Dear Dan Schulman,
I am writing to respectfully urge decisive leadership in reaching a timely and forward-looking agreement with the union representing Verizon’s workforce. A prolonged contract dispute is more than a labor issue — it is a strategic business risk that affects competitiveness, brand trust, operational stability, and long-term shareholder value.
In today’s telecommunications environment, reliability and service quality are inseparable from workforce stability. Highly skilled technicians, customer service professionals, and infrastructure specialists form the backbone of network performance and customer satisfaction. When negotiations extend unnecessarily, uncertainty erodes morale, productivity declines, and institutional knowledge becomes vulnerable to attrition. The financial impact of workforce disruption — even without a strike — often exceeds the cost of reaching a fair agreement earlier.
More importantly, resolving an extended contract now positions Verizon Communications for strategic advantage in several measurable ways:
- Operational Continuity and Service Excellence
A secure and engaged workforce delivers more consistent network performance, faster deployment of infrastructure upgrades, and stronger customer experience metrics — all critical differentiators in a highly competitive market. - Cost Predictability and Risk Reduction
Prolonged labor uncertainty introduces hidden costs: contingency planning, delayed projects, reputational exposure, and potential customer churn. A stable contract converts uncertainty into predictable budgeting and planning horizons. - Competitive Positioning in 5G and Next-Generation Infrastructure
Network expansion and technological innovation require cooperation and trust between leadership and labor. Alignment accelerates deployment timelines, improves implementation quality, and strengthens execution discipline — all essential in maintaining industry leadership. - Talent Retention and Recruitment
The telecommunications sector competes aggressively for technical expertise. A demonstrated commitment to fair, timely agreements signals stability and respect, strengthening recruitment and reducing costly turnover. - Brand Reputation and Investor Confidence
Markets reward stability. Customers and investors view constructive labor relations as a sign of strong governance and long-term strategic clarity. Early resolution communicates disciplined leadership and operational foresight. - Long-Term Financial Performance
Sustained productivity, reduced disruption risk, and improved execution capability directly support revenue growth, margin stability, and capital efficiency. In practical terms, a timely agreement is not simply a labor expense — it is an investment in operational resilience.
History across multiple industries shows that companies that treat labor negotiations as strategic partnerships — rather than prolonged contests — consistently outperform peers in reliability, innovation adoption, and customer loyalty. The telecommunications sector, where infrastructure and human expertise are deeply intertwined, magnifies this effect.
Resolving the contract sooner rather than later is not a concession. It is a leadership decision that aligns economic prudence with strategic vision. Stability now enables focus on growth, innovation, and market leadership rather than internal uncertainty.
Strong companies build durable advantages not only through technology and capital, but through trust, alignment, and shared purpose. A timely agreement reinforces all three.
Thank you for your leadership and consideration of the long-term interests of the company, its workforce, and the customers who depend on both.
Respectfully,