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The 2006 Virginia 100 -
Focusing on the big picture
Entrepreneuer Rodney Hunt creates
a diverse work force at technology services company
READER
RESOURCES
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Multimedia:
AUDIO: Rajendra
Singh on wealth
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VIRGINIA
100 LISTS
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by Joan Tuppance
Virginia
Business
June 2006
It didn’t take long for Rodney Hunt to settle
into the role of entrepreneur. The summer he turned 14,
Hunt started a lawn-cutting business in his hometown
of Fort Washington, Md., with the simple goal of earning
extra cash. Within a month 70 customers had signed on,
and Hunt was hiring school friends to keep up with the
cutting.
“That’s when I realized
I was good at marketing,” he
says. “That business yielded $2 million in gross
revenues over a four-year period. I used my money to
buy my parents a car and to help with college.”
Today, Hunt, 45, still hustles to serve clients as president
and CEO of RS Information Systems Inc., (RSIS), a McLean
technology services company he co-founded in 1992 as
a part-time venture. In March 1993, with a $5,000 investment,
the company began full-time operations and generated
$327,000 in revenue the first year. By 2005, revenues
stood at more than $365 million, and Hunt expects that
figure to rise to $400 million this year.
So what’s the secret behind his Midas touch? How
did a small startup IT government contractor not only
survive in Washington’s competitive marketplace,
but earn awards and a spot on many of Northern Virginia’s
lists of fastest-growing technology companies? “We
continue to prosper because we look at the big picture,” says
Hunt. For Hunt, the big picture means a conscious
effort to hire a diverse work force, to mentor small
businesses
(by bringing them on as contractors) and to offer an
innovative package of engineering and technology services
along with good customer service. “Our clients
have fiduciary responsibility to take [tax] dollars and
deliver an end item,” he explains. “We
can help them speed up that process. They appreciate
the
fact that we can help them, and they give us follow-up
business.”
Through the years, Hunt has built RSIS
into the 15th-largest African-American service company
in the country and the
largest minority-owned contractor in the Washington,
D.C.-Virginia region. With 30 offices around the United
States, the company employs more than 2,000 people.
Women and minorities make up 60 percent of Hunt’s employees,
and they’re extremely loyal: the company’s
employee retention rate is more than 90 percent.
Looking back, Hunt says his career could have taken
a different path. His father played baseball for the
Negro
Leagues for a year and Hunt, a pitcher in high school,
shared the same passion for the sport. “This
was a way for me to connect with my dad.”
At 16, Hunt was torn between three
careers — business,
engineering and baseball. After high school, a major
league team drafted him to play in its minor league system,
but Hunt declined the offer. “My parents talked
me into going to college,” he says. Hunt received
a dual bachelor of science degree in operations research
and industrial engineering from George Washington University.
After college, he played ball for the Washington Black
Sox, a minor league industrial team, and worked as a
systems engineer during the off-season. His athletic
career ended 4½ years later when he tore a rotator
cuff.
Before starting RSIS, Hunt worked as
a senior associate for large government contractor Booz
Allen Hamilton.
His background in systems engineering, information
management and business development was the perfect breeding
ground
for RSIS. “I wanted to start my own company,” he
says. “I thought we could develop a company where
we could take the best of management consulting and the
best of information services providers and combine them…”
Hunt likes to feel that his company
makes a difference. He points to the scientists and engineers
in the company’s
climate prediction group who have been hired by the National
Weather Service and tasked to the Air Force to help predict
the weather in Iraq. “Our staff believes in what
we are doing, and that’s exciting to me.”
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