I reworked the organization’s Verizon Wireless footprint — from nine lines on limited data plans down to two upgraded individual plans plus a cell-phone credit for other users — cutting a ~$700 monthly bill by about $250 a month while keeping everyone connected.
Nine Lines, One Bloated Bill
The Verizon account had grown to nine lines on limited data plans, averaging around $700 a month, with more capacity paid for than actually needed. Trimming it meant right-sizing to the lines that mattered and shifting others to a credit — without cutting off anyone who depended on the service.
What I Delivered

Audited nine active lines
Reviewed all nine wireless lines and how each was actually being used.

Consolidated to two plans
Reduced to two upgraded individual plans sized to real usage.

Cell-phone credit for others
Moved remaining users onto a cell-phone credit instead of full lines.

~$250 saved every month
Brought a ~$700 monthly bill down for about $250 a month in savings.
Skills & Tools
The stack behind this build — tap any to see related work.
The Impact
A right-sized Verizon footprint: nine lines down to two upgraded plans plus credits, roughly $250 a month saved against a ~$700 bill, and no loss of essential service for the people who relied on it.
Right-Size Before You Renew
Wireless plans accumulate lines the way closets accumulate clutter — quietly, until someone looks. Auditing the account and cutting nine lines to two turned an oversized ~$700 bill into a lean, deliberate one, saving ~$250 every month.
Image credits: “Hand holding smartphone with blank white screen” by Santeri Viinamäki (CC BY-SA 4.0) · “Dollar Bills” by Fanti Salms (CC BY-SA 4.0) · “Aurora electronic calculator DT210 08” by Coyau (CC BY-SA 3.0)


