Lumen Technologies reportedly made cuts to its partner division, as the vendor continues to lean more on hyperscalers and data center providers in its AI pivot.
Per Channel Dive, Lumen is cutting around 90 roles across the U.S. in its Global Partner Solutions team, including management across Lumen's national channel and partner success units. According to the outlet, no WARN notices were filed, suggesting the impact is limited to less than 50 in any particular state.
Lumen's voice portfolio staff were also affected, with another Channel Dive report revealing this week that Lumen is ending voice sales, eliminating compensation for voice services across new voice sales and contract renewals going forward.
Most of the impacted employees were informed at the start of July and are expected to depart Lumen July 10.
In an email shared by the outlet, the firm said: "Lumen continues its transformation to support long-term growth as the trusted network for AI. We are making difficult but necessary changes to align our workforce to business needs and strategic priorities. We recently took steps to further align our commercial resources to Lumen’s goals, including the difficult decision to eliminate certain roles within our Growth organization.”
Lumen heads toward the AI light #
While the move guts Lumen's channel organization, a source claimed the firm will add partner success talent as it pivots into network-as-a-service (NaaS), a move bolstered by its recent acquisition of cloud networking firm Alkira. That pivot saw Lumen make reductions earlier this year, according to its Q1 2026 filings, which didn't specify headcount losses but did detail severance payments.
The restructure has also seen it cosy up to different kinds of partners, namely hyperscalers like Amazon Web Services (AWS) and data center players like Digital Realty and Prometheus Hyperscale.
In a recent interview with this title, Lumen CEO Kate Johnson said its ambitious network expansion was "powered by the hyperscalers and the neoclouds and the social platforms doing the private connectivity fabric deals with us for this massive upgrade.”
Since April, Lumen's global channel sales have been led by Cisco veteran Jim Ortbals, who saw Lumen as "building the physical and digital foundation customers need to compete in the AI economy."
This AI focus explains Lumen acquiring Alkira to expand deeper into east-west connectivity with a firmer footprint in the cloud-to-cloud and data center-interconnect space. According to comments made by Johnson around the announcement, the deal would "help customers build, scale, and operate in the AI era."