• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Dick Yarbrough

Four-time winner of the Georgia Press Association's Best Humor Column

  • Home
  • Biography
  • Columns
    • 2026 Columns
    • Column Archives
      • 2025 Columns
      • 2024 Columns
      • 2023 Columns
      • 2022 Columns
      • 2021 Columns
      • 2020 Columns
      • 2019 Columns
      • 2018 Columns
      • 2017 Columns
      • 2016 Columns
      • 2015 Columns
      • 2014 Columns
      • 2013 Columns
      • 2012 Columns
      • 2011 Columns
      • 2010 Columns
      • 2009 Columns
      • 2008 Columns
      • 2007 Columns
      • 2006 Columns
      • 2005 Columns
      • 2004 Columns
      • 2003 Columns
      • 2002 Columns
      • 2001 Columns
      • 2000 Columns
      • Iraq Columns
      • Letters To My Grandsons
      • Zack Columns
  • Opinion
    • Dicktations
  • Publications
    • Books
    • Newspapers
  • Art
  • Reader Comments
  • News
  • Philanthropy
    • Grady College of Journalism
  • Email

Mar. 13, 2006: BellSouth Has Gone and Taken My Loyalty With It

March 13, 2006 by webmaster Leave a Comment

Well, knock me over with a rotary-dial telephone! My alma mater, BellSouth, has been purchased by “The New AT&T,” aka SBC, aka Southwestern Bell, one of the seven original Regional Holding Companies, created at the divestiture of “The Old AT&T” back in 1984. Plans are to move the headquarters of the company to San Antonio, Texas, although Gov. Sonny Perdue says he is going to visit AT&T and try to talk them into moving to Atlanta. Good luck with that pipe dream.

Why would AT&T want to move to Atlanta? San Antonio has the Alamo, Riverwalk and the NBA champion Spurs. All Atlanta has is a catchy jingle, the Atlanta Hawks and a sewer system crumbling faster than warm cornbread.

I must admit I was shocked to learn of the $67 billion transaction not from the company, but on the Sunday evening news. I, along with other retired officers and directors, received an email on Monday saying the announcement was made on Sunday because of “media speculation in the electronic press.” I’m not quite sure what an “electronic press” is, unless newspapers have discovered a new way to print papers electronically. I think the company meant “television,” but I’m not going to ask because at this point it doesn’t matter. Sold is sold.

Is the old Bell System monopoly being re-created? No. There is too much new technology around and too many competitive players for that to happen again. Cable companies are now in the telephone business. So are Internet companies. The telecommunications companies are getting into television. Where it is all headed, no one knows. I only know that the days of a telephone monopoly are gone forever. And, alas, so is BellSouth.

What makes all of this ironic is that I was part of the team that helped create BellSouth. My little band of warriors designed the current BellSouth logo, created a financial information program for Wall Street — we had to sell stock, you know — and positioned BellSouth as “The right company in the right place at the right time.” It worked. The company hit the ground running as the 13th-largest corporation in America.

In spite of doing everything for the first time as a publicly owned company, we did it pretty well. Our management team was bright. Our network was technologically advanced. We were in one of the fastest-growing areas of the country, and we gave good service. For seven years in a row, Fortune magazine named BellSouth the “Most Admired” company in the telecommunications industry.

Southwestern Bell wasn’t a blip on our radar in those days. Somewhere along the line, the company caught fire and grew like kudzu. It bought PacTel, Ameritech and the old AT&T. At the same time, Verizon merged Bell Atlantic with NYNEX and bought GTE and MCI and became a formidable competitor in the marketplace as well. BellSouth suddenly found itself the odd man out. Quite a comedown from those heady days in which we were the telecommunications Pied Piper and everyone was following us.

BellSouth’s CEO Duane Ackerman is getting kicked around in the media for being too cautious in an industry that requires bold leadership and a fair amount of risk taking, and for getting outmaneuvered by his counterpart at AT&T, Ed Whitacre. I suspect there is some truth to the charge. I don’t know anyone who would classify Duane Ackerman as a visionary. Don’t cry for Ackerman, however. His timidity will earn him about $49 million.

Lost in all the hoopla are some 10,000 staffers — many in Georgia — who probably will lose their jobs as a result of the sale. These are hard-working people whose only sin was to be in the wrong company in the wrong place at the wrong time. Maybe Ackerman will share some of his largesse with them, but I wouldn’t count on it.

Am I sad that my old company is riding off into the sunset? Not much, because corporations like BellSouth don’t engender the kind of loyalty they used to. Today, it is all about the bottom line, and the bottom line in this case is that BellSouth is no more. End of story.


Filed Under: 2006 Columns

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Most Recent Column

January 26, 2026: Not Much Peaceful About Nobel Peace Prize

Dick’s Artwork

Column Archives

Footer

Dicktations: Here’s What I’m Thinking

State Sen.Steve Gooch, R-Dahlonega, has announced he is running for lieutenant governor.  Gooch is the guy who said that approving permits to strip-mine the Okefenokee for titanium dioxide to manufacture, among other things, toothpaste whitener is not a legislative matter.  It is up to the bureaucrats to decide. This, despite overwhelming opposition from Georgians across the state.  File that away and remember it when it comes time to vote.  I know I will. … [Read More...] about A long memory

Reader Comments

Yarbrough received over 1,000 email responses last year – both positive and negative. Though most of the emails he receives support his viewpoints, one thing is for sure: Dick Yarbrough’s column speaks to people and they respond. Here is a sampling of email responses Yarbrough has received in the past:

  • Thanks for writing what we all are thinking.
  • I am annoyed by anybody who presumes to know what Georgians think.  And that, sir, includes you.

Read more comments

Latest News

July 2021: Dick's NEW Edition of his popular book 'And They Call Them Games' -- a look back at the 1996 Olympics Just in time for the 25th anniversary of the Olympic games in Atlanta, Dick's book has been re-released and is available now on Amazon.  If you're a fan of Dick, or the Olympics -- or both! -- you won't want to miss this! > Follow this link to order.   February 2020:  Grady-Yarbrough Fellows Announced for Spring … Read more... about News

Copyright © 2026 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in