
Windstream combines decades of dedication to customers with a strong commitment to innovation in communications services. Headquartered in Little Rock, Ark., Windstream is a FORTUNE 500 and S&P 500 company and has more than $6 billion in annual revenues. Windstream is a leading provider of advanced network communications, including cloud computing and managed services, to businesses nationwide.
Windstream primarily sells its products through a channel of hundreds of partners. Their partners are local companies who choose to market Windstream products and services and also their own value-added services. These partners have diverse IT backgrounds in areas such as interconnects, integrators, ASPs, data vendors, OEMs, computer vendors and telecommunication consultants.
News Title: Windstream Introduces Enhanced Partner Strategy for Cloud Solutions at Channel Partners Conference
Date Originally Published: 2/26/2014
Industry: Telecommunications
Type of Extended Enterprise Learning: Channel Learning
Business Drivers: Increase cloud sales from channel partners
Business Challenge: With the industry and Windstream’s rapid migration to Cloud technologies, the channel needed help in understanding the cloud and Windstream cloud solutions so that they could compete better in the marketplace, drive increased revenue and provide outstanding customer service.
Business Solution: Not all partners are equal in their knowledge or preparedness in regards to cloud computing. As a result, Windstream deployed a readiness assessment for their partners. The assessment determines the partner’s skill level and market readiness in a variety of areas. With the assessment, Windstream can determine the customized training and support required to get the partner to a state of readiness required over time. Customized training can include computer based training, webinars and live seminars. Additionally, Windstream is hiring 10 additional channel managers who are experts in the Cloud to be the go-to resource for partners on all things cloud.
Key Takeaways:
Matt Preschem, Windstream’s senior vice president and enterprise chief marketing officer shared these insights:
- “At Windstream, we’re committed to helping our channel partners understand the cloud space, to supporting their advancement and success, and to building solid relationships with their customers”
- “By helping our partners become more comfortable with cloud solutions, we are strengthening our position in the cloud market, ensuring our partners’ success, and extending the cloud product suite to even more customers and prospects”
- “Our partners are accustomed to Windstream’s ‘smart solutions, personalized service’ brand promise, and offering these enhanced sales enablement tools provides even more opportunities for them to win in the marketplace.”
- “Whether our partners are ‘cloud ready,’ with strategies firmly in place, or ‘cloud motivated’ and recognize their need to tackle the cloud solutions suite, Windstream is going beyond typical provider certification by establishing specific training and support paths to foster the continued and sustained success of our channel partners.”
Mike Sapien, principal analyst at Ovum had the following two quotes:
- “According to Ovum’s global small and mid-size business survey findings, nearly 40 percent of those not using cloud services today are planning to deploy a cloud service within the next year.”
- “Our survey verified that telecommunication service providers are also in a very strong trust position with small to mid-sized customers, and key to customer adoption of cloud services is having strong sales resources including channel partners who can provide the required support including training and on-going service management for customers.”
All information derived from this news review was obtained from following publicly available sources:
- WSJ Online — http://online.wsj.com/article/PR-CO-20140226-912833.html titled “Windstream Introduces Enhanced Partner Strategy for Cloud Solutions at Channel Partners Conference.”
- windstreambusiness.com
- http://www.reuters.com/
Want more insights? Watch our on-demand webinar:
How to Think Outside the Employee Learning Box
When business decision makers think of training, they typically think of employees first. That’s one reason why so many learning platforms focus on workforce development and compliance.
But business success also depends upon the ability to educate customers, channel partners and others in your value chain.
How can you leverage learning technology to move beyond an “employees only” mentality? Take an in-depth look at this topic with John Leh, Lead Analyst and CEO at Talented Learning and Gary Underhill, Sr. Solution Architect at Expertus. You’ll learn:
- How to understand non-employee “external” audience learning needs
- How to avoid the “gotchas” of multiple audiences
- LMS functionality required to serve multiple audiences
- Strategies for building on an existing employee-focused LMS infrastructure
- Fundamentals of external marketing and promotion
- How to measure success when expanding your reach
Need Proven LMS Selection Guidance?
Looking for a learning platform that truly fits your organization’s needs? We’re here to help! Submit the form below to schedule a free preliminary consultation at your convenience.
Share This Post
Related Posts
LMS Demo Dos and Don’ts
If you have a room full of administrators, a more in-depth click, click, click approach works great, but that approach is shunned by most executive audiences who are more influenced by the bigger picture.
4 Corporate LMS Flavors: Which Do You Choose?
Extended enterprise learning is defined as any type of education a corporation provides to external audiences – including customers, prospects, channel partners such as dealers, franchisees, distributors and others.
10 Tips to Boost Sales: For LMS Vendors
Inexplicably, vendors make the most prose mistakes in these two areas of their proposals, yet these are the sections that every executive spends the most time reviewing.
LMS Integration: The Learning Ecosystem
Google Analytics tracks a visitor’s access device, browser, previous website, pages visited, time spent on the page, next site visited, language, IP, precise geographic location, age and much more.
LMS Implementation Pricing: Take 2
One of the biggest mistakes LMS buyers make is not defining the level of help and support they will need to successfully implement and support their LMS.
Introducing the LMS Almanac: Corporate Edition 2016
The LMS Almanac defines corporate LMS market trends, types of corporate LMSs, business uses, feature and functions, hosting models, license models, service and support models, return on investment and provides real-life examples of all.
Public LMS Pricing: Proof You Can Overpay
It is foolish to pay more than you have to and get nothing in return but it is impossible to know if you are overpaying if you first don't define your LMS requirements.
Shrinking LMS Implementation Fees Drive Market Expansion
Making sure your LMS selection team is on the same page in regards to implementation/configuration needs will allow a buying organization to quickly disqualify many vendor options without the labor of investing a ton of time.
LMS License Models: What in the World is Going On?
Associations, training companies, corporate channel, customer and other extended enterprise buyers can create any number – hundreds of thousands even – of active ongoing accounts but a buying organization only pays for active usage.



















FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL