Lumen has confirmed it is ending sales of its voice products. New voice sales no longer earn compensation, and partners have been told that renewals on voice will not be compensated going forward. Around the same time it cut roughly 90 people from its Global Partner Solutions unit, including national channel managers and partner success managers.
If you hold a Lumen voice base, your position just changed on two fronts. The relationship infrastructure you relied on has thinned out, and the residual income on that base is on a downward path as contracts run out.
Lumen is honoring existing voice contracts and paying the associated commissions for now. It is not selling net-new voice, and it is steering customers toward what it calls solutions better aligned to their needs.
Here is what that means for your book. Once a customer's contract hits term expiration, that customer has to go somewhere. There is no renewal to place. So every Lumen voice contract you hold has an expiration date that is also a decision date, and the whole base is visible to every competitor at once.
Barry Bazen, founder of Tech Advisor Services, told Channel Dive it is a huge opportunity for every competitor and predicted the attrition rate will beat Lumen's own expectations. That opportunity runs in your favor too - but only if you move first. The question is whether you move those customers or someone else does.
The accounts that feel safest are the ones most exposed. A customer whose Lumen voice runs fine today has no reason to call you, so nothing happens, until a renewal notice arrives and they start taking calls from everyone. At that point you are one option among many, competing on price, with less control over the timeline and less credit for the relationship you built.
The partners who keep these accounts reach out first, while there is still runway, and show up with a plan. That means having a provider you can move customers to cleanly, and a migration story that holds up.
Not every UCaaS or voice provider makes a good destination for a displaced base. A few things separate the ones that protect your relationship from the ones that strain it.
Sort your Lumen voice accounts by contract end date. The ones expiring in the next two to three quarters are where the runway is thinnest and the risk of losing them to a competitor is highest, so they go first. For each, the conversation is straightforward: your voice provider has exited the product, here is a migration that keeps your numbers, your platforms, and your uptime intact, and here is the timeline.
The accounts further out are your planning pipeline. You do not need to move them tomorrow, but you want to be the one who raised it first, so that when the renewal notice lands you are already mid-plan rather than starting from scratch.
Voice is our core business. We are not going to step away from it next year, and that is exactly why we are a stable place to land your base. Hand us an account and we will scope the migration with you, run it with engineers your customer can reach directly, and leave you holding the relationship you have spent years building.
If you want to work through your Lumen base together and prioritize which accounts to move first, that is a conversation we are ready to have now, while the runway is still on your side.