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Chance, risk taking and service power Germane Systems
by Heather
B. Hayes
for Virginia Business
May 2006
Marc
Green, CEO of Germane Systems, says he didn’t plan for great success
in the manufacturing industry. He started his Chantilly-based company in
1998 as a training consultancy, but, because he had a knack for rebuilding
PCs and components, he soon began receiving requests for small hardware projects.
By the end of the year, the company had revenue of $650,000 from its moonlighting
venture.
Today, Germane Systems is a major original equipment manufacturer of high-end
servers for mostly military and government customers. The company grew 1,286
percent from 2001 to 2004, making it the best-performing manufacturer on
the Fantastic 50 list. Green expects revenues to reach close to $35 million
in 2006.
COMPANY
PROFILE
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Manufacturing
Germane
Systems LC
Location: Chantilly
Founded: 1997
Top
Exec: Marc
Green, CEO
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Amazingly, given such large numbers,
Germane Systems until last year had never had to rely
on bank financing and, in fact, has never completed
a business
plan for its hardware business. “We’re completely free to take
risks and run the business as we see fit,” says Green, whose wife,
Kerry, serves as president and oversees all of the back-end operations.
The company, which has 75 employees
and plans to add another 15 this year, certainly doesn’t shy away from taking risks. Its servers exceed the
temperature, vibration, impact and performance specs required by most customers.
The company also absorbs all engineering costs rather than passing them on
to the customer. “We’ve been told by military procurement people
that we’re a paradigm breaker,” Green says, noting that its
early focus on military projects gave it even more impetus to push the
size, capacity
and processing ability of its products.
Germane’s approach results
in huge financial savings to its customers, faster
procurement cycles and better performance. A military
study found
that in 2000 the Department of Defense was paying $30,000 to $35,000 per
server; with Germane, it pays just $4,000 to $6,000.
Germane’s servers are exceptionally rugged. They endure heat as high
as 120 degrees Fahrenheit, survive in ship environments and last as long
as four years. Because the servers are “commercial off the shelf” products,
new designs can be delivered in three to four months, rather than the typical
18-month procurement cycle involved in contract-negotiated purchases. “We’re
buy and use,” says Green. “They’ve also told us point blank
that it isn’t just the hardware we’re building that keeps them
coming back, but it’s the total value-add solution that we provide.”
Germane services include configuration
management and obsolescence management, which, Green
says, “helps keep the product available for years
when normally it goes out of service in two or three
quarters.”
The military makes up 85 percent
of Germane’s customer base, with most
of its servers used in submarine and ship programs. Recently, the company
won the lead position for the 2006 bi-yearly technology insertion for the
Navy Sub Sonar program, a position it also won in 2002 and 2004. Green
says this win, and others, will position the company
to grow to at least $50 million
over the next 18 months.
The next two years are an especially critical time for Germane. The company,
which last year moved into a new 61,000-square-foot facility, plans to expand
its offerings through four divisions: a military division that will continue
to provide rugged servers; a commercial sales division and federal civilian
sales division, both of which will be focused on delivering integration services
for conventional, non-rugged servers; and a fast prototyping and engineering
services division, for which Germane has already invested almost $1 million
of facility and laboratory equipment.
“We’re just going to keep doing what we do well and move that expertise
and approach into other markets,” Green says. “I’d say
our future looks extremely bright.”
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