Springboard
to the Future?
Provider finds profits in data center assets bought through Chapter
11
August 9, 2002 -- Are the deeply discounted data centers
of today the foundation for the profitable web hosting industry
of tomorrow?
Rich
Lee thinks so. In fact, tomorrow is already here for Springboard
Managed Hosting, the company Lee launched last year with assets
purchased from a bankrupt provider.

Based in North Carolina's Research Triangle, Springboard
purchased the data center and customers of Utenzi in a Chapter
11 deal, and was profitable within six months of its launch.
"I knew that if we had focus - concentrating on one facility
and one market - that the model works," said Lee, Springboard's
chief executive officer. "You can build up a huge circle
of influence in the community, and web hosting can be very profitable."
With
the right cost structure, that is.
"The beautiful thing about our model is that we have no debt
on our facility," said Lee, who co-founded Springboard in
June 2001 with company president Chris Hanks.
Springboard's 11,000 square foot facility in Cary, NC includes
6,000 square feet of raised-floor data center space. The equipment
for the company's 140 customers fills about 27 percent of that
space.
"It's a Rolls Royce facility, and we're putting some common
business sense into it and running it like a true bricks and mortar
operation," said Lee. "We got to erase all the liabilities
and cherry-pick all the assets."
With
more than 50 telecom companies in bankruptcy and remaining providers
slimming down, the market is flooded with finished data centers
and equipment. Many will stand empty or be converted to an alternate
use. A few will remain intact as their owners emerge from Chapter
11.
The
rest will be acquired by new owners, who will operate these facilities
without the mountain of debt it took to build them. These providers
may represent the shortest route to profitability for money-losing
data center assets, and their success could have substantial impact
on competitors who've either skirted Chapter 11 or emerged from
bankruptcy.
"I
think we're seeing a new breed of provider that's very focused
on the expense side," said Lee. "They expand when they
can afford to do it, get a good entry price, and do it in a way
that isn't a distraction to management."
Acquiring
bankrupt assets has its challenges, according to Lee, who previously
founded and sold MPInet, an ISP in Orlando, Fla.
"The
first six months we had to overcome some challenges because of
the previous bankruptcy (of Utenzi)," said Lee. " As
we've seeded the new brand, we've built up a good name and a good
reputation."
That's
paying off in Springboard's sales effort. Earlier this month the
company announced nine new customers that will generate $200,000
in revenue.
"We're
doing well in the small to medium-sized business market,"
said Lee. "They want personalized service and a local data
center. We can get a lot of $5,000 to $10,000 a month customers,
and that's just fine with us. I think we're fighting in a space
where we can show a clear return on investment.
"Medium-sized
companies are starting to get it," Lee added. "I think
the outsourced model is catching on. I can go in and show a customer
what the cost of infrastructure would be for them to do it themselves,
as opposed to what we can offer."
With its data center paid for, Springboard
can also price its services competitively. It has 17 employees,
compared to 140 for the center's previous operator, Utenzi.
"We have what I call operational leverage," said Lee.
"We can go in there and beat EDS and IBM Global Services
by 20 to 30 percent on cost, and still have 50 percent margins."
Lee
thinks the model will work in other markets as well, and there
are plenty of data center assets available.
"We
want to perfect our business here, and then we may go out and
look at another facility," said Lee. "As Springboard
continues to grow, we're going to be very aggressive in looking
at acquisition opportunities."
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