy just attending to their own primary businesses.

What secrets were learned? Doing more for existing customers was the "success theme of the day". Most of the successful agents I spoke to were not so much interested in calling their existing customers to sell them one-off services so much as calling them to make sure they were happy with whatever they'd already been sold. Agents doing this regularly reported getting extra business and referrals to for their core business services of dial tone, data and Internet access.

Bottom line? Minority stuff is still minority stuff. The big idea is to contact your existing base to see what they want and then sell them whatever they ask for - and introduce them to new lines and opportunities like conferencing and enhanced/managed services.

The other big idea(s)? Doing more for bigger clients. One vendor flat out said, "On the direct side we're done selling to customers that spend less that $1,000 per month. Feel free to sell to them yourselves - but on the direct side, we're done. Similarly, an up and coming agent I spoke to said, "I've got 80 customers but I've determined that 25 are the sort that I want more of." Not that he's going to abandon the 55 that don't make him as much money, he just isn't going to expend resources pulling in anything other than companies that look like his "top 25".

As well, vendor after vendor started out their presentations with, "We're looking to attack the upper mid-market and enterprise customers." While it used to take $500 a month or more in telecom spend to attract an agent now it looks like it's going to take a $5,000 a month spend to attract agent marketing dollars at least.

Another big idea? SIP trunks. As more vendors and agents move towards larger, multi-location prospects they encounter a need to provide services that give free inter-office calling and work with the new IP equipment platforms. Hello SIP trunks.

Lastly? Managed services and business applications. While the 17 vendors all had 15 minutes to speak, none of them could go more than 4 minutes without saying "managed services" or "business applications" a half-dozen times. What are managed services? Anything business customers can rent or subscribe to that allows businesses to have to hire one less IT employee.

What are business applications? Any software package an employee accesses to perform their job function. Fewer businesses seem to be interested in paying for employees that manage internal systems as opposed to generate new revenue. Business customers do seem to be interested in paying agents whatever's necessary to get business admin funtions accomplished short of hiring an employee and incurring the overhead that comes with that.

In summary. If you're an agent out there that is a serious full-timer but you feel like you need serious support you should should look into working with Intelisys. Sure there are a lot of great master agents to work with but appears to be the favorite of quite a few high performing agents. You should investigate why that is.

So those are all the secrets and observations you missed if you were not here. Following are video snippets to give you the flavor of the show.



Video Snippets



Jay Bradley & Mike McKinney kick off the "agent only" round table. This was a very cool hour as no vendors were in the room and it was just the Intelisys agents "peer-to-peer" sharing.





Michael Tighe of T-Squared Networks on why he likes Intelisys





Kris Richards of Insight Technology on why he likes Intelisys









Colombo DiSalvatore of C4 Communications on why he's with Intelisys




Intelisys President Jay Bradley Inviting TA Members to Next Year's Event




Craig Schlagbaum of Level 3 on the Importance of Managed Services. Click here for more information about the MSP show he references in the video.




Dan Harper of PAETEC on their upgraded Equipment For Services ("EFS") solution providing for "free Allworx phones".




Jay Bradley Pulls the $1,000 Winning Name & Business Fair "Walk-around"

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