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Avaya: "continuity and change" for the local channel

Avaya's local channel players say it is business as usual for A/NZ, despite big changes for the vendor

The slogan "continuity and change," was bandied about by Australia's Prime Minister, Malcolm Turnbull early last year as he worked to sell fresh leadership amid existing policies.

The phrase met with amusement among the makers of political satirical TV comedy, Veep, which created the deliberately meaningless slogan, "continuity with change", for its fictitious protagonist's election campaign.

While Turnbull's slogan met with mirth locally and further afield, it has become an accurate way of describing how local channel partners feel about the filing of Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the United States by networking and collaboration vendor, Avaya.

Avaya revealed on 19 January that it had filed voluntary petitions under Chapter 11 of the US Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court - move the company claimed marked its transition from a hardware business to a software and services company.

The vendor said its “foreign affiliates aren’t included in the filing and won’t be affected”, and the bankruptcy has since been greeted with nonchalance by at least some of its US customers. Locally, that sentiment seems to be the same for its channel partners in Australia and New Zealand.

While news about the future of Avaya has triggered speculation on the direction of the company, its local channel partners say they are confident in the Avaya brand, and that nothing will change in terms of partnerships, arrangements, or strategy.

Vice-president and country manager of Avaya A/NZ partner, AGC Networks Australia, Tony Heywood, said the announcement did not come as a surprise to him and suggests it will not disrupt its operations.

“The Chapter 11 restructure was always one of its options. If anything, it’s actually the best option for AGC Networks, and we see the Avaya business as very strong, both in enterprise and mid-market. We’re not changing anything in our strategy and the need for its technology will not go away.

“Avaya is fundamentally a better business today than it was five or six years ago. If you look at its EBITDA, it has positively grown in terms of real EBITDA dollars – its gross has gone up because it is focusing on software and services, which means its hardware business is in decline as part of its strategy,” he told ARN.

Heywood added that the viability of the company is not in question.

“It is one of the first unified communications contact centre vendors to move everything to a virtualised environment. As it makes a push towards software, it is fundamentally a better business now, returning more per dollar than it ever had.”

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Another local Avaya partner is CCNA. Its operations director, Craig Sims, told ARN that the Chapter 11 filing is a concerning move for CCNA, but it will be business as usual for the time being, as it has not seen any direct effect on the business so far.

“It’s very hard to sell new solutions when it comes to companies in Chapter 11," Sims said. "The uncertainty around Avaya and its ownership structure makes it hard to sell a new solution into new customer bases. Our customers are obviously keen to know what’s happening with Avaya going forward.

“We’ve got some customers moving ahead with Avaya solutions, while some other customers are asking questions and evaluating things at the moment. But if Avaya has some capital to keep the US part of its business running while it is in Chapter 11, it would help. We will see how that pans out over the next month,” he added.

Westcon-Comstor A/NZ vice-president and managing director, Dave Rosenberg, told ARN that, as a distributor of Avaya’s solutions, business will continue between both companies and that there is no change to their operations.

“We are still distributing Avaya. Avaya is a longstanding global partner, so we are well-engaged with it.

“With the industry changing, any partner which is having difficulty is concerning; however it is important to note that along with Chapter 11 come protections. Going forward, we will need to work with it as we do with any partner where the circumstances change on what this means to our business,” he said.

An Avaya A/NZ spokesperson mirrored the sentiment of its partners, saying that business will continue in the local region.

“Avaya A/NZ’s position is the outcomes of several significant agreements with organisations including (but not limited to) major government departments and Tier 1 banks, and continues to work closely with partners to deliver on market demands.”

In addition, the spokesperson mentioned that Avaya A/NZ is in “on track for 2017” with a “strong pipeline supplementing existing momentum” under the continued leadership of Peter Chidiac, who was appointed managing director in August 2016.