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Techead
(Small Business Success Story
of the Year - Central Virginia Finalist)
Flood waters failed to sink IT staffing firm
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by Donna
C. Gregory
for Virginia Business
February 2006
Richmond IT staffing firm Techead
has weathered its share of challenges — the dot-com
bust, Y2K, 9/11 and even Mother Nature. “We have
really built a business through blood, sweat and tears,
through sales and service,” says Philise Conein,
the company’s CEO. “We’ve managed
to just kind of ride the waves.”
“Riding the waves” took on a whole new meaning
in August 2004, when soaking rains from Tropical Storm
Gaston flooded the company’s headquarters in Richmond’s
Shockoe Bottom district. “We lost our entire first
and lower levels of our building, including our training
rooms, off-the-shelf software, network capabilities,
electrical systems, furniture and all desktop equipment
for staff,” she recalls.
The ensuing eight months were “complete torture,”
says Phil Conein, Philise’s husband, and Techead’s
founder and president. “Just imagine scraping
six inches of sludge off the floors…off any kind
of flat surface. It was very, very difficult.”
Even so, Techead never went off-line.
In fact, many of its clients didn’t even know
of the company’s trouble. Within 24 hours of the
storm’s passing, Techead set up temporary offices
in downtown Rich-mond, and two months later it moved
back to its Shockoe Bottom address. The staff worked
upstairs while renovations were under way. “We
did not miss a client call or a payroll during this
entire process,” notes Phil.
With far fewer challenges, many companies in the field
of staffing, training and Web solutions have folded
in recent years due to changes in the IT environment.
Techead, however, has proved that a small, local company
can outlast even large competitors, particularly when
it adapts to customer needs.
Phil founded the company in 1988 in a one-bedroom apartment
in Richmond’s Fan district. Philise joined him
in the business a week later. They married in 1990.
In the beginning, the Coneins provided desktop publishing
support to local businesses and corporations. Soon clients
were calling them to troubleshoot other IT issues. “A
client suggested that they would like to hire someone
like myself with those skill sets. I could see [that
an IT staffing agency would] work. Just because of my
exposure to technology, I knew there would be a transition
into this kind of work,” Phil says.
In 1992, Techead expanded to include a staffing service,
and two years later it added a training component. Since
then, the company has placed more than 1,200 creative
and IT professionals in contract positions with local
companies. The client roster includes Philip Morris,
Circuit City and Wachovia Securities.
Wachovia Securities — formerly Wheat, First Securities
— has been a client since Techead started its
IT staffing arm. “[The company] has helped us
be able to manage our volumes and direct our growth
without all the costs of employees. We really do get
great people at all levels of experience,” says
David Acey, managing director of marketing at the securities
firm.
So great, in fact, that most members of Wachovia Securities’
graphic design team are former Techead contractors.
“The employees were so good that as we created
opportunities for full-time positions. We would work
it out with Phil to hire these associates,” says
Acey.
Success didn’t come easy for Techead, however.
There were lean years, particularly after Y2K, 9/11
and the dot-com bust. “We were in the creative
business, and there were no marketing dollars to be
spent,” says Phil. “We had to come up with
a lot of creative ways to keep employees.”
To ensure the company’s survival, the Coneins
temporarily cut their employees’ work week to
32 hours, refinanced the business and closed their Northern
Virginia office in 2003. “We lost revenues, but
we stayed on course,” says Phil.
In 2004, the company saw a 50 percent increase in revenue,
and in 2005, “we had the best year ever in our
history,” says Phil. The company now employs 12
full-time staff and around 50 full-time contractors.
Last August, Techead spun off a new company, TULIP Solutions
LLC, to market a newly developed Web-based time logging
system that allows companies to track employee hours
electronically. “We decided to separate our product
from ourselves, and we launched it as a separate company,”
says Phil. “We’re getting a lot of interest
and we’re really excited by the opportunities
for it.”
In the future, the Coneins expect steady growth. “We’re
looking to expand into Maryland and down into North
Carolina. We’ll be back in Northern Virginia very
soon,” says Phil. “We’re going to
be around. We’re not going away.”
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