It is interesting for me to read how Mike came to managed services because for me it was a very different experience. I have always been a service person that happens to be good with technology and at the time I met Mike I had just wrapped up being a one man shop charging my small network of clients anywhere from $100 to $150 per hour to fix computer problems. Even when I did not know what I was doing I was good enough at managing my relationships and had a deep enough circle of technology friends that I could scramble to figure things out without my clients getting upset.
The pitch of starting a ‘recurring revenue’ IT services business didn’t really make a whole lot of sense to me at the time but I was caught up in Mike’s ability to paint the big picture and sell the future (anyone that has ever met Mike can attest to his ability to do this).
The future was clear, I would fix technology problems remotely for clients around the country and he would figure out how to sell the product. What was different for me was Mike’s focus on the business side of things, processes, scalability, getting away from billing hours, selling value, servicing clients around the country / world. These were all things that me and my technology friends had never talked about when painting our vision of creating an hourly IT consulting business.
Over the next few months we brought on a sales person, who is still with us to this day, signed a few clients, started providing service and set off on our journey of learning. We spoke with every expert we could find and quickly came to realize that the experience we had from creating and running Everon put us in the position of being the industry experts. Every time we would get on the phone with someone that was a leader or vendor in the industry the call would quickly turn to “well tell us how Everon does that, or accomplished this, or decided that, and can I fly out to meet you and see your operations” because the so called experts had not built a managed services business for themselves.
Today I like to call Mike the leading mind on managed services in the country – he does not accept this designation because of his modesty – but I guaranty that Mike’s name will come up if you start digging around the managed services industry to find out who is doing it right!
I am not saying that we have not had to learn things the hard way a lot of the time but I am saying that our experience over the years should provide some interesting reading if not invaluable content for those in the industry!
The rest, as they say, is history.
JC


