Solutions to help your business Sign up for our newsletters Join our Community

:: Business Continuity ::

CONTINUING SPECIAL REPORT

In the spotlight: John Grady, Nextlink Wireless

Nextlink Wireless is a sister company to XO Communications, focusing on last-mile broadband wireless access using LMDS spectrum licenses in the top 75 U.S. markets. As a carrier’s carrier, Nextlink sells to both wireless and wireline operators as well as large entities such as the federal government. John Grady, director of marketing for Nextlink, spoke to Editor-at-Large Carol Wilson about the role his firm can play in business continuity planning...

Razorline finds disaster recovery a bigger seller

Razorline, a Louisiana-based provider of hosted IP-PBX services, had always included business continuity in its sales pitch to small and mid-sized businesses in the New Orleans area. Needless to say, that sales pitch is resonating much more today...

VoIP changing business continuity

Voice-over-IP technology can play a significant role in enabling businesses to stay up and running in the face of diverse disasters, but only if those businesses have planned in advance to use the best of what’s available today. Read this continuing business continuity special report here...

AT&T tackles disaster recovery challenge

Disaster recovery has been very much on people’s minds a year after Hurricane Katrina, but for AT&T, disaster recovery and business continuity have been an ongoing challenge that isn’t associated with any single event but with many. Click here to read this business continuity special report...

Disaster recovery: Should voice mail be free?

A couple of communications industry veterans believe the telcos should add something to their disaster recovery lists--free voice mail service in the event of large-scale disasters. This is the second in a series of special reports on business continuity...

Redefining business continuity

Like all major telecom service providers, AT&T got a wake-up call in 2005, when a series of hurricanes wiped out networks throughout the Southeast and forced many businesses to consider a more serious approach to disaster recovery and business continuity than they had taken in the past...

TELEPHONY PODCAST

A Telephony Podcast: Business Continuity

With so many businesses vulnerable to disruption and data loss in the wake of disasters, business continuity and disaster recovery have emerged as critically important parts of service providers’ strategies. Join Telephony’s Carol Wilson and Jason Meyers as they discuss what the concept of business continuity means and how service providers in different categories are approaching it...

RELATED ARTICLES

AT&T spotlights disaster recovery

AT&T doesn’t normally train for disasters when “it’s 75 degrees and sunny outside,” according to Ken Smith, team lead of AT&T’s Network Disaster Recovery unit. But next week, the unit will make an exception, putting its 16 years of disaster recovery experience on exhibit as part of the TelecomNext trade show in Las Vegas...

Cox counts losses from Katrina

Cox Communications reported dramatic losses for the third quarter of 2005 following the effects of Hurricane Katrina, which ravaged the Gulf Coast in late August...

BellSouth’s Smith: VoIP no miracle cure for Katrina

BOSTON--The telecom industry needs to be more careful in portraying VoIP as an alternative network technology in the event of disasters such as Hurricane Katrina, BellSouth CTO Bill Smith reminded the VON ’05 audience in Boston Tuesday morning...

Learning Library

Featured Content

A time and money saving approach to fiber deployment

Service providers are under tremendous pressure to turn up new services faster then before and, at the same time, to do it at less expense - and intra-office fiber is one of the biggest challenges in terms of both cost and service turn-up.

The Latest

News

From the Blog

Briefingroom

Join the Discussion

Resources

Get more out of Connected Planet by visiting our related resources below:

Connected Planet highlights the next generation of service providers, as well as how their customers use services in new ways.

Subscribe Now

Back to Top