CONTACT A CEO™

 

WE HAVE TAKEN THE SEARCH OUT OF EXECUTIVE RESEARCH!
Sprint has suffered two years of dwindling subscriber growth and is losing miserably in improving in what has been regarded as piss poor customer service. Sprint in the past three years has LOST 9.4 million "postpaid" wireless subscribers who sign up for monthly service contracts, and lost 578,000 postpaid customers in the first quarter. Sprint has reported losses in its last 10 quarters. Sound CLUELESS? Sprint Info Source: Business Weekly

dan hesse sprint nextel ceo executive photo picture image photograph look like

Contact Sprint CEO (CLUELESS executive officer) / Contact Nextel CEO Address VERIFIED
Contact Sprint CEO / Contact Nextel CEO Information
Dan Hesse (wife: Diane Hesse aka Diane Canaday)
5208 Belleview Ave. 
Kansas City, Missouri  64112

Sprint Nextel CEO Headquarters Address VERIFIED

OR CONTACT SPRINT NEXTEL EXECUTIVES

padget alves executive sprint nextel photo picture photograph image looks like Business Markets Group

PADGET ALVES (wife: Deborah Alves)
(Sprint Executive: President, Business Markets Group)
11521 Canterbury Cir
Leawood, KS 66211-2918
(913) 906-9459 (PHONE NUMBER VERFIED)

Chief Financial Officer Robert Brust Sprint Nextel Executive Photo photograph image picture

ROBERT BRUST (wife: Joan Brust)
(Sprint Nextel Executive: Chief Financial Officer)
3252 N Halstead St
Hutchinson, KS 67502-1811
(620) 662-2277 (PHONE NUMBER VERFIED)

Sprint Wholesale Solutions Executive Nextel Photo picture image photograph daniel dooley

DANIEL DOOLEY III (wife: Michelle Dooley)
(Sprint Nextel Executive: President, Sprint Wholesale Solutions)
11709 Brookwood Ave
Leawood, KS 66211-2903
(913) 499-1098 (PHONE NUMBER VERFIED)

sprint nextel executive photo picture image photograph steve elfman network operations and wholesale president

STEVE ELFMAN (wife: Monique Elfman)
(Sprint Executive: President, Network Operations and Wholesale)
1205 W 59th St
Kansas City, MO 64113-1148
(816) 214-6827 (PHONE NUMBER VERFIED)

 

These HOME Phone numbers and HOME addresses are more or less public information, available to anyone with an Internet connection (or a phone book). It is NOT illegal and there is no law prohibiting someone from publishing public information. PERIOD. Sorry Sprint, you STILL SUCK.

I BET YOU CAN GET ONE OF THESE SPRINT EXECUTIVES ON THE PHONE TO ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS.

If you are seeking people like Sprint Nextel's CEO Dan Hesse email address, or if you found Sprint Nextel CEO's email address on another website, ITS NOT RIGHT. CEOs change their email address when they are publicly leaked. They will change their email address to something like dan.x.hesse or daniel.2.hesse or some other off beat name to conceal their real e-mail address. Every e-mail address for Dan Hesse you have found online is NOT valid, once a CEO email address is made public, it is quickly changed again. Contact him above.

After suffering a loss of $2.6 billion last year, the third-largest U.S. cell phone carrier reduced employee count by nearly a third.

sprint next sucks ass

"Even Sprint Nextel, which has struggled to retain customers due to its POOR REPUTATION..." - CNET.com

I suppose that CNET didn't even know about the more than 31,400 Better Business Bureau complaints against Sprint. Based on BBB files, Sprint has a BBB Rating of C- on a scale from A+ to F because they had around 31,444+ BBB complaints filed against the business. In the same time period with AT&T the BBB processed a total of 8107 complaints about this company in the last 36 months, the standard reporting period. Of the total of 8107 complaints closed in 36 months, 3537 were closed in the last year.

Sprint Nextel Corporation is a telecommunications company whose headquarters are located in Overland Park, Kansas. The company owns and operates the third-largest wireless telecommunications network in America, with just under 50 million customers, trailing Verizon Wireless and AT&T Mobility. Sprint is a global Internet carrier and makes up a portion of the Internet backbone. In America, the company also operates the largest wireless broadband network and is the third-largest long distance provider.

The company began in 2005, by the $35 billion dollar purchase of Nextel Communications by Sprint Corporation. In 2006, the company separated its land line telephone business, calling it Embarq. The company also paid $6.5 billion to acquire Nextel Partners, which mostly provides Nextel wireless services to rural areas. Supporting Sprint Nextel, also means supporting the Federal Government. Sprint also operates and maintains DCSNet, the U.S. Federal Government's private surveillance network.

In 2009, Sprint announced that the daily operations management of their entire wireless network will be given to the Sweden-based Ericsson. Sprint will transfer many of their network operations employees and Ericsson will take control of the full maintenance and operations of the wireless network. However, Sprint will retain ownership of the network, and will have control over the network assets. Ericsson will be housed within the Sprint headquarters in Overland Park, Kansas. Everything is supposed to be completed by the end of 2009.

Today's Sprint-Nextel Corporation initially began in the 1800's, Southern Pacific Communications Company (SPC), a unit of the Southern Pacific Railroad, in Burlingame, California. The Railroad had an extensive microwave communications system along its rights of way used for internal communications. Eventually, they expanded by laying fiber optic cables along the same rights of way. In 1972, they began selling surplus capacity on that system to businesses to use as private lines. This effectively circumvented AT&T's monopoly at the time on public telephony. Prior attempts to provide long distance voice services had not been approved by the FCC.

SPC was only permitted to provide private lines, not switched services. It was not until MCI Communications released Execunet, that SPC took the FCC to court, and won the right to offer switched services.

They decided they needed a new name to differentiate the switched voice service and ran an internal contest to choose a name. Obviously, the winning choice was "Sprint". The Sprint service was initially marketed to six major cities.

 

In 1982 SPC became part of GTE under the name GTE Sprint. In 1986, GTE Sprint and Telenet were merged with the United Telecom properties US Telecom, Uninet and ISACOMM, to form US Sprint. This was a joint venture by GTE and United. In 1988 United sold Telespectrum to Centel to fund the purchase of an additional 30% of US Sprint. This purchase gave United operational control of US Sprint. In 1991, United Telecom completed its acquisition of US Sprint. United Telecom officially changed its name to Sprint, mainly due to the increased brand recognition from the successful Candice Bergen advertising campaign. What is further interesting is that In 1993, Sprint acquired Centel. Centel is the company that United sold Telespectrum to in order to purchase more of Sprint. This allowed them to provide service now in 18 states and got them back into the wireless market.

In 1994, Sprint spun off their existing cellular operations as 360 Communications, a move made for regulatory reasons, in order to start a new service in the PCS band. In 1998, 360 Communications was acquired by Alltel, which was then acquired by Verizon in 2009.

In October of 1999, Sprint and MCI WorldCom announced a $129 billion merger agreement. The deal would have been the largest corporate merger in history at the time. Thank goodness the deal did not go through because of pressure from the United States Department of Justice and the European Union due to concerns of it becoming a monopoly. One of the few great decisions in the history of big businesses.

NEXTEL began as FleetCall in 1987 by a communications attorney. The name was changed to Nextel Communications in 1993. On December 15, 2004, Sprint and NEXTEL announced the merger that became Sprint Nextel Corporation. At the time of the announcement Sprint and NEXTEL were the No. 3 and No. 5 providers in the US mobile phone industry. The FCC placed a condition on the merger that Sprint Nextel is to provide wireless service within the 2.5 GHz band within the next four years. On September 1, 2005, Sprint Nextel combined plan offerings of its Sprint and Nextel brands to bring more uniformity across the board. Only a few key Nextel executives remained two years after the merger, and many former middle and upper-level managers left citing numerous reasons including a huge cultural difference between the two companies.

-SOURCE FOR SPRINT NEXTEL INFORMATION: WIKIPEDIA

 

This site is for informational purposes only. Information is reliable but not guaranteed. All information on this site is public information.

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