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PSS reinvents itself and taps into government IT market
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by
Garry Kranz
Virginia Business
May
2004
SERVICE |
|
Year |
Revenues |
2002 |
$10,120,318 |
2001 |
$9,243,967 |
2000 |
$1,174,931 |
1999 |
$332,578 |
Robert
Hisel Jr. had to nearly destroy Preferred Systems Solutions
Inc. in order to save it — or at least to make
the company into what he wanted it to be. In the late
1990s, even though the company was profitable, Hisel
sold all of its commercial contracts. He kept the name,
though, and turned the firm’s focus away from
commercial customers such as America Online and the
World Bank IMF and began focusing on the government
sector’s information technology needs.
Six years later, there’s no question that the
risky move has paid off. PSS is one of the few new firms
to successfully tap the lucrative but complex government
IT market. The 8(a)-certified firm (a designation for
small and minority businesses that participate in a
program sponsored by the Small Business Administration).
It began growing steadily by late 1999, and lately has
started to gain momentum. The company took in more than
$13 million in 2003, and was recently recognized by
Deloitte & Touche as one of the fastest-growing
IT firms in the country.
“It was an expensive proposition and it took a
couple of years to get the ball rolling, but the proceeds
from the sale allowed us the time we needed to build
in the infrastructure and staff the organization with
talented, knowledgeable people in this particular space,”
says Hisel, the company’s president and CEO.
Hisel expects PSS to fare even better in 2004, projecting
that revenues will top $25 million, thanks to several
recent Department of Defense and Department of Homeland
Security contracts. The company is one of a handful
of prime contractors awarded the NAVAIR Multiple Award
contract, a five-year engineering and IT services opportunity
that boasts a total value of $460 million. It also won
a $10 million contract with the Military Traffic Management
Command to support its entire network operations center
rake. And just this year, it was named prime contractor
by the Transportation Security Administration to support
all internal databases.
The company, which currently has 185 employees, expects
to hire another 100 people in 2004 and plans to pursue
the General Services Administration FAST 2 contract,
a 7-year, $7 billion government-wide acquisition contract
for 8(a) firms, as well as more work in defense and
homeland security programs.
Success, Hisel says, results from a passionate focus
on protecting the company’s reputation. “We
get a lot of our business from repeat customers and
word of mouth,” he says, noting that PSS has never
lost in a re-compete of its existing contracts.
PSS also thrives, Hisel says, because of a strong relationship
with partner firms, such as Accenture, Computer Sciences
Corp. and Northrop Grumman. And it’s not just
a case of the little firm seeking out the biggest and
best partners; the big companies ring up PSS. “These
guys are a bunch of go-getters,” says Vince Vlascho,
a partner in Accenture’s Federal Government Group.
“They work to understand what our needs are and
how they can best support us, and they’ve got
a unique knack for finding the right folks with the
right skill sets in a timely fashion. There’s
never a blip with these guys.”
Hisel hopes PSS can leverage this reputation to become
a $100 million company within the next four or five
years — even while maintaining its emphasis on
providing top customer service. Of course, challenges
loom on the horizon. PSS will be leaving the 8(a) program
in 2006 and thus lose the advantages of that designation
in winning contracts. But Hisel isn’t worried.
“With our reputation and our relationships with
our current customers, we honestly can’t see anything
but a major upside to our growth.”
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