AAPT chief executive Paul Broad won't say whether he wants the top job at Telstra following the departure of Sol Trujillo, but he's got firm opinions about how he would change some of the company's operations.
AAPT chief executive Paul Broad won't say whether he wants the top job at Telstra following the departure of Sol Trujillo, but he's got firm opinions about how he would change some of the company's operations.
Paul Broad(Credit: AAPT)
If Broad replaced Trujillo, he told ZDNet.com.au during an interview this week, he would stop giving the company's retail division a "free ride" and make its wholesale division the jewel in Telstra's crown.
Drive it hard and you'd get a much more responsive reactive retail business
AAPT CEO Paul Broad
"I have quite a strong view that their wholesale business is
very powerful business," he said.
"Their model has been not to bat wholesale, it's been to use
their strength to underpin their retail business. Whereas I'm a
bit old fashioned... You make your retail business perform against
the competitors — don't give it an easy ride. Drive it hard
and you'd get a much more responsive reactive retail business."
Broad thought that Telstra should look more to leverage the
infrastructure it had, which has been his modus operandi with AAPT.
"We're very happy to do business with anybody who wants to use
our assets," he said, pointing to his relationship with Vodafone
and Hutchison for backhaul. "Our wholesale business in this company is
incredibly powerful. It's by far and away the most successful part."
Despite his observations, Broad thought outgoing CEO Sol
Trujillo had received a bad rap for what Broad considered was a
good performance during his time at Telstra.
"I think history will judge his time in Telstra has been very,
very positive. I think he's done an outstanding job," he said. "People will
criticise how he did it, people will criticise how I did it. People
in glass houses should not throw stones. I don't throw stones. I
would do it differently. You've just got to accept people approach
things differently."
Broad thought that the general opinion that Trujillo had
"missed the main game" by allowing Telstra to be excluded from
the National Broadband Network was false. "Telstra's always
consistently said they'd invest as adds value to shareholders," he said. "They weren't going to be part of it unless the rules were pretty
clear. I don't have any problem with that."
He even went as far as saying he would have likely done the same
thing in Trujillo's shoes, although "in a nicer way".
"I'm an Australian. So, I think Australians, we fight hard in
the field then afterwards we go and have a beer and put an arm
around each other," he said.
Broad wouldn't comment whether he would like a chance to tilt
for the top position now Trujillo was on the way out, although he
admitted that he had been interested in the job before Trujillo
nabbed it.
Back to AAPT
The executive's focus at AAPT is currently on completing the migration to AAPT's billing
platform Hyperbaric and moving customers onto its revamped IP
network, into which it has pumped $30 million.
Half of the customers have now been migrated onto Hyperbaric. The migration
had been restarted late last year after being suspended following
faults in the system which made angry customers swamp call centres.
The company was taking it slowly now, Broad said, and would finish after
the next 12 to 18 months. He admitted that the company had
taken a hit to its consumer division because of the botched start
to the migration, but pointed out that Telstra had encountered
similar problems. He believed getting rid of the legacy systems
had been completely necessary and that even in hindsight the move was
the right decision.
Australians ... fight hard in the field then afterwards we go and have a beer and put an arm around each other
AAPT CEO Paul Broad
As for the IP network, which AAPT has been working on for 15
months, the core Cisco routers have been put in and the company
is now working on the edge routers. AAPT is currently in the progress of moving
its customers from other external networks onto its own network.
Having its customers
on its own equipment doubles AAPT's margins, Broad said. He expected to see
growth in this area; AAPT was going to capitalise on its investment by starting a new marketing campaign
in the business segment soon.
Broad was not the only one who felt positive about AAPT's
prospects. Pacnet has said publicly that it has its eye on AAPT for
acquisition, but Broad reiterated that AAPT parent Telecom New Zealand has made
it clear that its subsidiary is not for sale.
Broad considered the offer a good thing. "I really love it when
people want to buy us," he said. "I'd rather be that than when
they want to sell you. Usually when they want to buy you they're
thinking good things about you," he said. Yet he wouldn't comment
on any synergies Pacnet might realise with AAPT.
There have been whispers that Pacnet might not be looking to
buy, but be bought as in the case of Powertel, however, Broad
slashed hopes in that direction, saying that he didn't see any
value in purchasing the company.