Posts Tagged ‘Peak 10’
Wednesday, April 27th, 2011
RALEIGH, NC – Peak 10 Inc., a managed services company with world-class data centers is hosting IPv6 Engineering Series events throughout its 10 markets in order to help business and IT leaders prepare for the impending IPv6 adoption.
In addition to the IPv6 Engineering Series, Peak 10 has released a white paper on the topic and recently sponsored the South Florida Technology Alliance event in which John Curran, the president and CEO of the American Registry for Internet Numbers, spoke about the imminent transfer from IPv4 to IPv6.
“We want to ensure that our customers as well as other businesses in our markets are adequately prepared for the addition of IPv6 to their network, and education is our key initiative. It is important to not only educate IT managers, but everyone in the business about IPv6 as it could affect many aspects of a company,” said Ronnie Frames, the director of network services at Peak 10. “There are many misconceptions surrounding IPv6 and we want to provide clarity and guidance on the subject.”
Both the IPv6 Engineering Series and SFTA events are geared toward identifying the realities of IPv6 and how companies can prepare for its adoption.
Many do not understand adoption is not mandatory
“Many people do not understand that the adoption of IPv6 is not mandatory, however it is the evolution for the continued growth of the Internet,” said Frames. “That being said, it is important that companies proactively budget and plan for an inevitable implementation in their network.”
Peak 10 Network Engineering spent countless lab hours preparing and planning for overlaying IPv6 on their backbone. “We wanted to assure our IPv6 deployment followed standards that technical staffs were already familiar with so that the learning and training aspects were minimized,” said Don Lundquist, senior manager of network engineering at Peak 10. “We integrated IPv6 into our existing network design so that our team easily understood the deployment methodologies for provisioning and operation.”
In addition to hosting and sponsoring IPv6 events, Peak 10 has also released an IPv6 white paper, “A Practical Guide to Preparing for IPv6,” the first of three in an IPv6 series. The paper is designed to walk readers through the reasons behind the IPv6 adoption, and explain the steps that will need to be taken in order to make businesses IPv6-ready. For more information about IPv6 or to read this white paper, click here.
Peak 10′s managed IT and data center services improve performance and reliability, lower costs and maximize internal resources for customers while keeping their valuable information technology assets close to the business. The company combines its secure, private network and enterprise-class data centers with world-class engineering and support to serve market-leading companies nationwide. As a managed services leader, Peak 10 offers a wide range of technology solutions including virtualization, managed hosting, and cloud-based services in a cost-efficient and reliable platform for its customers.
The company owns and operates data centers in 10 markets that include Cincinnati, Ohio; Atlanta, GA.; Raleigh and Charlotte, NC; Tampa, Jacksonville and Fort Lauderdale, FL.; Nashville, TN.; Louisville, KY.; and Richmond, VA.
Tags: Cincinnati, data centers, Events, FL.; Nashville, Ga.; Raleigh and Charlotte, Jacksonville and Fort Lauderdale, Ky.; and Richmond, NC; Tampa, Ohio; Atlanta, Peak 10, preparing for IPv6, TN.; Louisville, VA, white paper on IPv6 Posted in Business advice, Internet/New Media, IT | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 13th, 2010
 Jeff Spalding
By Allan Maurer
RALEIGH, NC – Many Chief Information Officers have faced pressures to keep delivering value to their businesses from an IT standpoint despite the availability of fewer resources in an recessionary environment. “As always,” says Jeff Spalding Peak 10 executive vice president of market operations, “IT organizations are under pressure to deliver results to the business in a timely manner and within budget.”
How they are doing that is a question Spalding will ask them at the CIO Roundtable at the upcoming Internet Summit in Raleigh, NC, Nov. 17-18. Spalding is one of more than 100 Internet and digital media thought leaders, executives, entrepreneurs and venture capitalists participating.
Spalding says he plans to discuss “If their business has been impacted positively or negatively as they come out of this recessionary period and what does it mean from an IT standpoint? How has it changed their priorities? How are you delivering value?”
Cut costs but get better value?
Some have turned to technology such as cloud computing or Software as a Service or, says Spalding, “Variations that give them the ability to speed deployment to market or integrate with a merged company. Some businesses reduced staff, so they need a more efficient level of technology.”
It is, says Spalding, “That infamous question: how do I reduce my spend and get better dollar value?”
Many capital constrained smaller businesses turn to the cloud or SaaS solutions to do that he says.
Larger businesses often have to take a somewhat different approach that allows them to integrate any new technology with legacy applications and maintain their security and privacy. “Most large businesses have a substantial investment in their current technology,” Spalding notes. So, they take a hybrid approach, integrating their server environments with cloud and SaaS deployments.
During the recession and its aftermath, a good many firms have looked at outsourcing non core business processes.
Some turn to managed services
That means many turn to managed services such as those Peak 10 and other data center providers offer. They’re moving their server operations out of closets or fairly large separate areas into data centers.
We once worked for an NC firm that had its servers in a corner of the supply room. We had to call in our IT guy if anything went wrong, needed updating or something had to be changed. It tended to be disruptive and distracted us from getting our jobs done.
Spalding did not mention this, but that’s one reason data center companies, including Peak 10 and others, have been expanding steadily in the last several years. Outsourcing a server environment to them removes a lot of IT problems from security and patch management to disaster recovery and data backup over to a firm where that is the core competency.
Spalding brings considerable business savvy to the CIO Roundtable at the Internet Summit. He has 25 years of sales, operations and leadership experience. He spent much of his career at IBM and rapidly moved up the sales management ranks to assume the position as North America’s Business Unit Executive. Prior to joining Peak 10, he was the head of sales for Osprey Systems, a SAP, e-commerce consulting and software firm.
He is responsible for sales, marketing, managed services, product management, strategic partnerships, market operations and the P&L for Peak 10.
Tags: CIOs, cloud computing, Internet Summit, Jeff Spalding, NC, Peak 10, Raleigh, SaaS Posted in Carolinas, Events, Internet/New Media, IT, North Carolina | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 5th, 2010
RALEIGH, NC – Peak 10 Inc., a managed services company and data center operator, and Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe, a private equity firm, have closed a transaction in which Welsh Carson has become the majority shareholder of Peak 10.
As part of the acquisition, Peak 10 has closed a new credit facility for $155 million.
Peak 10’s existing management team, led by Co-Founder, President and CEO David Jones will continue to operate the business. The $155 million credit facility will be used to accelerate Peak 10’s growth plans in managed services and high-growth markets.
“This is a tremendous milestone for our management team and entire company,” said Brian Noonan, executive vice president and chief financial officer.
Two members of the Welsh Carson team, John Clark and Darren Battistoni, will now serve on Peak 10’s board, with Clark serving as chairman. The company will continue its successful track record of organic growth through construction of additional data centers in its existing markets, the addition of greenfield markets, strategic acquisitions and expansion of its service portfolio to meet increasing customer demand.
“We have worked with the Peak 10 management team for several years and have always been impressed by its careful and tactical use of financial resources,” said Ken Klassen, Managing Director, at RBC Capital Markets. “For this very reason, we continue to support Peak 10’s growth strategy and are excited to see it capitalize on the opportunities that lie ahead.”
Peak 10 combines its secure, private network and enterprise-class data centers with world-class engineering and support to serve market-leading companies nationwide.
Peak 10 offers a wide range of technology offerings including virtualization, managed hosting and cloud-based services in a cost-efficient and reliable platform for its customers. The company owns and operates data centers in ten key markets that include Cincinnati, Ohio; Atlanta, Ga.; Raleigh and Charlotte, N.C.; Tampa, Jacksonville and Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Nashville, Tenn.; Louisville, Ky.; and Richmond, Va.
Tags: acquistions, Cincinnati, credit line, Fla.; Nashville, Ga.; Raleigh and Charlotte, Jacksonville and Fort Lauderdale, Ky.; and Richmond, N.C.; Tampa, Ohio; Atlanta, Peak 10, Tenn.; Louisville, VA, Welsh Carson Posted in Acquisitions, Carolinas, Florida, Georgia, Internet/New Media, IT, Kentucky, North Carolina, Other SE, Potomac, Tennessee, Virginia | Comments Off
Monday, September 27th, 2010
RALEIGH, NC – The North Carolina Technology Association (NCTA), a technology lobbying organization, has named the four finalists for the 2010 Tech Executive of the Year.
This year’s winner will be recognized at NCTA’s annual “0021” Awards gala on Wed., Nov. 10 at the Sheraton Imperial Hotel and Convention Center in Durham, N.C., presented with title sponsor Grant Thornton.
NCTA members and non-members can cast their votes until October 15 for the 2010 Tech Executive of the Year by going to www.nctechnology.org.
The Tech Executive of the Year Award is sponsored by NYSE Euronext.
Finalists for the 2010 Tech Executive of the Year include several who we cover often at TechJournal South:
- David Jones, Peak 10. Jones co-founded Peak 10 in March 2000 and has led the company to a top market position as the leading independent data center operator and managed services provider in the U.S. He currently serves as president and CEO.
- Ryan Allis, iContact. As co-founder and current CEO, Allis has built North Carolina-based iContact from its start in July 2003 to its current size of more than 210 employees, 65,000 customers, and $38 million in annual sales.
- David Morken, Bandwidth.com. Morken is the co-founder, president and CEO for Bandwidth.com, recognized as the fastest growing private telecom company in the U.S. by Inc. Magazine for 3 years running (2006-2008). Bandwidth.com delivered more than 4 billion minutes of voice traffic in 2009.
- Mark Munday, Elster. Munday is president and CEO for Elster Solutions, North America, one of the world’s largest electricity, gas and water measurement and control providers.
Tags: Bandwidth.com, David Jones, David Morken, Elster, executive of the year awards, icontact, Mark Munday, NC, NCTA, Peak 10, Ryan Allis Posted in Carolinas, Events, Internet/New Media, IT, North Carolina | Comments Off
Thursday, September 2nd, 2010
CHARLOTTE, NC – Welsh Carson, Anderson & Stowe, a private equity firm, and Peak 10′s executive management have acquired a majority stake in the company. Financial details were not disclosed.
Selling shareholders include majority owner Seaport Capital, a New York-based private equity firm and McCarthy Capital, an Omaha, Neb.-based private equity fund.
Peak 10’s existing management team, led by Co-Founder, President and CEO David Jones will continue to operate the business.
Jones said, “Our partnership with Welsh Carson enables Peak 10 to continue increasing the scale of our business to meet the high demand for data center infrastructure and related managed services. Our strategic focus remains intact but our resources now position us to more rapidly extend our geographic footprint, strengthen our team and further accelerate our managed services and cloud offerings.”
Peak 10 has managed a path of steady and consistent growth achieved through expansion in the greenfield markets of Jacksonville, FL.; Charlotte, NC.; Tampa, FL. and Raleigh, NC, and through acquisitions of established data center companies in Louisville, KY; Nashville, TN.; Richmond, VA and, most recently, Fort Lauderdale, FL.
In 2007 and early 2008, Peak 10 opened greenfield data centers in Atlanta, Ga. and Cincinnati, Ohio respectively. Over the last two years Peak 10 has completed construction of additional facilities in five of its markets to meet customer growth and demand.
The transaction is expected to close in early October.
Tags: Acquisitions, Atlanta, Charlotte, FL, Fort Lauderdale, GA, KY, Louisville, Nahsville, NC, Peak 10, Raleigh, Richmond, TN, VA, Welsh Carson Posted in Acquisitions, Carolinas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Other SE, Potomac, Tennessee, Virginia | Comments Off
Friday, June 25th, 2010
By Jeff Spalding
Peak 10
 Jeff Spalding
One of the most talked about but least implemented initiatives concerning IT infrastructure is the design and execution of a Disaster Recovery (DR) plan. This is particularly relevant as hurricane season gets underway in the Atlantic.
Whether man-made or natural, disasters of all shapes and sizes represent costly disruptions to business practices. Fortunately, their long-term effects can be diminished with a DR plan.
An especially crucial business tool in today’s increasingly electronic world, a DR plan enables a company to effectively coordinate people and resources to mitigate downtime or any other interruption to services and operations in the event of a disaster.
Benefits of a Disaster Recovery Plan
A University of Texas study revealed that half of the companies that lose their data through disaster never re-open, and of those who do re-open, 90 percent will be forced out of business within two years.
Disasters are inevitable and can strike at any time. When it comes to anticipating such an event, expect the unexpected. Natural disasters may churn up conversations about DR, but statistics show that adverse situations resulting from simple human error or technical failure are far more likely to take place. These events can result in a crisis that is just as great a threat to your business’ mission-critical data.
A DR plan offers a proactive solution for times of instability. Having a DR plan creates flexibility within an organization as it requires identifying alternatives for resources, strategies and solutions. A good plan is one that has been tested over and over to ensure effectiveness. Its success depends on high level of collaboration, initiative and ingenuity.
Performing a risk assessment can help to calculate the true cost of downtime for your company, and allows you to understand the importance of a DR plan. It is important to determine your business’ level of disaster preparedness and identify potential areas for improvement
Designing a Replication Strategy
Companies who have ever experienced any type of downtime recognize that having data backed up at a secondary site is a powerful form of defense against data loss. Offsite data backup at a secondary site is vital, but is only one piece of the puzzle.
A full replication strategy includes planning for how you restore your data from the secondary site to the workplace after the crisis has concluded. In order to enjoy such a complete business continuity solution, you might consider:
- Designing a current, written and tested DR plan.
- Informing hardware, software, facilities and service vendors of the plan and their expected roles at that time.
- Backing up data on a regular basis at a geographically remote, hardened data center.
- Having a firewall and virus protection in place monitored regularly by expert engineers.
The Power of Data Center Networking
Simply storing your mission-critical data at a secure data center represents a large step toward avoiding the ill effects of disaster. A world-class facility is capable of providing IT infrastructure and resources that many companies are unable to duplicate in-house. Selecting the right data center partner is an important consideration because it can provide facility integrity, connectivity and even technical support that is crucial for disaster preparedness. When considering a data center partner, you might want to reflect on the following:
- Choose a data center that monitors and manages all conditions such as temperature, humidity and power conditions, and has multiple levels of security.
- Ensure that you have fully conditioned power to all of your hardware and redundant power with a UPS and generator.
- Critical systems should be tested on a regular basis and scheduled maintenance performed frequently.
- Multiple connections to a network service provider and multiple Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are essential.
Taking Pride in Your Team
Perhaps the most overlooked and underrated aspect of a successful DR plan is the people who make up your company. During a crisis, the typical volume of calls and transactions increases threefold. Employees who can approach a disaster with preset expectations will be more likely to handle the situation with flexibility and composure. Their positive energy and attitudes will go a long way toward helping your company to recover as quickly and efficiently as possible. To successfully prepare personnel for disaster, consider the following:
- Design a DR plan with your employees in mind, making sure that roles are clearly outlined and communicated.
- Assign a designated recovery site for your people and determine whether or not staff members would be willing to relocate.
- Test your DR plan to ensure that all initiatives and expectations are clear.
- Provide each staff member with a clearly documented version of the written DR plan for reference.
The Best Defense: A Good Offense
At Peak 10, we provide our clients with the resources and technical expertise to help implement the best solution for avoiding business interruption caused by disaster and to recover as quickly and efficiently as possible. We know that being prepared in advance makes a world of difference when it comes to managing your business in the face of disaster. Having a DR plan will keep your IT infrastructure from being compromised and your company up and running. It is essential to design a plan that is appropriately tailored to your company and leverages the best methodology for your business and type of data. Pre-consideration of your company’s priorities and best practices allows for clear, logical thinking when disaster does strike. Proactive measures like these will allow you to implement the best solution when it comes to avoiding business interruption caused by disaster.
Click here to download Peak 10′s DR checklist to help determine your business’ disaster recovery preparedness and identify potential areas for improvement.
Jeff Spalding serves as the executive vice president of Market Operations for Peak 10, a managed services company with world-class data centers. The company delivers scalable, economical and reliable solutions for hosting and managing complex IT infrastructure. Peak 10 owns and operates data centers in 10 key markets that include Cincinnati, Ohio; Atlanta, Ga.; Raleigh and Charlotte, N.C.; Tampa, Jacksonville and Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Nashville, Tenn.; Louisville, Ky.; and Richmond, Va. Jeff can be reached at jeff.spalding@peak10.com. For more information see: www.peak10.com.
Tags: Disaster preparations, FL, Georgia, Jeff Spalding, NC, Peak 10, TN Posted in Business advice, Carolinas, Florida, Georgia, Internet/New Media, IT, North Carolina, Other SE, Tennessee, Viewpoint | Comments Off
Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010
By David H. Jones, President, CEO and Co-Founder of Peak 10, Inc.
 David Jones, president, CEO, Peak 10
Surviving these economic times has been challenging and has created shifts and changes along with “refocusing” on core operating principles, scale of operations, business retention and financial leverage. Remapping is taking place. By that I mean that access to efficient business solutions impacting the speed of change in systems and information technology has led to new business ideas.
This reality does not overshadow the fact that access to the right balance of capital in the form of venture capital, private equity or line of credit requires careful consideration as our financial markets continue to seek predictability.
Postitive potential for raising capital
I was recently asked if I had thoughts about what entrepreneurs might need to consider today in the effort to raise capital. First off, I do not think the fundamentals today are much different than they have been in the past.
The ability to attract capital for a business idea or plan, whether from friends and family, angels, venture funds, private equity or debt, boils down to a combination of factors and that certainly includes the economic environment.
I believe the potential for accessing capital today is positive. However, to attract it with favorable terms depends on several tightly interrelated factors.
1. Strength of the plan and the leadership.
Whether starting a company or attempting to expand, the financial requirements and what the money is used for, will determine how attractive the opportunity is to a capital investor. The track record of the leadership of the enterprise adds very significant weight to that attraction, but also a clear message of the vision and purpose of the business solution along with what and how the business achieves that purpose is obviously critical.
A showing of commitment from the leadership team (with their own investment) and positive progress since inception establish a basis that will be attractive to a potential investor and are fundamental to raising outside capital.
2. Purpose of the investment.
When raising money for physical assets such as infrastructure to support a business case, you may need to look to a different potential investor group than raising capital to execute on an “idea” to develop a software solution or an ecommerce business plan for example. There may be a presumption that a physical asset has some recoverable (or collateral) value, and “brick and mortar” often has more attraction today than capital for a “soft” product deployment.
On the other side of that statement, there are numerous examples of new interfaces that provide access to unique information via a variety of platforms (public and private cloud, social media databases, etc.) and thus new products or services that require little investment in physical infrastructure.
The point here is to make sure you are in the right investor interest market, and avoid a shotgun approach. Get advice or references for the venture group or capital sources that understand the line of business you are focused upon.
3. Taking the money
With all else equal, take the money if you have done due diligence on the venture group or private equity group and there proves to be a match of philosophies. “Taking the money” is one of the most difficult decisions you will make. The favorability of the terms will be determined by the perceived risk the investor has in your team, your execution plan and how dire the situation is in terms of “need.”
If the need is to fund an idea, it is quite a different scenario than funding a plan that has been launched where the investment is “growth capital” to accelerate execution of the plan.
Ultimately when you have reached this point, you are at the intersection of a decision about your belief in your strategy and your ability to execute and grow, and your belief that with the new investor your odds of success and time to market are noticeably better than you would otherwise expect to achieve.
Giving up ownership
Giving up part of your ownership can only be offset by your belief and commitment that this is the best move for your enterprise and ultimately because of that, the best move for you as the founder or key executive and for your team.
One last point here, since you have made a decision to consider raising capital if you have not approached this need with your early investors, you have an obligation to inform them of the potential impacts of the change.
By virtue of the determination you have made to seek outside capital, it is presumed that you have earlier discussed this need with your investors and that group is not in a position to address the magnitude of the capital need. At the same time you must determine from the new investor if there is flexibility to offer follow-on investment to current investors.
4. Your partnership.
Once you are in a partnership with an investment group, make sure you communicate regularly the good and the bad news. No surprises. Nothing jeopardizes the relationship with your significant investors than poor communications and engagement. Typically a venture or private equity group’s role is not in operating the business, but one of strategic advisor and sounding board. Nevertheless, do not forget that this new investor is your partner and shares an important equity stake along with you.
Engage the investor in board committee responsibilities that foster one-on-one interaction away from the board room. Face it: your business will likely require morphing, changing and adapting to reach the performance goals you have set. The economy and technology innovation alone will change and challenge your operating environment. Your co-investors may have some of the best “eyes” into these changes since yours are focused on your sales, operations and culture that fosters customer loyalty and growth.
5. Managing the results.
Prepare a “best case” business plan but present a realistic, achievable plan to raise capital. A venture or private equity firm will have a ‘haircut’ case that will be the basis for their investment. Know the inflection points in your plan and ensure that your team understands them.
Also understand the goals of your investor; they may not have the same long term aspirations as your plan contemplates. Investment funds have a life term; determine where your investment fits into the life of the fund. If you do not know the investor’s return goal(s) you will have a difficult time understanding their strategic decisions.
There is nothing wrong with an investor exiting, as long as the exit is positive. If they are cutting their losses by exiting their investment, and that comes as shock to you, it is obvious that either you were not aligned to start with, you are not realistic about the success of your venture, or you are in love with an idea that is not sustainable. However, in most cases the latter is rectified on the front end of the process.
I believe that we are seeing a renewal of entrepreneurial activity and growth as we emerge from the stress of the economic slowdown that has changed our business environment over the past 18-20 months. For those of you who have successfully raised capital for your business, you may have a few more tips that are relevant, but I have found that the ones above hold true over time and must work in concert with one another.
Peak 10 is a managed services company with world-class data centers. It delivers scalable, economical and reliable solutions for hosting and managing complex information technology infrastructure. The company owns and operates data centers in ten key markets that include Cincinnati, Ohio; Atlanta, Ga.; Raleigh and Charlotte, N.C.; Tampa, Jacksonville and Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Nashville, Tenn.; Louisville, Ky.; and Richmond, Va.
Tags: data centers, David Jones, Florida, Georgia, NC, Peak 10, raising capital, Virginia Posted in Business advice, Carolinas, Florida, Georgia, Hardware, Internet/New Media, IT, Kentucky, Money, North Carolina, Other SE, Potomac, South Carolina, Tennessee, Viewpoint, Virginia | Comments Off
Wednesday, March 17th, 2010
RICHMOND, VA – Peak 10, a managed services and data center company says it is expanding its Richmond operations with a second enterprise-class, 13,500 square foot facility contiguous with its current one here.
Scheduled to open later this year, the expansion will bring Peak 10′s Richmond footprint to nearly 30,000 square feet and will be the company’s 19th data center facility in its 10 U.S. markets.
“The expansion of our Richmond operations is a direct result of high customer demand from enterprise companies stretching from Tidewater Virginia to Washington, D.C.,” said Mark Wensell, Ph.D., the vice president and general manager of Peak 10 Richmond.
The new Richmond data center will be engineered with multiple levels of security, uninterruptible power, HVAC systems, fire suppression and around-the-clock monitoring and management. It will be SAS70 Type II, PCI compliant and interconnected with Peak 10’s private network.
The company recently expanded its credit facility to $95 million, positioning it for ongoing organic growth and re-investment in its current markets, the company says.
Peak 10 clients include: LendingTree, Global Knowledge, Pergo, Healthways, Churchill Downs and The Fresh Market.
www.peak10.com
Tags: data centers, managed services, Peak 10, Virginia Posted in Hardware, Internet/New Media, IT, Potomac, Virginia | Comments Off
|
|
|