Beckley, W.Va. (Mar. 15, 2023) – In 2020, Dan Cox had a business plan in his head and it
included starting the business in southern West Virginia. Cox worked for large
telecommunications firms in Pennsylvania but longed to create his own company in an area
where broadband improvements were needed. After enlisting the help of the West Virginia
Hive and taking a CO-STARTERS Core training course to pressure test his strategy, he began
pitching Cox Telecom as a viable enterprise to investors.
Less than one year after launching his business, Cox Telecom is employing 16 full-time
employees and creating a local and regional based operation to deploy a turnkey operation of
wireless services to all cellular carriers (AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, DiSH). The company is also
solving the problem of recruiting out of state labor forces to complete projects in West Virginia
for cellular carriers.
“Dan has exceeded all expectations in revenue and job creation,” said Peni Adams, senior
business advisor at the Hive who works with the company. “Cox Telecom was the first active
WV Hive client to receive an investment from the Country Roads Angel Network (CRAN).”
CRAN, West Virginia’s only accredited angel investment network, invested $100,000 in Cox
Telecom in May 2022.
Adams said Cox and his telecommunications firm continue to face some daunting problems.
She said finding locally trained employees and maneuvering broadband funding and regulatory
issues offer challenges.
On workforce challenges, Cox said, “Our company, like many others in the utility industry, is
searching for highly motivated individuals who don’t mind working outside in the elements all
year round. Similar to an electric utility provider, wireless infrastructure is looked at the same
way. When a cell site is down, the cellular providers see it as an outage that could cost them
customers. Our hours are long (12–16-hour days) when we’re trying to get a cell site back on
air.”
He added that a specific challenge to the telecommunications industry is finding individuals
who are comfortable working at heights of 200 feet-plus all day long. “Also, the inordinate cost
of training to get these individuals the necessary certifications to be able to work on cell sites
for vendors is very expensive,” said Cox. “Base certifications and a climbing kit for one Tower
Technician is approximately $3,000.”
Cox said there are great things happening in the broadband space throughout West Virginia
right now, but he believes more could be done on the city and county level as well as in the
business metro space. “The barriers to public and private investments in rural areas — where
terrain is a problem and there are low numbers of potential customers — continue to stonewall
progress,” said Cox.
“I would like to see counties or metro areas — Beckley, Princeton and Summersville for example
— look to upgrade their own infrastructure while also creating jobs (maintenance crews,
network operating centers, call centers, etc.), “added Cox. He said Chattanooga, Tennessee
built their own network and has recently been cited as a top location for business and remote
work.
“From the cities, fiber networks could be extended out to the more and more rural areas that
would not be possible on their own merit,” said Cox. “The state could also look to partner with
some of the best providers of WISP networks (Wireless Internet Service Providers) with some of
the federal funding being used to establish fiber backbone throughout the mountains of West
Virginia.”
The WV Hive is the entrepreneurship program of the New River Gorge Regional Development
Authority (NRGRDA) and the administrator of the Country Roads Angel Network. Its 13-county
service area includes Raleigh, Fayette, Summers, Nicholas, Webster, Greenbrier, Pocahontas,
Monroe, Mercer, McDowell, Wyoming, Logan, and Mingo counties. More information about
the WV Hive can be found at https://wvhive.com/.
CRAN is made up of accredited investors from across the country who in large part are native
West Virginians looking to showcase the talent offered in their home state. More information
about CRAN can be found at https://wvcran.com/.