IE11 Not Supported

For optimal browsing, we recommend Chrome, Firefox or Safari browsers.

Google Cloud Names Heizer Enterprise Sales Rep for California SLED

“I am incredibly excited and very grateful to join this amazing company,” Tyson Heizer told Techwire. “I am truly looking forward to continuing to partner with the state of California to realize their goal of digital transformation with innovative technology.”

Veteran sales professional Tyson Heizer has joined Google Cloud as enterprise sales representative serving state and local government and education (SLED) in California.
Tyson Heizer cropped.jpg
Tyson Heizer

Heizer, based in the Sacramento area, was most recently senior district sales manager for NICE inContact in California.

In his new role, Heizer will be supporting state government, specifically the California Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency, the Labor and Workforce Development Agency and the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and entities within those organizations.

“I am incredibly excited and very grateful to join this amazing company,” Heizer told Techwire. “I am truly looking forward to continuing to partner with the state of California to realize their goal of digital transformation with innovative technology.”

Before his affiliation with NICE inContact, Heizer was with Verizon Business, first as a senior account executive for SLED and then as client partner for SLED. Before that, Heizer was with AT&T in Sacramento, first as a business account manager for small and medium businesses and then as an application sales consultant.

Heizer is a graduate of California State University – East Bay, where he received his bachelor’s degree in business administration with a focus on corporate management and supply chain management. He has multiple professional certifications including Science of Consultative Selling from Axiom Sales Kinetics and as an Amazon Web Services Cloud Practitioner.
Dennis Noone is Executive Editor of Industry Insider. He is a career journalist, having worked at small-town newspapers and major metropolitan dailies including USA Today in Washington, D.C.