It was the cold call that turned into a half-a-million
dollar business deal.
When an inside sales associate at Carousel Industries called
Dean College, not only did the solution provider fortuitously reach out at exactly
the right time, it managed to put together a compelling deal, kicking off a
relationship that has brought in hundreds of thousands of dollars in revenue.
"One of our inside sales members was cold calling and
got them on a good day, I guess, and they decided to allow us to come in to
meet with them to get an introduction to their environment," says Becki
Somers, an account executive with Carousel Industries, an Exeter, R.I.-based
solution provider that specializes in data networking and converged
communications.
Because it wasn’t able to keep up with the demands of the
college’s 1,200 students, not to mention its staff and faculty, as social media
and video use skyrocketed, Franklin, Mass.-based Dean College was in the midst
of revamping its technology infrastructure. In addition, the college was
building a new 28,800 square-foot performance and dining center that would be
an additional drain on the network’s capabilities.
After initial discussions on the state of the campus’
wireless network, Carousel and its partner wireless networking vendor Aruba
Networks, came to the college with a proposal. "It was good timing that we
ended up being able to bring in Aruba
to meet with them and give them information on how [the Aruba
solution] would work in their environment. From there we talked through it and
did some design work with them," Somers says. "They were really
interested in the security applications that came with the Aruba solution, along with its scalability."
The timeline was tight. The college wanted to do the work
during the summer months, when fewest students and faculty would be on campus.
"They do a lot of summer programs and classes, camps… They also have a
very large football program there. So we were really working with Dean College
very closely on the timelines they had put in place," Somers says.
Beginning in early summer, 2010, the college’s IT team
worked with Carousel to deploy Cat 6 Ethernet cabling, and install an Aruba 3x
5400 series router system with HP ProCurve 2910 switches. They also deployed
335 Aruba AP-105 access points, providing the entire campus with wireless
802.11 a/b/g/n connectivity. An Aruba
6000 Mobility Controller managed traffic flow and security policies. The
project was completed on time in August 2010.
When the college started its infrastructure upgrade, it had several goals in mind including increasing network capacity, reliability and security, according to Darrell Kulesza, CIO of Dean College. "By working with Carousel, we were able to accomplish
each of these objectives within our allocated time frame and budget allowance.
Carousel was instrumental in the planning, integration and the overall success
of this project."
While the infrastructure upgrade was not primarily driven by
cost savings, Kulesza says they have been able to bring the college’s IT
spending down with its $1.5 million investment, about $350,000 of which was
spent on the networking upgrade with Carousel. It’s been able to cut hardware
replacement costs in half, and cut the cost of its wireless network by 30
percent.
The project’s success has allowed Carousel to approach Dean
College with other projects and ideas and develop a relationship as the
college’s trusted technology adviser, says Brian Feshler, sales director at
Carousel Industries.
Carousel is now working with Dean on a project to upgrade
its storage applications and create a disaster recovery system. Carousel sold
Dean an EMC storage application for about $60,000. "We started to talk to
them from a worst-case-scenario to “nirvana” – steps to take to cover yourself a
little bit and here’s what you can do long-term to cover yourself completely,"
Feshler says.
"We’ve had them down to the executive briefing center
and our corporate offices, talking about trends in education and from those
various meetings stemmed our ability to get into other technologies outside of
the initial projects," Feshler says.
In addition to pitching a virtualization and desktop
virtualization solution, Carousel is piloting a classroom technology upgrade
project with Dean that involves smart boards other classroom technologies.
"We’re in the process of installing the first two or three classrooms that
could ultimately lead into up to 40 different classrooms. Based on their
current budget and over the next 12 to 19 months the intention is for us to
deploy this technology through each of these classrooms."
Each classroom costs between $10,000 and $15,000 to upgrade.
But that project wasn’t necessarily a shoo-in for Carousel.
The solution provider has had to bid and compete against other solution providers
– including CDW, which also works with Dean College – for every project it’s
won.
"They keep us honest. We’ve competed in every scenario.
Just because they view us as a partner and a trusted advisor, they still bid us
out," Feshler says.
Another solution provider worked with Carousel on its phone
system upgrade as Dean had an NEC solution and Carousel doesn’t work with that
vendor. "Some other projects that they’ve gone with CDW on – but we’ve got
our fair share," he says. "I think they’ve gotten two or three
different partners that they view as their strategic partners. I think they do
that by design so that they’re not reliant on one VAR."
The biggest factor in Carousel’s ongoing success with Dean
College is the way the two have developed a partnership, Feshler says,
including discussions on bringing Dean students in as interns at Carousel.
"I think our ability to be a technology advisor to them
across multiple solutions is a big key to it. We’ve got very strong
relationships with key manufacturers in the industry across multiple
technologies. We also have subject matter experts in each of these areas that
we can go in and speak to Dean’s organizations. I think they trust us.
"For them, a bit thing for Dean College is utilizing
technology to stay competitive in the marketplace for themselves. Utilizing
technology, plus what we’ve talked about, has allowed them to be more
competitive and offer a better educational product," he says. "We
hope that the relationship lasts for several years to come."