Forty under 40

"Justin Connolly"

JOE FARAONI / ESPN

It was Sunday, Aug. 29 — a little more than a week before ESPN and Time Warner Cable would announce their groundbreaking carriage agreement — and ESPN’s Justin Connolly was at his customary spot, sitting in a conference room at Manhattan’s Time Warner Center.

Connolly, who had been part of every negotiating session in the run-up to this deal, was flanked by two ESPN lawyers. During a marathon 16-hour session that started at 10 a.m. and ran until 2 a.m., Connolly and his Time Warner Cable counterparts hashed out many of the broader deal points.

All of the negotiations surrounding this high-profile deal were tense. Just six months earlier, Connolly and his distribution colleagues were unable to avert a problem with Cablevision, as ABC went dark on the cable operator’s New York-area systems for about 24 hours in the lead-up to the Oscars.

The Time Warner negotiations were faring much better because of lessons Connolly learned from the Cablevision negotiations, including the need to keep in close contact during any dispute.

“Both parties were focused on keeping dialogue and conversation going,” Connolly said. “When talks break down and the lines of communication are broken, people disengage. Good relationships make for a much smoother process.”

Adding to the pressure of the Time Warner talks were similar negotiations Connolly was conducting with Verizon. At least three times a day, Connolly walked six blocks from negotiations at Time Warner Center to ABC/ESPN’s offices at 66th Street, to call the telco about its deal.

The end result is one of the cable industry’s most forward-thinking deals, one that allowed Time Warner Cable subscribers to stream ESPN’s channels to their personal computers. Connolly believes the deal was easier to cut thanks to his experience with Cablevision.

“Justin possesses an amazing aptitude for simplifying and solving complex issues by building coalitions and finding mutually beneficial common ground in the wake of competing points of view,” said Terry Denson, Verizon’s vice president of content strategy and acquisition. “As a result, my dealings with Justin never feel as though we are locked in a zero-sum game.”

Age: 35

Title: Senior vice president, national accounts

companies: Disney and ESPN

Education: A.B., Harvard; MBA, Harvard Business School

Family: Wife, Jessica; daughters, Carthan (3) and Brynn (18 months)

Career: From corporate finance to business strategy to sales and marketing

Last vacation: Cape Cod

What's on your iPod: Children’s music, family photos, music from the ’60s to the mid-2000s, no current music

Guilty pleasure: Listening to Howard Stern during long commutes

Best stress release: Cold beer and “date night” with my wife

Pet peeve: Long lines at airport security

Greatest achievement: My kids — two beautiful, healthy daughters who have a cute way of putting Daddy in his place

Greatest disappointment: Jets-Pats 2010 NFL playoffs (not life-changing, but it still stings)

Fantasy job: Owner, operator, GM of the Boston Red Sox while moonlighting as an in-stadium vendor at Fenway Park and stunt double for Tom Brady

Business advice: Don’t be afraid to ask questions (lots of questions).



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