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- <text id=89TT2421>
- <title>
- Sep. 18, 1989: Smooth Operator
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Sep. 18, 1989 Torching The Amazon
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 60
- Smooth Operator
- </hdr><body>
- <p>No longer a tin-can outfit, MCI has become a telephone giant
- </p>
- <p>By Christine Gorman
- </p>
- <p> For the go-getters at MCI Communications, the contest was
- their big chance to prove that they could whip their nemesis,
- American Telephone & Telegraph, at its own game. One of AT&T's
- largest customers, Merrill Lynch, wanted to upgrade its vast
- communications system to link its headquarters in Manhattan with
- an expanding empire of more than 730 branch offices around the
- world. If MCI could beat AT&T for the $150 million contract, it
- would rank as the biggest single deal in MCI's history.
- </p>
- <p> Starting at the top, William McGowan, MCI's co-founder and
- chairman, flew to New York City early in 1988 to pitch the deal
- in person to Merrill chief William Schreyer. In laboratory tours
- in Washington, the phone company showed Merrill Lynch executives
- MCI's research on artificial intelligence. Company President
- Bert Roberts handpicked a group of analysts and technicians,
- dubbed the Swat team, to develop an unbeatable package deal. The
- MCI crew even agreed to adapt Merrill Lynch's own equipment to
- the new network -- a provision at which AT&T balked, since it
- manufactures its own gear. Last June, after more than eleven
- months of negotiations, Merrill Lynch made up its mind. The
- winner: MCI.
- </p>
- <p> The champagne corks are popping like machine guns at MCI
- these days, as the scrappy No. 2 phone company celebrates one
- giant-killer success after another. Long dismissed by AT&T as
- a tin-can operation and wavering at the brink of financial ruin
- less than three years ago, MCI has transformed itself from a
- consumer long-distance carrier into a full-service
- communications giant. The company has become a marketing
- innovator as well, offering consumers perks such as
- frequent-flyer miles on American and Northwest airlines as a
- reward for using MCI's long-distance lines (five miles for every
- $1 of service). At the same time, MCI is carrying out a $6
- billion equipment overhaul in which the company is replacing or
- upgrading every piece of gear, from switches to trunk lines.
- </p>
- <p> As the industry's most aggressive upstart, MCI is riding
- the crest of a worldwide boom in telecommunications volume.
- Long-distance revenue in the U.S. alone has zoomed from $33
- billion in 1984 to a projected $56 billion this year. While AT&T
- still dominates the U.S. market with a 69% share, down from 95%
- in 1984, MCI accounts for 12% of today's burgeoning market, up
- from 5% five years ago. The No. 3 carrier, US Sprint, lays claim
- to an 8% share.
- </p>
- <p> MCI has suddenly become a profit machine, posting earnings
- of $285 million for the first half of 1989, a 138% increase from
- the same period last year. The big breakthrough at MCI stems
- largely from its aggressive pursuit of corporate business. In
- the past two years, the Washington-based company has wooed away
- such prestigious AT&T customers as Chrysler, United Airlines,
- Westinghouse and Procter & Gamble. "MCI is starting to hurt AT&T
- where it hurts the most: the Big Business customer. By stealing
- the big accounts, MCI is giving AT&T fits," says Michael Miller,
- who follows the industry for the Wall Street investment firm
- Northern Business Information/DataPro. "MCI is no longer the
- 98-lb. weakling of the telephone industry."
- </p>
- <p> Not bad for a company that McGowan and John Goeken, an
- electronics expert, founded only 21 years ago as a private
- microwave-radio service for truck drivers in the Midwest. By
- 1980 MCI had begun offering discount long-distance service to
- residential customers in major cities. When AT&T tried to
- throttle its newfound competition by refusing to connect the
- company to the public telephone network, MCI sued the giant
- under the Sherman Antitrust Act. The Government followed up with
- its own lawsuit. In 1984 AT&T settled the cases and agreed to
- break up, under Government supervision, into one long-distance
- carrier and seven Baby Bells.
- </p>
- <p> MCI emerged victorious from the long court battle, but it
- nearly went broke afterward. As deregulation swept the
- telephone industry, prices for toll calls fell as much as 38%.
- The slide devastated MCI because two-thirds of its business came
- from residential customers. By contrast, AT&T counted on
- noncorporate customers for about 40% of its revenues; the rest
- came from Government and business contracts.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, MCI had won direct access to local telephone
- grids, which simplified customer dialing by reducing the number
- of required digits from 22 to eleven but increased the access
- charges that MCI had to pay. Result: in 1986 MCI posted the
- first loss in its history -- a whopping $498 million. The
- company laid off more than 2,400 of its 16,000 employees. Then
- in December of that year, McGowan suffered a near fatal heart
- attack and soon afterward underwent a heart transplant. The
- company's future looked so bleak that senior executives
- considered putting MCI up for sale.
- </p>
- <p> Instead the top brass made a gutsy decision. During a
- four-day marathon planning session in a suite at the Westin
- Hotel in Washington, they agreed to mount an all-out offensive
- on AT&T, with McGowan's blessing. Led by V. Orville Wright, a
- former MCI president who had been summoned out of retirement to
- serve as acting chief executive during McGowan's convalescence,
- MCI determined to steal the giant's bread and butter -- its
- corporate accounts. Says Daniel Akerson, MCI's executive vice
- president: "We decided to go where the money is."
- </p>
- <p> MCI leaders planned a two-pronged attack that emphasized
- high technology and new services. The carrier replaced virtually
- all its old-fashioned microwave transmitters, which could handle
- only 8,000 simultaneous calls per route, with fiber-optic lines
- that would allow 100,000 calls. New services, such as a special
- network for fax messages and a system of discount private lines,
- called Vnet, were developed for corporate users. MCI's software
- engineers took care to design their toll-free 800-number service
- so that customers could find out where their clients were
- calling from and even determine their phone numbers -- a service
- AT&T did not provide.
- </p>
- <p> Service innovations were a crucial part of the Westin plan,
- as the scheme hatched at the hotel has become known, because the
- MCI officials thought telecommunications companies would soon
- be offering the same quality and price. "Competition will come
- down to who can satisfy the customer. It will come down to
- service, and we're prepared for that race," says McGowan, 61,
- who received the heart of a 20-year-old during his 1987
- transplant surgery and has been back at MCI's helm for two
- years.
- </p>
- <p> MCI's salespeople have earned a reputation as tigers, which
- they need to be. While the company can sell to residential
- customers and small businesses over the phone or by mail,
- selling to a major corporation requires a lot of firepower. So
- MCI beefed up its sales force by recruiting a small army of
- hard-nosed salespeople from IBM, Digital Equipment and even
- rival AT&T. The group, says Akerson, is divided into "hunters"
- and "farmers." Says he: "The hunters shake the trees and find
- prospects. The farmers maintain the accounts and work day to day
- with customers, while the hunters go back out and find new
- customers."
- </p>
- <p> So far, MCI's strategy has worked brilliantly. Commercial
- customers now account for more than 60% of MCI's revenues, in
- comparison with about 30% five years ago. AT&T has noticed the
- change and is fighting back. After MCI walked off with the
- Holiday Inn account late last year, AT&T applied to the Federal
- Communications Commission for permission to provide special
- discounts to selected customers. (The Federal Government still
- regulates AT&T because of its dominant position in the
- industry.) The behemoth won the right to change its prices, and
- it regained the Holiday Inn account.
- </p>
- <p> MCI is still growing fast in the consumer market, adding
- some 70,000 customers a week. Last year it offered its first
- pay-phone service and added a flat-rate discount program called
- Prime Time, to compete with AT&T's Reach Out America. In July
- MCI scored another hit by announcing that it would allow
- customers to charge domestic long-distance calls directly to
- their Visa cards.
- </p>
- <p> MCI's success goes to show that in the phone business,
- deregulation has proved its worth. "Five years ago, MCI offered
- only five major services," says Akerson. "Now MCI and AT&T each
- offer more than 50 kinds of telecommunications features." In
- another five years, Akerson boldly predicts, MCI will rival
- AT&T in size, providing an even more competitive environment.
- While some Americans may mourn the loss of the old Ma Bell, they
- now have an innovative No. 2 that tries harder than almost
- anyone else to keep up with the push-button age.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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