Ep. 175 - The Human Side of Infrastructure - Roy Alexander
In this episode of the Future Fuzz Podcast, Harry Duran speaks with Roy Alexander, Chief Revenue Officer at VisionNet, about leadership, infrastructure, and what it takes to build meaningful customer relationships in the telecommunications industry.Roy shares how stepping away from technology—through woodworking, hiking, and hands-on projects—helps him stay grounded and return to leadership with a clearer perspective. That philosophy of slowing down and focusing on people carries through to his work at VisionNet, where he emphasizes empathy, trust, and long-term relationship building as essential components of revenue growth.The conversation explores VisionNet’s unique origins, created by rural telecom providers in Montana to solve education access challenges through video connectivity. Today, the company operates one of the largest privately owned middle-mile networks in the state and delivers managed services, data center infrastructure, and network connectivity across the country.Roy also explains how enterprise infrastructure is evolving toward distributed networks, why managed services often succeed quietly in the background, and how organizations can stay visible to customers even when everything is running perfectly. Throughout the episode, Roy highlights a leadership philosophy rooted in empathy, accountability, and the belief that technology ultimately exists to serve people.Guest BioRoy Alexander is the Chief Revenue Officer at VisionNet, where he oversees sales, marketing, and customer-facing operations for the telecommunications and managed services provider.With more than 30 years of experience in telecommunications, Roy has held leadership roles across sales, operations, and customer service organizations. His work focuses on aligning revenue strategy with customer experience, ensuring that network infrastructure and managed services support the real-world needs of the businesses that depend on them.At VisionNet, Roy leads efforts to expand enterprise connectivity, managed network services, and data center capabilities across the United States while helping organizations navigate increasingly complex infrastructure environments.TakeawaysTechnology infrastructure ultimately exists to serve people, not just platforms. Empathy is essential in customer-facing operations, especially when services are critical to business continuity. Managed services succeed when customers forget about them—but that also makes value communication essential. Distributed infrastructure is becoming increasingly important as AI and low-latency applications grow. Enterprise buyers face overwhelming complexity and need partners who simplify decisions. Trust in enterprise sales builds slowly through consistent delivery on commitments. Organizations should align messaging across every customer interaction, not just marketing. Leaders should step away from technology periodically to reconnect with the human impact of their work.Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Roy Alexander 01:00 Why Disconnecting from Technology Matters 03:00 Leadership, Empathy, and Customer Experience 04:30 VisionNet’s Origin Story and Rural Connectivity 06:30 Bringing Customer Operations Under Revenue Leadership 08:10 What a Network Operations Center (NOC) Does 09:15 Why People Often Get Lost Behind Technology 12:00 Lessons from Early Career Mentors 15:00 VisionNet’s Ownership Model and Growth Strategy 17:30 Navigating Pipeline Growth in Noisy Markets 19:00 Why Managed Services Often Go Unnoticed 22:00 Data Centers and VisionNet’s Infrastructure Strategy 24:00 The Case for Distributed Infrastructure 28:00 Helping Customers Navigate Infrastructure Complexity 32:00 Privacy, Data, and Technology Tradeoffs 36:30 What 30 Years in Telecom Has Taught Roy 39:00 Advice for Revenue Leaders in Complex MarketsLinkedInFollow Roy Alexander on LinkedIn Follow Harry Duran on LinkedIn