MVP Network Consulting Named MSP 501 Comeback Kid Award Winner

Rocked by the sudden death of their co-CEO, the company's employees banded together to continue his mission.

Todd R. Weiss

September 10, 2018

3 Min Read
Comeback

When MVP Network Consulting held its annual picnic for its 18 employees and their families on Sept. 10, 2011, it was to be a day of fun, food and friendship. But while playing a pick-up game of touch football with employees, co-CEO Jeremy Pollock, only 38 years old, had a massive heart attack and died in the Buffalo, New York, park where the event was being held.

For the then nine-year-old MSP and MSSP, it was a devastating day.

A few days later, Ikram Massabini, Pollock’s co-CEO, and the rest of his company’s team began trying to regroup.

ikram-massabini-mvp-network-2018.jpg

Ikram Massabini

Ikram Massabini

“We came back to the company and didn’t know what to do,” Massabini said. “We had to completely reinvent ourselves, from the products we were selling to the company’s organization.”

Pollock and Massabini, who had worked together in the past, bought MVP in August of 2002. Until his premature death, Pollock was a core part of the business, involved in nearly every stage of the product life cycle. He conducted R&D and wrote code, helped test it and developed documentation for how to install and sell it. Pollock even delivered solutions to customers.

“Jeremy handled the back of the house,” said Massabini. “I had no idea what was going on back there. He did just about everything and told us what to do with it. And then we went and sold it.”

That meant Massabini had to relearn the business from top to bottom.

On the first work day after Pollock’s death, the first thing Massabini and his team members did was create a leadership team to help guide the now shell-shocked company.

“We came back and we selected a couple of our top techs and our top sales guy for the leadership team, which was tasked with running the company using committees and figuring out how to grow it moving forward,” he said.

The team pulled together to continue Pollock’s mission. They wanted to make him proud. But it has not been an easy road. Massabini said it took MVP six years after Pollock’s death to get back to where it wanted to be. The leadership team helped dramatically with the company’s transition by adding structure, providing direction and helping to determine how to best serve MVP’s customers.

During those six years, MVP tripled in size to 51 employees, added its own 2,000-square-foot on-site data center to better serve its customers and moved into providing cloud services and consulting to follow emerging trends.

“Things were tenuous at times,” said Massabini. “We were stuck a little bit.” In fact, MVP held stagnant at $2 million in revenue for a couple of years due to concerns from clients about the company’s growth prospects after the tragedy.

To overcome this, Massabini and his team started a Virtual CIO program to provide responsive online support, started a marketing department and went out to the streets to talk with their customers.

Today, things are much improved at MVP. “When something like this happens, it really brings a team together or it breaks it apart,” said Massabini. “It took us some time to wrap it all together and get the growth that we found.”

Revenue for the business to date in 2018 stands at about $8.5 million and is expected to reach $10 million by year’s end. MVP’s average customer has about 30 users, with its largest customer at more than 1,000 users.

Receiving the 2018 Channel Futures MSP 501 Comeback Kid of the Year Award means a lot to the company.

“It’s exciting, and it’s well-deserved because our team truly shocked me by banding together so tightly following Jeremy’s death,” said Massabini. “We really thought after the first year that we were going to close down, that there was no way we could keep going.”

About the Author

Todd R. Weiss

Todd R. Weiss is an award-winning technology journalist who covers open source and Linux, cloud service providers, cloud computing, virtualization, containers and microservices, mobile devices, security, enterprise applications, enterprise IT, software development and QA, IoT and more. He has worked previously as a staff writer for Computerworld and eWEEK.com, covering a wide variety of IT beats. He spends his spare time working on a book about an unheralded member of the 1957 Milwaukee Braves, watching classic Humphrey Bogart movies and collecting toy taxis from around the world.

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