|

Jato Communications: Denver's Best Kept Secret?
Just south of Denver, you will find a typical small town
menagerie featuring the natural splendor of the area. It's just about
the last place you would expect to find a national broadband service provider,
a mid-sized company looking for ISP partners across the US especially
ISPs with good sales forces.
by Patricia Fusco
of internetnews.com
Jato Communications, Inc. is nestled
in Englewood, Colorado. Its corporate birth date goes back to 1998, but
Jato's digital subscriber line buildout really started in the third quarter
of 1999. By the first of the year, Jato had fired up its DSL services
to three markets in six cities.
Six months later, the firm has deployed IDSL and SDSL lines to 27 markets
in about 38 cities, including Denver, Boulder, Albuquerque, Santa Fe and
Salt Lake City, to name a few. By the end of the year the firm has plans
to be in more than 120 markets nationwide.
The money came
Jato assembled its high-speed network through a series of alliances that
involved a few hefty equity investments from top industry players. It
secured a line of credit from Lucent
Technologies, Inc. and partnered with Qwest
Communications International Inc. in a $10 million equity deal. Jato
pocketed another $5 million from an investment made by Global
Crossing and picked up $10 million from Microsoft
Corp. Additional private investments from venture capital firms rounded
out Jato's coffers to the tune of $84 million.
As of March the company has been granted CLEC certification in 47 states.
Jato has entered into interconnection agreements with Ameritech, Bell
Atlantic, Bell South, GTE, PacBell, Southwestern Bell, Sprint, and US
West.
In addition to offering high-speed data and voice communications services
to small and medium sized businesses in tier two and three markets, Jato
struck a deal with NorthPoint
Communications to deploy broadband services in tier one markets.
SMB
A lot of companies target the small and medium sized business market,
but the definition of the segment changes with the size of the company.
For Jato, the SMB market is its bread and butter, and it's built both
direct and indirect sales channels to meet the demand for communications
services.
According to Mark Nixon, Jato vice president of corporate communications,
the firm defines the SMB market as companies that have about 100 employees,
but the firm is not afraid to pick-up marquee accounts.
"The small to medium sized business market has tremendous segmentation,"
Nixon said. "Generally speaking, our services target companies with about
100 employees, but that does not mean we do not serve big accounts. We
just picked up the State of New Mexico as a client because the government
body demanded broadband access as a teleworking solution."
Nixon said Jato has 25 to 30 people working its telesales division and
more than 125 "feet on the street" selling its DSL services to businesses.
Partnerships with ISPs
Tom Hall, Jato president of indirect sales, is in charge of the 10-member
team that resells its LAN-based DSL services through Internet service
providers. Hall said Jato's ISP partners range from single market ISPs
to super-regional and national players, like Qwest and Global Crossing.
Hall said the company's criteria for reselling partnerships varies with
the capabilities of the ISP.
"Our ideal ISP partner profile provides services to tier two and three
markets," Hall said. "We want an ISP partner to be financially reliable,
have a solid sales force, and be respected in the markets it serves."
Hall added that ideally, an ISP partner would be capable of reselling
1,000 lines each year. But if a small ISP operated in a market that was
of interest to Jato, Hall said it would work with the service provider
to strike a deal.
For the time being, Jato remains privately held. Its initial public
offering was nixed on May 10, when the dot.com market went south. The
company is currently completing a second round of private financing to
maintain its current growth rate.
In the near future, Jato intends to add dial-up services to its product
portfolio. Jato also intends to broaden its business services as an application
service provider, as part of Microsoft's investment in the company requires.
It plans to distribute both dial-up connectivity and software through
its direct and indirect sales channels to leverage its national backbone.
Jato's modular installation process and alliance with Lucent allows
the company to quickly add DSLAMs across the nation. Jato assembles the
boxes, ships the units to a telecom, where Lucent engineers complete the
installation in the central office (CO).
DLEC origins
Jato started out as a data competitive local exchange carrier (DLEC),
but its primary focus is to be a single-source solution for businesses
demanding high-speed services. Nixon said Jato differentiates its DSL
services from other providers because of its intense focus on turning
broadband technology into a competitive edge for its customers.
"We can provide high-speed connectivity to the Internet, or office-to-office,"
Nixon said. "And we are constantly looking for enhancements and applications
that let our customer find superior business solutions directly through
Jato or an ISP partner."
Jato offers six DSL service plans ranging from 144 kilobits to 1.5 megabits
per second. Customers may adjust their transfer rates at any time.
Jato is actively seeking quality ISP Partners throughout its U.S. service
area. ISPs interested in partnering with Jato are welcome to contact the
company to receive a detailed description its partnership
program.
It's estimated that the majority of the 40 million personal computers
in the U.S. currently connect to the Internet or a corporate LAN by low-speed
dial-up analog modems. As a result, pent-up demand for high-speed access
is growing. Jato wholly intends to meet the demand with DSL services in
tier two and three markets.
End
|