Every multi-site business has the same moment. Somewhere between the tenth location and the thirtieth, the IT lead stops running the network and starts coordinating vendors instead. The work shifts from operating to integrating. Nobody plans for it. Almost everybody hits it.
The frustrating part is that the cause is not the number of locations. The retailer with fifty stores on one accountable connectivity partner is busy, but not broken. The retailer with fifty stores on five vendors is doing more than twice the work. That gap is the whole story.
The math of multi-site connectivity complexity
Imagine two businesses, each with fifty locations.
Business A has one connectivity vendor. Fifty sites to install. Fifty circuits to monitor. One bill to reconcile. One renewal cycle. One support number. One team accountable. The work is linear in the number of sites.
Business B has five vendors. Fifty sites to install, divided across the five. But now there are five renewal cycles, five billing systems, five support escalation paths, and the constant overhead of figuring out which vendor owns which issue at which location. Coordination overhead is not 50 sites of work. It is closer to 250 effective coordination touchpoints.
Multi-vendor complexity is what scales exponentially. Multi-site complexity, on its own, does not.
Four problems that compound
Once a business crosses into multi-vendor territory, four things tend to get worse together.
Bills that nobody can fully reconcile
Each vendor invoices on its own schedule, with its own line items, its own promotional discounts that expire on their own dates. Finance asks IT to validate the bills. IT delegates back to facilities. The bills get paid because they have to be, not because anyone is sure they are right. Over time, this accretes into real money lost to overbilling, mistaken charges, and services nobody uses anymore.
Tickets that take five vendors to close
An outage at one location involves a circuit, a router, a phone system, possibly a building issue. With one vendor, that is one ticket. With multiple vendors, it is finger-pointing between vendors while the location is dark. Each vendor checks its own piece, confirms it is fine, points elsewhere. The IT lead becomes the air traffic controller. The site stays down longer than it should.
Renewals you did not see coming
Each vendor has its own contract end date. Auto-renewal clauses kick in quietly. The first time a business actually maps every renewal date against every regional contract, the spreadsheet is bigger and less consistent than expected. A renewal that should have been negotiated three months in advance becomes a thirty-day scramble, with no leverage.
New site openings that take twice as long as planned
A new location requires a circuit. The carrier in that region is one of the five vendors. The install runs on that vendor's schedule. The router has to be ordered from the equipment vendor. The phone system is configured by the voice vendor. Each handoff between vendors adds days. New stores open later than the operations team wants and later than the lease commitments demand.
Why IT becomes the integration layer
None of these problems is technical. They are coordination problems. Coordination problems land on whichever role has the most context across vendors, which is almost always the IT lead.
The IT lead becomes the integration layer between vendors. The integration layer is one person with a full inbox. The job description that person was hired for, building technology that runs the business, gets squeezed by the job they were not hired for, mediating between contractors.
A growing multi-site retailer described it this way during a Frontier conversation: "I don't have the time or resources to coordinate all the vendors on my own." That is the moment the operating model has stopped working. Adding more vendors does not help. Removing them does.
What changes when you consolidate
Consolidating onto one vendor is not just a cost decision. It is an operating model decision. When the same partner owns the broadband, the voice, the equipment, the dispatch, and the support, there is no finger-pointing between vendors when something needs fixing. Tickets close in hours instead of days. Bills come in on one schedule. Renewals run on one calendar. New site openings happen on one process.
This is what our pillar post on one vendor or many covers in detail. The short version: the right model is one accountable vendor managing multiple underlying carriers behind a single relationship. The vendor handles the complexity. The customer does not see it. The questions worth asking before signing are the diagnostic for whether a provider can actually deliver that model.
Where Frontier fits
Frontier's customer base is multi-site businesses that hit exactly this wall. The customer stories on our case studies page describe two of them. One was a Canadian retailer in a growth phase, with a head office IT team too small to coordinate the carrier sprawl. The other was a national retailer with thousands of sites that had accumulated multiple regional carriers over years.
In both cases, the move was to one vendor managing the entire estate, nationwide. One bill. One support number. Canadian-based support. No finger-pointing between vendors. No field service charges. TrueVoice on the voice side. SD-WAN on the data side. Our own backbone (AS7311) and our own NOC sit behind it. 0 to 4 hour resolution objective. We handle the break up with your existing vendor and pay your final bill, so the move itself does not become its own coordination problem.
What to do next
If you are running a multi-site business and the coordination overhead has started to feel like its own job, it probably is. The first project is mapping it: every vendor, every region, every renewal date, every line item. The second project is figuring out what consolidation would actually look like.
If you want to walk through what that looks like for your estate, let's talk. No formal RFP required for an initial conversation.