Martin Vavrek

Associate Partner - Business Transformation

Martin has been managing large and dispersed teams in global telecommunications for 16 years. He is widely recognised as a specialist in multiple areas, including cost reduction/avoidance and process development.


Martin joined AT&T Slovakia and played a significant role as this location became central to AT&T processes. He created the Global Disconnection Team and many of his processes became the global standard for the company. 


This trend continued in subsequent promotions, and Martin’s responsibility for service delivery grew to all EMEA and CALA operations. His talent for automation and efficiency, creating new platforms, integration of processes and cost efficiency led to AT&T saving over $12m annually. 


In 2019 Martin joined Cambridge Management Consulting as a partner.   


Martin lives with his family in Bratislava, Slovakia. He is a former professional at volleyball. Martin also actively supports a number of volunteering organisations in Slovakia.

Industry insights


Two blocks of data with bottleneck inbetween
by Paul Brooker 29 October 2025
Read our article on hidden complexity and find out how shadow IT, duplicate tools and siloed buying bloat costs. See how CIOs gain a single view of IT spend to cut waste, boost compliance and unlock 5–7% annual savings | READ FULL ARTICLE
Neon 'Open' sign in business window
by Tom Burton 9 October 2025
SMEs make up 99% of UK businesses, three fifths of employment, over 50% of all business revenue, are in everyone's supply chain, and are exposed to largely the same threats as large enterprises. How should they get started with cyber security? Small and Medium sized Enterprises (SME) are not immune to the threat of cyber attacks. At the very least, if your business has money then it will be attractive to criminals. And even if you don’t have anything of value, you may still get caught up in a ransomware campaign with all of your data and systems made inaccessible. Unfortunately many SMEs do not have an IT team let alone a cyber security team. It may not be obvious where to start, but inaction can have significant impact on your business by both increasing risk and reducing the confidence to address new opportunities. In this article we outline 5 key questions that can help SMEs to understand what they need to do. Even if you outsource your IT to a supplier these questions are still relevant. Some can’t be delegated, and others are topics for discussion so that you can ensure your service provider is doing the right things, as well as understanding where their responsibilities stop and yours start. Q1: What's Important & Worth Defending Not everything needs protecting equally. In your personal life you will have some possessions that are dear to you and others that you are more laissez-faire about. The same applies to your digital assets, and the start point for any security plan needs to be an audit of the things you own and their importance to your business. Those ‘things’, or assets, may be particular types of data or information. For instance, you may have sensitive intellectual property or trade secrets; you may hold information about your customers that is governed by privacy regulations; or your financial data may be of particular concern. Some of this information needs to be protected from theft, while it may be more important to prevent other types of data from being modified or deleted. It is helpful to build a list of these assets, and their characteristics like the table below:
Illustration of EV sensor fields
by Duncan Clubb 25 September 2025
Explore the rise of edge AI: smaller data centres, faster networks, and sustainable power solutions. See why the future of digital infrastructure is distributed and intelligent | READ FULL ARTICLE
A close-up of the Downing St sign
by Craig Cheney 19 September 2025
Craig Cheney | The conversation around artificial intelligence (AI) in Government has shifted in recent years. The publication of the UK Government’s AI Playbook represents more than just updated guidance — it signals a huge shift in the government's approach to AI.
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