As they today hold partnership talks with Cable and Wireless Communications, the Guyana Telephone and Telegraph yesterday rebranded with a new logo and slogan ‘Do More’.
“It’s a partnership to bring more… Cable and Wireless has some services and some advantages that we don’t have to make GTT services better, to bring more to the customers, to bring more to Guyana,” GTT’s Acting Chief Executive Officer Justin Nedd explained after the launch of the new logo.
Nedd announced that the company has traded in its 1991 Blue and White GT&T logo for “a more modern” GTT orange and blue one with the slogan ‘Do More’ even as they unveiled plans promising to lead through reflection of the said logo.
This includes improving the company’s wireless presence in rural areas and by extension throughout the country.
He said that as the company awaits legislation, that will see more frequency spectrum allocated, they have nonetheless begun other infrastructural and customer services development.
“Part of the ‘doing more’ is fixing your land lines promptly, getting more Internet speeds, the other part of doing more is providing more devices, giving you better value, giving better quality care, providing more for our employees, doing rural development and providing more for Guyana as a whole,” he said.
“We want to bring 4G to Guyana and as soon as we get spectrum from the government we will do that,” he also stated.
Legislation on the telecoms sector has been pending for many years.
Also included in the company’s expansion plans is the establishment of new store locations countrywide, with enhanced and modern customer friendly layout and design.
As it pertains to the likely partnership with Cable and Wireless, GTT’s Chief Commercial Officer Greg Post explained that Guyanese business customers will see benefits in the areas of hosting, shared applications, co-location, risk management and data back-up which GTT could resell rather than invest its own funds. “If we can offer that together, we don’t have to build it ourselves. These guys (Cable and Wireless, Columbus Communications and Flow) have multimillion dollar data centres, so we better use their services and see what it can mean for our customers, here in Guyana, in a way to do more. It’s better than doing everything ourselves,” he said.