Lucent Wins Verizon Gear Deal
Coddling the big cats is paying off for Lucent (LU Quote).
The telecom gearmaker has won a three-year contract to supply Verizon (VZ Quote) with metro optical phone network gear, say people familiar with the deal. The deal is valued in the neighborhood of $1 billion or more, these same people say, and marks a substantial victory during a period of falling network spending by big telcos like Verizon.Tech Talk
Word of the arrangement has been making the rounds for weeks, aided in part by a briefing that Lucent's Bell Labs engineers gave analysts recently. It seems the tech team spoke highly of the unannounced contract and their efforts to design the optical gear -- dubbed EON -- hand-in-hand with Verizon technicians. Verizon had been working with various vendors for a couple of years on a product to boost network capacity, says a former Verizon engineer. The attraction of DWDM systems is that they use devices that act like prisms to separate laser light into component colors, making one optical fiber capable of carrying many channels of information at one time.| Ramping Industrywide DWDM metro sales forecasts |
| Source: Communications Industry Researchers |
The Tech Edge
Lucent has had significant stumbles in this metro optical market, most notably the termination of Chromatis, a highly respected optical shop that Lucent acquired for $4.5 billion last year. Lucent was unable to integrate the tech and perhaps the culture of the start-up into its product line, and more widely into its new core customer strategy. In August, nearly two years into its struggle to regain its footing, Lucent decided to limit its efforts to some 30 major global customers, killing most products that didn't show immediate profit potential. It was one of several severe moves, including the firing of nearly half its employees, by Lucent in its attempt to change its disastrous course. But Lucent realized that one of its strengths was that its gear was installed at most of the world's major phone networks. And one of the primary challenges for the network owners was trying to improve their networks by integrating new equipment. Because Lucent sold the original gear, it had the best perspective on how to make new systems mesh with the old. In short, Lucent saw its new role as hand-holder to customers in transition. "Phone companies were waiting for the large players to step up and help them migrate their entire networks," says one analyst, formerly with Lucent, who asked not to be identified. To be sure, one contract doesn't spell immediate success for Lucent, but you can bet the beleaguered networking shop will still sing the deal's praises as loud as it can.- Loading Comments...
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