Gregory Pankert

Managing Partner

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

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

Education

Solvay Business School
Commercial Engineer

Past Experience

Andersen
Manager

Main Title Secondary - For Display Purposes

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.

Recent Publications

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.

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.

Recent Publications

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.

More About Gregory