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Rod Kackley
MiBiz Network
August 23, 2004
Next I.T. could be
considered a textbook example of how the Muskegon Launch Pad incubator
is supposed to work.
The company that was birthed in the Launch Pad in July 2001 is
now in its own building with an office in the Grand Rapids area
and plans to expand into Lansing or Ludington in the next couple
of years.
Next I.T. Co-Owner Eric Ringelberg
told MiBiz that the Launch Pad was a great place to start. It
was actually a good learning experience for everyone involved,
including those who were running it.
“We were one of the first companies
to move into the Launch Pad,” he said. “They really
didn’t know what we needed and we really weren’t sure
what we wanted, so we figured it out together.”
Being in the incubator gave Next I.T.
instant credibility. When the company’s sales people called
on prospects the name was immediately recognized. That was probably
the biggest benefit of beginning in the Launch Pad, according
to Ringelberg.
The company moved out of the Launch
Pad in May 2002 because it needed more room to handle all of the
business it had generated. That is also why Ringelberg and his
partner, Bard Williams bought their own building instead of leasing
space from a landlord.
“We were growing every month,
so we knew that we needed the ability to expand quickly, and we
couldn’t do that if we rented or leased,” said Ringelberg.
The building gave Next I.T. more than
a new home. It became another profit center. The company now has
six tenants in the building, which has slightly less than 6,000
square feet. Next I.T. is using about 2,500 square feet. The tenants
are using the rest.
Next I.T. opened a Grand Rapids area
office in December 2003 on Plainfield Avenue. Ringelberg said
the firm had to expand into Grand Rapids simply because it already
had 70 percent of the Muskegon area companies signed to contracts.
Ringelberg and Williams had already been working on getting new
accounts in Grand Rapids and felt they would be more successful
if they had a Grand Rapids location.
Ringelberg wants to open in Lansing
or Ludington and hopes to have as many as five offices in the
next two years.
Next I.T. is no longer the Launch
Pad company that offered a small package of services. It has been
adding service offerings as needed by clients. Now Next I.T. employs
three developers and Ringelberg said he would like to grow that
staff to eight or nine.
He foresees similar growth in the
Next I.T. Web hosting division. “We were having trouble
finding a good Web hosting service in West Michigan, so we just
started our own.” The company serves slightly less than100
accounts. Ringelberg would like to get that number up to 500 by
the end of 2004.
Next I.T. is still growing. There
are 12 people on the staff between the two offices in Norton Shores
and Grand Rapids. Ringelberg needs to hire two engineers and at
least one Web designer as soon as possible. “We really need
those people so that we can maintain our guarantee of a four-hour
response time and 24/7 support.”
Next I.T. also promises its clients
that they will not be billed extra for work performed outside
of 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday through Friday. “Unless you can
do the work without shutting their whole system down, it is hard
not to have to work outside of regular office hours,” said
Ringelberg.
All of this from a man who hated computers
when he was a kid. Ringelberg said he really got into computers
in the U.S. Navy when he made the mistake of raising his hand
when his unit was asked if any of them owned a computer. Because
he had owned a computer the Navy thought he would be perfect for
computer work. It turned out the Navy was right.
This article appeared in the August 23, 2004 issue of MiBiz, read
by upper management executives in West and Southwest Michigan.
Print subscriptions are free to qualified individuals who do business
in West and Southwest Michigan. For further information about
MiBiz Network, visit www.mibiz.com.
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