Gregory Pankert

Managing Partner

Global Practice Leader, Telecommunications, Information Technology, Media & Electronics (TIME)

Belgium

Gregory advises actors in the digital landscape on disruptive strategies and business-model redesign in rapidly converging ecosystems.

Gregory Pankert

Education

Solvay Business School
Commercial Engineer

Past Experience

Andersen
Manager

Main Title Secondary - For Display Purposes

Gregory Pankert

Gregory Pankert is Managing Partner based in Arthur D. Little’s Brussels office and is leading our Global TIME (Telecommunication, Information, Media and Electronics) Practice. 

He specializes mainly in market-entry and growth strategies, strategic asset reconfiguration, content strategies, and regulatory strategies with a focus on the telecommunication and media segments. Gregory has also built experience in supporting companies in Europe, the Americas, Asia and the Middle East on leading company transformation programs, helping clients define disruptive business models and strategies, and translating those into practice in terms of governance and organization redesign, post-merger integration, performance management, and change management.

Gregory is a Belgian national and speaks French, Dutch, English, and German.

Acing the regulatory exam
Acing the regulatory exam
Integrated telcos undergoing separation/asset reconfiguration must carefully balance several factors, not least of which is regulation. The regulatory benefits from asset reconfiguration strongly depend on: (1) the type of separation model being adopted, (2) strategic resolutions spelled out in the master service agreement (MSA) between separated entities, and (3) local regulations. Consequently, there must be a careful assessment at all decision-making levels to “ace” the regulatory exam.
Migrating to the next network
Migrating to the next network
The telecom industry is evolving rapidly, simultaneously witnessing the rise of new, advanced network transitions while current technology becomes obsolete. This Viewpoint explores how mobile telecom operators can effectively implement customer migration acceleration programs to optimize operations, migrate customers to advanced networks, and unlock new opportunities in a future-ready telecom landscape.
CAN REQUIRED DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURE OF SOUTHEAST ASIA BE BUILT PROFITABLY IN THE NEXT 5 YEARS?
CAN REQUIRED DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURE OF SOUTHEAST ASIA BE BUILT PROFITABLY IN THE NEXT 5 YEARS?
Over the next five years, Southeast Asia’s data consumption and computing growth will require a massive investment (US $40-$60 billion) in infrastructure (towers, fiber, and data centers). Through the mix of telecom revenues and IT spending flattening, high interest rates soaring, and weak currencies across the globe, this is both a tall order and a huge opportunity for companies with the right strategy. This Viewpoint explores the path forward toward digital transformation.
Navigating fixed asset reconfiguration in telcos
Navigating fixed asset reconfiguration in telcos
Telcos have long looked to asset reconfiguration as a lever to increase strategic focus and unlock value. While examples often focused on mobile, reconfiguration now reaches fixed assets and is accelerating overall, both in passive and active network components. Rising interest rates, rapid fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) deployment, and an ever-increasing need for differentiation are forcing integrated telcos toward asset reconfiguration to avoid being outpaced.
Telecom, media and technology – COVID-19 implications and medium-term recovery
Bouncing back with strength and leveraging opportunities opened up by the crisis
The race to the home butler
Are telcos about to miss the digital home service opportunity?
Unlocking GigaWorld Innovation
The GigaWorld is defining a new internet cycle, with additional network requirements   The second cycle of the internet is reaching maturity. Today’s internet – and its enabling applications such as e-mailing, web browsing and video streaming – require asynchronous and/ or one-way near real-time data transfer. Wider coverage and greater bandwidth have to date defined its value.
Time to dare: Reinvent the home butler
After years of decline, telecom operators are being lured by promising opportunities around the smart-home.
Time to monetize fixed-mobile convergence
Fixed-mobile convergence has become a reality in Europe, driven by operators in markets within frastructure-based competition and essentially adopted by customers for its discounts.
The Belgian Telecom Landscape
Arthur D. Little released its first study on the Telecom sector in Belgium, commissioned by the five major operators of the Belgian Telecom market (Base Company, Mobistar, Proximus, Telenet and VOO), entitled ‘A New Deal for the Telecom Sector in Belgium’ at a seminar in Brussels, Belgium. With this first edition we want to make a first step in shedding some light on the role and contribution of the telecom sector to the Belgian economy and society, and unravelling some of the complexity related to the major disruptions ongoing in the digital ecosystem.
How to enable the company of tomorrow
Businesses have traditionally organized themselves to ensure optimal effectiveness in each of their business functions. However, shorter product lifecycles, demand for customization, rising consumer expectations, and the growth of automation and data challenge this model. This article explains how success requires organizations to decouple capabilities from business functions, in order to deliver best-inclass performance and enable the company of tomorrow.

Gregory Pankert

Gregory Pankert is Managing Partner based in Arthur D. Little’s Brussels office and is leading our Global TIME (Telecommunication, Information, Media and Electronics) Practice. 

He specializes mainly in market-entry and growth strategies, strategic asset reconfiguration, content strategies, and regulatory strategies with a focus on the telecommunication and media segments. Gregory has also built experience in supporting companies in Europe, the Americas, Asia and the Middle East on leading company transformation programs, helping clients define disruptive business models and strategies, and translating those into practice in terms of governance and organization redesign, post-merger integration, performance management, and change management.

Gregory is a Belgian national and speaks French, Dutch, English, and German.

Acing the regulatory exam
Acing the regulatory exam
Integrated telcos undergoing separation/asset reconfiguration must carefully balance several factors, not least of which is regulation. The regulatory benefits from asset reconfiguration strongly depend on: (1) the type of separation model being adopted, (2) strategic resolutions spelled out in the master service agreement (MSA) between separated entities, and (3) local regulations. Consequently, there must be a careful assessment at all decision-making levels to “ace” the regulatory exam.
Migrating to the next network
Migrating to the next network
The telecom industry is evolving rapidly, simultaneously witnessing the rise of new, advanced network transitions while current technology becomes obsolete. This Viewpoint explores how mobile telecom operators can effectively implement customer migration acceleration programs to optimize operations, migrate customers to advanced networks, and unlock new opportunities in a future-ready telecom landscape.
CAN REQUIRED DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURE OF SOUTHEAST ASIA BE BUILT PROFITABLY IN THE NEXT 5 YEARS?
CAN REQUIRED DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURE OF SOUTHEAST ASIA BE BUILT PROFITABLY IN THE NEXT 5 YEARS?
Over the next five years, Southeast Asia’s data consumption and computing growth will require a massive investment (US $40-$60 billion) in infrastructure (towers, fiber, and data centers). Through the mix of telecom revenues and IT spending flattening, high interest rates soaring, and weak currencies across the globe, this is both a tall order and a huge opportunity for companies with the right strategy. This Viewpoint explores the path forward toward digital transformation.
Navigating fixed asset reconfiguration in telcos
Navigating fixed asset reconfiguration in telcos
Telcos have long looked to asset reconfiguration as a lever to increase strategic focus and unlock value. While examples often focused on mobile, reconfiguration now reaches fixed assets and is accelerating overall, both in passive and active network components. Rising interest rates, rapid fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) deployment, and an ever-increasing need for differentiation are forcing integrated telcos toward asset reconfiguration to avoid being outpaced.
Telecom, media and technology – COVID-19 implications and medium-term recovery
Bouncing back with strength and leveraging opportunities opened up by the crisis
The race to the home butler
Are telcos about to miss the digital home service opportunity?
Unlocking GigaWorld Innovation
The GigaWorld is defining a new internet cycle, with additional network requirements   The second cycle of the internet is reaching maturity. Today’s internet – and its enabling applications such as e-mailing, web browsing and video streaming – require asynchronous and/ or one-way near real-time data transfer. Wider coverage and greater bandwidth have to date defined its value.
Time to dare: Reinvent the home butler
After years of decline, telecom operators are being lured by promising opportunities around the smart-home.
Time to monetize fixed-mobile convergence
Fixed-mobile convergence has become a reality in Europe, driven by operators in markets within frastructure-based competition and essentially adopted by customers for its discounts.
The Belgian Telecom Landscape
Arthur D. Little released its first study on the Telecom sector in Belgium, commissioned by the five major operators of the Belgian Telecom market (Base Company, Mobistar, Proximus, Telenet and VOO), entitled ‘A New Deal for the Telecom Sector in Belgium’ at a seminar in Brussels, Belgium. With this first edition we want to make a first step in shedding some light on the role and contribution of the telecom sector to the Belgian economy and society, and unravelling some of the complexity related to the major disruptions ongoing in the digital ecosystem.
How to enable the company of tomorrow
Businesses have traditionally organized themselves to ensure optimal effectiveness in each of their business functions. However, shorter product lifecycles, demand for customization, rising consumer expectations, and the growth of automation and data challenge this model. This article explains how success requires organizations to decouple capabilities from business functions, in order to deliver best-inclass performance and enable the company of tomorrow.

More About Gregory
  • Solvay Business School
    Commercial Engineer
  • Andersen
    Manager