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Inside the World of Data Centers, with Derek Siler, Flexential

March 18, 2024 by John Ray

Derek Siler, Flexential
North Fulton Business Radio
Inside the World of Data Centers, with Derek Siler, Flexential
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Derek Siler, Flexential

Inside the World of Data Centers, with Derek Siler, Flexential (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 753)

In this episode of North Fulton Business Radio, host John Ray interviewed Derek Seiler from Flexential, a company that provides data center infrastructure services. They discussed the importance of data centers, how Flexential helps businesses manage their data, and the significance of having data centers across the country for better application performance. Derek also highlighted Flexential’s capabilities in hosting and managing the vast data and computational needs of modern businesses, including AI workloads. He also delved into the challenges and solutions around data security, phishing attacks, the importance of multi-factor authentication in protecting business data, success stories, and much more.

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. The show is recorded and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Derek Siler, Solutions Architect and Channel Sales, Flexential

Flexential empowers the IT journey of the nation’s most complex businesses by offering flexible and tailored hybrid IT solutions comprised of colocation, cloud, connectivity, data protection, managed services, and professional services. The company builds on a platform of three million square feet of data center space in 19 highly connected markets, and on its 100Gbps private backbone to meet the most stringent challenges in security, compliance, and resiliency. See how Flexential goes beyond the four walls of the data center to empower IT through an interactive map found on www.flexential.com.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Derek Siler LinkedIn

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Introduction to North Fulton Business Radio
01:28 Welcoming Derek Siler from Flexential
01:38 Exploring Flexential’s Impact on Data Center Infrastructure
03:44 The Importance of Scale in Data Center Operations
07:05 Navigating the Complexities of Cloud Computing
08:52 The Critical Role of Data Centers in Today’s Digital World
11:31 Security Measures and Challenges in Data Management
20:26 The Future of AI and Flexential’s Role
24:43 Identifying Ideal Clients for Flexential
25:48 Success Stories and How to Connect with Flexential
29:25 Closing Remarks and Additional Resources

About North Fulton Business Radio and host John Ray

With over 750 shows and having featured over 1,200 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in our community like no one else. We are the undisputed “Voice of Business” in North Fulton!

The show welcomes a wide variety of business, non-profit, and community leaders to get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. There’s no discrimination based on company size, and there’s never any “pay to play.” North Fulton Business Radio supports and celebrates business by sharing positive business stories that traditional media ignore. Some media leans left. Some media leans right. We lean business.

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. The show is recorded and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, and many others.

The studio address is 275 South Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009.

John Ray
John Ray, Business RadioX – North Fulton, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors

John Ray also operates his own business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their value, their positioning and business development, and their pricing. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as consultants, coaches, attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

John is the bestselling author of The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

 

Renasant BankRenasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions, with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management, and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

 

Tagged With: AI, Atlanta data centers, cloud computing, cybersecurity, Data Centers, Derek Siler, Flexential, managed services, multi-factor authentication, phishing

Sean Barker, cloudEQ

May 5, 2021 by John Ray

Sean Barker, cloudEQ
North Fulton Business Radio
Sean Barker, cloudEQ
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Sean Barker, cloudEQ
                    Sean Barker, cloudEQ

Sean Barker, cloudEQ  (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 354)

Sean Barker founded cloudEQ to provide cloud migration and related IT services to enterprise-level clients. He joined host John Ray to discuss the dynamics which drive large companies to the cloud, why cloudEQ’s work is not just technology based but also people focused, and much more.  North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

cloudEQ

cloudEQ is a professional services company providing customized cloud-based solutions.

Our focus is on cloud execution tailored to meet your goals and work with you to evaluate your current cloud model to improve performance, increase security, deliver automation, reduce cost and optimize your cloud environment.

cloudEQ is a professional services company specializing in Several areas of “Cloud” based services.

  •  Optimization for performance and cost-efficiency
  • DevOps – Automation for repetitive tasks and application deployment
  • Application Development of services, corporate and mobile
  • Security to ensure systems and data are safe and secure
  • Transformation to take advantage of more efficient technologies
  • Migrations to move your systems from your datacenters to the cloud
  • Production Support for client applications as well as performance enhancements
  • Operations Support to help manage client day-to-day services and systems

cloudEQ’s priorities are always keeping the focus on the customer and the business value generated, providing extensive expertise in creating robust, secure, high-performing DevOps design, implementation and support, using Agile methodology, always keeping clients in the loop, and complete project visibility and multiple open lines of communication from day one.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Sean C. Barker, CEO, cloudEQ

cloudEQ
Sean C. Barker, CEO, cloudEQ

Sean C. Barker founded cloudEQ and serves as its Chief Executive Officer. Mr. Barker founded cloudEQ after a successful career as an entrepreneur and executive in Fortune 100 companies. He has over twenty-five years of experience in IT and IT leadership in infrastructure, operations application development, SaaS, PaaS, and program management.

Prior to founding cloudEQ he founded Omadas; a consulting firm with clients across the globe and served as the COO of Boardwalk Entertainment group where he holds a patent for a Mobile Replacement Dialogue Recording system. Prior to becoming an entrepreneur, he was the CTO and VP IT at Ingram Micro (NYSE:IM $40B revenue) and Director IT WellPoint health Networks/Anthem (NYSE: ANTM $100B revenue).

He holds a B.A. in Business and an M.B.A. in Finance and Marketing from American Intercontinental University.

LinkedIn

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • Tell us about cloudEQ? What do you do? Why is it relevant now?
  • Why are you focused on the cloud and what makes the cloud relevant now?
  • What are some examples of the work cloudEQ does?
  • Has COVID affected cloudEQ or your clients?
  • What makes cloudEQ different?
  • What are you particularly proud of at cloudEQ?

North Fulton Business Radio is hosted by John Ray, and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Tagged With: cloud computing, cloud migration, cloud services provider, cloudEQ, DevOps, it services, managed IT services, Migration, outsourced IT services, Sean C. Barker, Technology

Cloud Computing for Atlanta Small Business – An Interview with Scott Bechtold, Agility IT (IT Help Atlanta, Episode 9)

October 16, 2020 by John Ray

Scott-Bechtold-Nerdio
IT Help Atlanta
Cloud Computing for Atlanta Small Business - An Interview with Scott Bechtold, Agility IT (IT Help Atlanta, Episode 9)
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cloud computing for Atlanta small business

Cloud Computing for Atlanta Small Business – An Interview with Scott Bechtold, Agility IT (IT Help Atlanta, Episode 9)

Host Rick Higgins speaks with Scott Bechtold, Agility IT, on cloud computing for Atlanta small business, what to look for in a cloud services provider, the difference between private cloud and public cloud, and much more.  “IT Help Atlanta” is brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your technology advisor.

About the Show

“IT Help Atlanta” profiles small to mid-market businesses and highlights how those companies use technology to succeed. An archive of previous shows can be found here.

About Your Host

Rick-Higgins-2019Rick Higgins is Owner and President of TeamLogic IT of Dunwoody, GA. Rick’s firm is part of a national network of locally-owned service businesses, providing comprehensive IT services to the small-medium sized business market.

They offer managed service for networking, cyber security, data and email, as well as hardware and software support in addition to a variety of consultation and preventative maintenance services. Rick’s personal and corporate philosophy is simple: Stand up, be bold, and tell the truth.

Connect with Rick on LinkedIn and Twitter, and follow TeamLogic on Facebook.

Tagged With: Agility IT, cloud computing, cloud services provider, IT, IT Help Atlanta, Rick Higgins, TeamLogic IT

Cloud Computing: A Special Edition of IT Help Atlanta with Rick Higgins

July 28, 2020 by John Ray

Rick-Higgins
IT Help Atlanta
Cloud Computing: A Special Edition of IT Help Atlanta with Rick Higgins
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cloud computing

Cloud Computing: A Special Edition of IT Help Atlanta with Rick Higgins

Cloud computing is the focus on this special edition of “IT Help Atlanta.” Rick Higgins addresses various aspects of cloud computing, including why it continues to grow so rapidly, why cloud computing is much more secure than on-premises IT, and much more. “IT Help Atlanta” is brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your technology advisor.

Question/Topics Covered in this Show:

  • Rick addresses the growing cloud computing trend(s) and why technology is progressing in that manner. 
  • What is the cloud?
  • Is the cloud more secure than an on premise system?
  • Why is cloud computing important to small or medium businesses?
  • What’s driving this trend?
  • What are the types of cloud solutions that TeamLogicIT offers?

About the Show

“IT Help Atlanta” profiles small to mid-market businesses and highlights how those companies use technology to succeed. An archive of previous shows can be found here.

About Your Host

Rick-Higgins-2019Rick Higgins is Owner and President of TeamLogic IT of Dunwoody, GA. Rick’s firm is part of a national network of locally-owned service businesses, providing comprehensive IT services to the small-medium sized business market.

They offer managed service for networking, cyber security, data and email, as well as hardware and software support in addition to a variety of consultation and preventative maintenance services. Rick’s personal and corporate philosophy is simple: Stand up, be bold, and tell the truth.

Connect with Rick on LinkedIn and Twitter, and follow TeamLogic on Facebook.

Show Transcript

Announcer: Broadcasting from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, it’s time for ”IT Help Atlanta” brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your technology advisor. Now, here’s your host, Rick Higgins.

John: Hello, everyone. I am not Rick Higgins. I’m John Ray sitting in for Rick today and I’m sitting in for Rick so we can actually talk to Rick and we’re gonna put him on the other side of the table today. Rick Higgins.

Rick: Hey, John.

John: Rick, yeah. Hey, welcome to your own show, pal.

Rick: Oh yeah. Well, thank you. Thank you so much for doing this. This is a really interesting thing we’re trying to do today, where we’re gonna talk specifically about cloud computing and the trends in the industry and why the technology is progressing in that fashion and in that manner.

John: Absolutely, I’ve been looking forward to us doing this so I can learn a few things. But folks, before we get into discussing cloud computing, I just wanna remind you that ”IT Help Atlanta” is brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your managed services technology advisor, specializing in cyber security cloud and business continuity solutions. Team IT leverages cutting edge technology to solve all types of business problems. And go to ithelpatlanta.com for audio archives of both this show and all the rest of the shows in the series and to learn more about TeamLogic IT.

So Rick, thanks again, and thanks for joining us with your expertise on this. So let’s talk about the growing cloud computing trends. We hear the word cloud a lot and why is technology progressing in this direction?

Rick: I think that there’s a few things that are the main driving forces behind the trend. And this is not in order of priority, but all of it’s coming together at this time and place that we are right now here in the year 2020. And one thing is that mobile computing is becoming a real important to people to be untethered from their wired network within their office to whether they wanna work from home or on Wi-Fi in a hotel room or a coffee shop or whatever. That combined with the rapid expansion in internet connection speeds on both hardwired connectivity and Wi-Fi has really made the demand…has really increased the demand for this type of computing.

And so when you have a mobile device, even though they’re extremely powerful, they don’t really need to be as powerful with the tool and the power of cloud computing, because most of the computation, most of the heavy lifting associated with the work is happening on a server in a data center somewhere. And that’s what the cloud is. So people ask me all the time, what is the cloud? And the simple answer is it’s a server and a data center and that’s all it is.

John: Yeah. And that’s really important because you hear this word cloud and you really don’t know. Sometimes, I mean, I don’t know what that means, and it sounds pretty ethereal, but it’s pretty hardwired in a sense, I mean, not hardwired, but it’s real technology sitting out there somewhere to be able to access. Correct?

Rick: You know, back in the day, it used to be the computers were all these big giant mainframes, and the way we accessed the computers was through what we called at the time dumb terminals or dummy terminals that didn’t really have any memory in the local function. Everything was just to access through hardwired connectivity, access to the mainframe. Well, that model is really what we’re reverting back to with the cloud. We’re in the heavy lifting associated with the servers, which are, you know, the diesel engines of our computing environment. All that computation and the heavy work is happening at the server level, almost all of it.

John: So Rick, let’s talk about security because that’s really at the top of everyone’s mind or should be with all the issues that are going on out there. I mean, is the cloud actually more secure than having an on-premise system?

Rick: There’s no more secure way to compute on this planet than in the cloud. It’s absolutely the safest way to compute when someone who’s concerned about their data, someone who’s concerned about access to their application or to their internal network. So here’s why. So consider a few things, consider the physical security aspect of a data center itself and compare that to the physical security of your office, where you may have an on-premise server. It would be very, very difficult for any CPA firm or engineering firm or any business, quite frankly, services firm or otherwise, to replicate the physical security aspect that is inherent in all data centers right now.

I think the last time I was in a data center, I had to have my eyeball scanned, my hand printed on a screen. And this is after I’d already gone through some fingerprinting the previous time that I was there. They also weigh me in an airlock system.

John: Really?

Rick: Yeah. I’m in an interim airlock system and they’re weighing me. So I had to tell them that I was, I had to put my briefcase on a special table, so that didn’t get included in my way. And so they were making sure I wasn’t coming in with some kind of a hidden device or something like that. So I had to go through all that before I could physically get into the data center.

Then once I got in, I was, you know, reminded of all the multiple levels of redundant power, the electricity that’s available, just to backup power, but the redundant feeds that are in there, redundant internet backbone access into that center so that should there be a major power interruption or for any reason, let’s say a tornado, you know, worst-case scenario, flood, tornado-type of thing, or earthquake that the system, in particular the stuff that I was working with was replicated in another data center in another city.

So trying to think about that in terms of security, and to try to replicate that in an on-premise server in an office somewhere would be very, very expensive. So cloud computing is expensive, but you know, if your system has to be up and it has to be secure, there’s no better way to do it.

And the other thing is it’s a different way to pay for it too, right? So it’s kind of, you pay by the drink or you pay on a monthly basis. So it’s part of your P&L as opposed to being something that you’re carrying on your balance sheet as an asset that you’re depreciating. You’re not really buying hardware so much as you’re leasing it. So that’s true whether you’re subscribing to an application or whether you’re doing a Desktop as a Service, which is something that we do at TeamLogic IT.

John: So since you’re subscribing, you’re always up-to-date because that’s what you’re subscribing to, right? Is the latest and the greatest, as opposed to you buy a piece of hardware software and it continually, I guess, depreciates in its quality over time, right? I mean, did I get that right?

Rick: Let’s just say you’re subscribing to an application that’s sitting on a server. Well, that server is a physical server in that data center. But the data center engineers are watching that hardware and making sure that they’re keeping the memory current, that they’re keeping the operating system current and all the security aspects associated with the operating system are current and up-to-date. And so they’re watching that.

And as that hardware ages, they’ll replace that, and that replacement will be invisible to you. You’ll never have to have somebody coming into your office to say, “Hey, it’s now time to…this server’s three or four years old. It needs to be changed out.” Well, that’s happening real time and/ or in the middle of the night. You’ll just never see it. You’ll never know, and it’ll be invisible to you. And you’ll basically just enjoy the continued and increased actual security and the continued and increase capability and performance of the application that you’re working with.

John: Folks, we’re chatting with Rick Higgins. He’s normally the host of ”IT Help Atlanta.” And I’m John Ray, I’m sitting in for him and getting the chance to talk to Rick about cloud computing. Rick, you work with small to medium-sized businesses mostly, why is cloud computing so important to small and medium-sized businesses particularly?

Rick: Well, we’ve talked about the security aspect. But I think the other thing that’s become very relevant in today’s time because here we are it’s July of 2020, we’re in the middle of, well, hopefully at the end, but I’ll just say we’re in the middle of the pandemic, the COVID situation, and the ability to have a remote working capability has never become more important. With folks not being allowed to come back to the office, kind of, depending on where they live in the country, I think California’s, has started another shutdown now.

Here in Georgia, we are allowed to go back to work, but some companies are still deciding to not let their people come back, or if they do, they can only come back every other day or in phases and stages. I know my wife’s company is doing that. So you still wanna get productivity out of your staff. You don’t wanna have to lay people off and if you can help it and you want them to be able to work. Well, that means remote working. So there’s no better way to do it than cloud computing and providing those capabilities and the security that’s inherent with that.

John: I think you’ve addressed some of this, but I’m just curious about what other drivers that you see in this trend toward cloud computing?

Rick: Well, the thing that I would revisit and that I talked about up front was the internet connectivity speeds. Right now, there are just tons and tons… And I’m talking specifically about Metro Atlanta. And my assumption is that it’s similar in every major city in the country, if not the whole world. But there’s tons and tons of telecom companies that are just digging up the roads and running fiber everywhere. And they’re starting to run it into residential neighborhoods as well. So it’s not just in areas that are commercial-centric.

But I don’t know really of too many commercial areas where office space is available or even industrial space is available where there’s not more than one fiber option for connectivity. And because of that rapid expansion of the connections and the cables and the fibers that are running everywhere, the pricing has come down.

So the speed is going up at the same time that the pricing is coming down. What that does for the application developers out there is it allows them to make their software more and more complex because heavier duty, higher iterations and heavy computation requirements are still able to run across that increased bandwidth. And then the end-user company can afford it because the prices are coming down because of competition. That’s what we’re seeing in Atlanta.

I’ve had clients request pricing on fiber, which is something that we do at TeamLogic IT. And then they, for whatever reason, they put that decision on hold, come back to me four to six months later and ask for an updated pricing. And we’re seeing as much as 25% reductions over that six months. Yeah. So and I tell people, I say, ”Look, you know, you need this and go ahead and do this deal, but let’s just do a 12-month deal because chances are this pricing is gonna be better in 12 months.” And that’s been the trend for the last five years.

John: So let’s get specific about how TeamLogic IT helps. So, you know, what kind of cloud solutions do you offer and do you work with your clients on?

Rick: So almost all of our clients are in at least some kind of hybrid cloud environment. But for fully cloud, for full-cloud capabilities, we have two different options. And the first one is we just call it a full application server with a Desktop as a Service. And what that means is that that client requires some kind of line of business application, whether it’s QuickBooks or their customer resource management tool, their CRM is required to be on a server of some kind or it could be an ERP solution, if it’s a manufacturing site, and it’s required to be on a server and because the software that they’re working with is not natively available on cloud yet as a subscription.

So we’ll put them on our cloud server and then we’ll create what is in effect, dumb terminals for their laptops and desktops to access that and we call that Desktop as a Service. All of the computation is occurring at the data center, on the server at the data center, very, very little local computation occurring on the local machines.

The neat thing about that as they can access that from a device as simple and benign as their cell phone or a tablet. They can be anywhere in the world. They need to be somewhere in the world. They can’t be off planet, right? It’s anywhere in the world. And if they have a web browser with connectivity on even just a low bandwidth, a really slow speed, they can get access to their desktop through any browser. And it’s very secure. As long as they have their login name, username, and password, they can get in. So it’s an extremely powerful tool. And we have, I would say, three quarters of my cloud clients use this particular tool and it’s full application server with Desktop as a service.

Our second option, which is not quite as expensive and obviously not as powerful is what we call the TeamLogic IT Cloud Drive. And that is basically for clients that don’t have any kind of application, line of business application, that’s required to be on a server. So everything they do, they’re already subscribing to cloud solutions for their line of business software. They’re using QuickBooks online for instance, or something along those lines. And if they don’t have the need to have their line of business Software on a Server that is already, you know, in the cloud, then the cloud drive is a really good option. And this is the neat thing about it.

And now, you can harken back to your days when the old file servers that everybody had in their office. So that’s effectively what our cloud drive is. It’s a file server in the cloud. And you can set up the governance for that particular set of data so that people can have access to drives and sub-drives in such a way that…or if they’re in like a collaboration sub-directory and they’re working on a specific file, if they’re using it, it locks out all the other users similar to the way that you old file servers used to do. You just can’t get that same kind of functionality with say a OneDrive or Dropbox or Box or anything like that, or even a Google Drive.

So it’s a really neat system. I think the last, let’s see five out of the last seven cloud deals that I’ve done have just been specific for the TeamLogic IT Cloud Drive. I see that actually as a trend in what we’re doing. And it’s been a lot of fun because we’re giving people some…at a really important time, we’re giving people remote work capabilities, and we’ve had clients that are telling us that we’re saving their company by what we’re doing.

John: Really?

Rick: Yep.

John: Wow.

Rick: And I do have an interesting success story that that would be fun to talk about.

John: Yeah, please share.

Rick: So for whatever reason, about 25% of our client base is CPA firms. I don’t know why that is. Anecdotally, I just attribute it to the fact that CPA’s are numbers people. They really understand the value proposition of what we were doing. And I had a client telling me last month that, you know, he’s just so grateful for what we were doing for him with cloud. And he saw his…when he got his bill and he approved it each month from us, which is, you know, always a level set bill, he saw that as an investment that’s directly attributing to his profit. So he didn’t really see that as a cost center so much as an investment that he was making in his company.

He’s able to quantify that, you know. Again, being the CPA, he’s able to do stuff like that with the numbers. But he looked at that and he was able to quantify the time saving, the savings that we’re providing him, the ability for him to work remotely, not just in his several offices of which he has more than one, but also to work onsite at his client.

So he’s the type of CPA that likes to go to his clients with his computer and work in their office with them. And the ability for him, as long as they give him Wi-Fi access or even hardwired access, it doesn’t matter. But the ability for him to do that without having to walk in with 100 pounds worth of paper files under his arm has been… And I think that was the actual example that he used. He goes, you know, I used to have to try to take my entire office with me, but I don’t have to do that anymore. I can take everything with me with just my laptop that weighs less than three pounds.

John: Well, and the pandemic hit in mid-March, which was right in the middle of tax season. So this was, for a CPA firm, boy, what a time to realize the value of cloud computing, right? I mean, because all of a sudden, all these firms are at home and all these people are separated from each other and from clients. And to have that access secured is awesome, right?

Rick: He knew it and he knew it going in. And we knew it going in. You know, when we realized that we were gonna have the shelter-in-place rules come down the line from the governor in Georgia, we were expecting, and we were right. We got an onslaught of help desk tickets and we just went into triage mode to get to everybody, to set up the remote working capabilities.

But John, this is the interesting thing that happened. And our client base is about half and half cloud services and otherwise. And we did not get one single help desk ticket from the half of our client base that has cloud service solutions. Nobody because they were already prepared. They already had made the investment. They were already all set up.

Now, we did convert some of our non-cloud clients to cloud. In the last few months, we’ve done some of that. And that’s been a big help to them because they’re…you know, it’s the unknown, right? Because here we are in Q3 of the dumpster fire of 2020. And it looks like it’s possible that we may have another shelter in place or shutdown scenario. I know that, like I mentioned, I mentioned California, you know, tried to go back and then now they’re back into their shelter-in-place rules or and who knows if we get to that in Georgia. So people are seeing that it’s a wise investment to get that put in place.

John: Sure.

Rick: So I, you know, and it’s an unfortunate thing, but who could have predicted this COVID situation, right? We were already in the trend and we were already seeing that more and more of our opportunities we’re cloud-centric, but this has really hammered at home.

John: Sure. Yeah. Yeah. And that’s an important point that you just made. It’s not that the pandemic has brought this on, it’s just, it’s accelerated it and made it clear that this is a trend worth taking advantage of for those small medium-sized businesses that have not.

Rick: That’s right.

John: Yeah. So this has been great, Rick. I’ve learned a lot and I think, just wrapping up here, I think it’d be great if you could give everyone that’s listening if they wanna be in touch, contact information. How do they get in touch with you and learn more, right?

Rick: So TeamLogic IT, the best way to get in touch with me is my phone number (678) 250-5312. And I’m extension 1 at that number. There’s an auto attendant that answers and tells you if you wanna talk to Rick Higgins, hit extension 1, and I want to talk to everybody who’s listening to this show. Email is rhiggins, that’s rhiggins@teamlogicit.com.

John: Rick Higgins has been our guest today and next time he’ll be back in the host chair here on ”IT Help Atlanta.” But just a reminder that this show’s brought to you by TeamLogic IT who is your managed services technology advisor. And they specialize in cybersecurity cloud and business continuity solutions. And TeamLogic IT leverages cutting edge technology to solve all types of business problems.

So once again, I’m John Ray, thanks again to Rick Higgins, our guest on this edition of IT Help Atlanta. Join us next time.

Tagged With: cloud computing, IT Help Atlanta, Rick Higgins, TeamLogic IT

Brandon Peccoralo with DataBank

June 17, 2020 by angishields

Brandon-Peccoralo-DataBank
Atlanta Business Radio
Brandon Peccoralo with DataBank
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OnPay-Banner

DataBank

Brandon-Peccoralo-DataBankBrandon Peccoralo, General Manager at DataBank, is a results–driven IT professional with 14 years of experience focused on data center, cloud, managed services, network and security.

Experience in management, global sales, sales engineering, design support, strategic planning, and implementation. Drive growth, optimization, and profitability for the client and company in multiple market verticals.

Connect with Brandon on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • What is ATL1?
  • What makes the ATL1 data center unique?
  • The advancements at ATL1 making it eco-friendly
  • How has DataBank risen to the challenge during the pandemic
  • Services DataBank offers

About Our Sponsor

OnPay’sOnPay-Dots payroll services and HR software give you more time to focus on what’s most important. Rated “Excellent” by PC Magazine, we make it easy to pay employees fast, we automate all payroll taxes, and we even keep all your HR and benefits organized and compliant.

Our award-winning customer service includes an accuracy guarantee, deep integrations with popular accounting software, and we’ll even enter all your employee information for you — whether you have five employees or 500. Take a closer look to see all the ways we can save you time and money in the back office.

Follow OnPay on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

Tagged With: cloud computing, data center, higher education, interconnection, managed services, security

IT Help Atlanta with Rick Higgins:  Warren McClellan, McClellan & Associates CPAs

May 29, 2020 by John Ray

McClellan & Associates CPAs
IT Help Atlanta
IT Help Atlanta with Rick Higgins:  Warren McClellan, McClellan & Associates CPAs
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McClellan & Associates CPAs
Left to Right: Rick Higgins and Warren McClellan

IT Help Atlanta with Rick Higgins:  Warren McClellan, McClellan & Associates CPAs

McClellan & Associates CPAs Founder Warren McClellan joins host Rick Higgins on “IT Help Atlanta” to discuss his firm’s special work with booster clubs and school systems, using the cloud to get client work done in a pandemic, and much more.  “IT Help Atlanta” is brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your technology advisor.

Warren McClellan, McClellan and Associates, CPAs

Warren McClellan

Warren McClellan is the Founder and CEO of McClellan & Associates CPAs. He has been a Certified Public Accountant for over 30 years, many of which he spent working with an international CPA firm providing services to a number of Fortune 100 companies. Warren observed the high demand for small CPA businesses that could access their accounts on a daily basis, like the largest companies could. This led him into creating McClellan & Associates CPAs.

​McClellan & Associates CPAs LLC was created in 1992 to provide reliable accounting services to individuals and corporations across all industries. The firm offers a wide range of services, many of which most accounting firms are unwilling or unable to provide. The professionals at McClellan & Associates strive not only to provide exceptional tax and accounting services, but to also build lasting client relationships through one-on-one guidance and counseling. The firm is a small team of CPAs, an Enrolled Agent, and financial experts who are always willing to go the extra mile for their clients’ accounting needs.

When Warren is not in the office or visiting clients, he will most likely be traveling with his wife, bike-riding, or grilling his infamous barbecue ribs. Warren also enjoys spending time with his children and grandchildren.

Visit the McClellan & Associates website to learn more.

About the Show

“IT Help Atlanta” profiles small to mid-market businesses and highlights how those companies use technology to succeed. An archive of previous shows can be found here.

About Your Host

Rick-Higgins-2019Rick Higgins is Owner and President of TeamLogic IT of Dunwoody, GA. Rick’s firm is part of a national network of locally-owned service businesses, providing comprehensive IT services to the small-medium sized business market.

They offer managed service for networking, cyber security, data and email, as well as hardware and software support in addition to a variety of consultation and preventative maintenance services. Rick’s personal and corporate philosophy is simple: Stand up, be bold, and tell the truth.

Connect with Rick on LinkedIn and Twitter, and follow TeamLogic on Facebook.

Show Transcript

Rick: Welcome everyone to the “IT Help Atlanta” radio show, the show that profiles small, and mid-market businesses and highlights how those companies use technology to succeed. “IT Help Atlanta” is brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your managed services technology advisor. Specializing in cybersecurity, cloud, and business continuity solutions, TeamLogic leverages cutting-edge technology to solve all types of business problems. Go to ithelpatlanta.com for audio archives of this radio show and to learn more about our sponsor, TeamLogic IT. I’m your host Rick Higgins. And today’s honored guests is Warren McClellan, the owner and founder of McClellan & Associates CPAs, located in Duluth and Johns Creek, Georgia. Welcome, Warren. How are you?

Warren: I’m great, Rick. Thank you so much for having me today.

Rick: We’re really glad you’re here. And we really appreciate you making time to come spend some time with us on the show. Warren, tell us who you are and what do you do?

Warren: Well, I’m Warren McClellan, I’m a CPA and have a practice that’s located in Duluth and Johns Creek. And it’s really a small business firm that’s focused on consulting in tax for individuals that own the businesses and individuals with complicated tax situations.

Rick: That’s great. Warren, give us a success story, maybe something that would be interesting of how you solved a tricky problem or how you helped someone. It doesn’t have to be anything recent or something that comes to mind that you’re really proud of.

Warren: Yeah, Rick, thank you. I mean, one of the things that we do is we work with a lot of nonprofit organizations as well as businesses and individuals. And we work with school systems around the state. And they hire us to speak to their booster clubs, and help the parents and it’s one of the things I’m very proud of what we do is that we help the parents to…well, along with a partner of mine help the parents to provide the extra stuff that the school systems can’t provide. And nonprofits are very complicated, and we try to break that down and help them establish and maintain those booster clubs. And we’ve had a lot of success in that area. And one of the things that I like is how it affects the children in their sports and in their extracurricular activities. So we do a lot of that and I feel like, because we do it so much around the state, we’ve made quite an impact on these children. Of course, right now with COVID this year, there’s not been a lot of activity in the spring, but I’m sure that as life gets back to normal, that will crank back up as well.

Rick: Warren, definitely I wanna circle back around and, you know, dive deeper on talking about COVID and how that’s affected your business. But can we unpack a little bit more about this new thing that you’re doing with nonprofits, because that’s not your main line of business, right? This is something that you’re dealing with another partner, in addition to your main CPA firm, correct?

Warren: Yeah, Rick, it really is. And basically what happened was my partner, Steve Kosmala and I, we’re parents. And we had kids and a new school didn’t have a booster club. And we looked around as to how to establish this thing right for their activity. And we started looking around, and we realized that a lot of people weren’t doing it right. And so we set it up properly, organized the parents, and developed a really good booster club and got that started and got the attention of Gwinnett County public schools and they started getting us to help them speak with their booster parents and help them work with that. And now it’s kind of gotten attention of a lot of people around the state.

We also help people with other nonprofits. And it’s kind of expanded and morphed to that, and we do a good bit of speaking as well, on governance, on how to be a board member. What you need to know before you go on to a board, and what you should really expect if you’re on a board, and in many ways is to give back to the team. [inaudible 00:05:32] obviously, we get paid in most situations, but really, we feel like it’s a huge impact for the community and it’s had an impact on the tax practice as well because a lot of these nonprofits come back to the tax practice and a lot of CPA firms don’t really operate that much in the nonprofit arena. They do it because they have to. They have a kid on the booster club as we did and they dabble in it, but my staff has kind of embraced it. And we do a lot of nonprofit accounting as well as significant corporate and individual accounting and tax.

Rick: I see why you’re proud of it, man. I understand it. And by the way, for the listening audience, full disclosure, Warren and McClellan & Associates is a client of ours at TeamLogic IT. I wanted to disclose that. So I do know a little bit about this line of work and this area of expertise, and it’s really a specialty. I don’t know anybody else that’s doing what you guys are doing in that area, Warren, do you?

Warren: I really don’t. Thank you, Rick. And a comment on being a client of yours, we have been a very happy client now for several years and that’s made a big impact on our firm. We’ve actually gone paperless under your assistance and it’s made a big impact on our being able to continue to operate this spring through what we all went through with COVID-19. So thank you very much.

Rick: Thanks Warren, for saying that one, appreciate it. So yeah, so here we are. It’s May 27th of 2020. We’re some 12 odd weeks into the, I guess the forced shut down or shelter in place rules and laws and whatnot. And strangely enough, these 12 weeks of…actually, maybe more, like, 14 or 15 weeks has been right in the height of the CPA busy season and busy time of the year. So I think more than anybody else, I’m hoping and I believe you’ve got a really interesting story to tell us about how COVID has affected your business. Did it really hit you at the most awkward time of all, didn’t it?

Warren: Oh, it really did. It was kind of a bizarre timing, not only for us, but for everyone. But our story with it is in mid-March was about where it hit, our firm as far as the corporate deadline had basically passed on March 15th. And so now we were looking full speed ahead at April 15th. And we have a deadline of about the end of the third week of March for our clients to get their information and it’s just not possible to adequately staff to do all the returns in the first two weeks of April. So we asked that our clients and through years we’ve helped them organize, get us everything that’s possible by about the third Friday in March. And that was about the time all of this hit. So we had everything in place that we were going to get done for the season.

Some of our employees went home and worked from home. Thanks to Rick and his team being able to make that possible and jumped through the hoops for us. But there were some of us working here. We didn’t allow clients in the office and we just worked away and finished our tax season pretty close to normal. Now what was really different was two things that happened. One was normally, the second week in April we would spend trying to get extensions for people. Well, that sounds pretty easy. You know, you just file the extension and you’re done. But for most of our clients, it’s a lot more complicated than that because the extension extends the time to file but not the time to pay. So you have to spend a good bit of time helping people organize and come up with a reasonable estimate of what they need to pay, communicate back and forth to get that information. Obviously, during that time, we don’t have the information. And so we’re working back and forth to do the best we can, communicate back to the client, help them figure out what they can pay and how they can pay. And that actually went away this year, and we’re working on it now. And a lot of those returns I think will be filed by the July 15th. So that was really the first thing that was the big change, was that second week in April not being so horrendous, jumping the hoops to get the extensions done.

Rick: Got you.

Warren: The second thing that had such a big impact on that was all the new legislation. And in particularly the PPP loans, and that’s really ongoing now. So first of all, we had to help our clients or we were asked to help our clients, many of them gathered the information to file for the PPP loans. We were kind of a central focus of information on this bank’s doing this, the bank’s doing that, how do we do it? You know, who got what and when? And then came down the, “Oh, do you really need it?” You know, if you don’t need it, you shouldn’t have got it. Maybe you should pay it back. Well, most of our clients, ultimately that came out and that if your loan was under $2 million, you have a safe harbor on that. Of course, you needed it. If your loan was over $2 million, then you’re going to have to do some serious justification and perhaps you should consider giving the loan back. So that made it very complex. So then we know there’s forgiveness of these loans if they’re spent right.

Well, they were required to give us the regulations from the SBA and the Treasury, within a month of when that loan was signed, which would have made that due about April 26th. So we got that information, very timely on about May 15th or so. So there were a lot of people that had eight weeks to spend the money and then it was really unclear as to how to spend that money in order to effectively get it forgiven.

And so now many of our clients are in certainly the second half of that eight-week period, I think most of them are. And so are there things that they need to do to appropriately spend that money so they can ensure forgiveness? And what are the calculations of the forgiveness? Which, again, we just really got last week. So we’re going through our clients and helping them do preliminary calculations based on what they’re spending and what they’re doing to make sure that they get that forgiven. So that along with all the new retirement rules that are out there, and all the other things, as well as the stimulus checks, where’s my stimulus check? All of those things, we were taking a million calls. So that actually made it very exciting. And while we didn’t always have the answer, we tried to maintain the latest information, so that when people called, we could help them and help them get on top of that. And so it certainly made it a very exciting year for us and hopefully, business gets back to normal and we’re all back to living our normal lives.

Rick: Well, everything that you just said, the thing that I just can’t get my mind wrapped around is how much of a moving target everything was that you were involved in, in your area of expertise and service to your clients. I mean, you were fielding calls non stop yet the answers were, again, a moving target almost constantly, right?

Warren: Absolutely. It really was. And my staff did great too. We would sit, and we would meet, we would talk things through. We watched videos from lots of law firms. We studied this thing. And again, it was very much a moving target and we were working during tax season. And some people were at home and some people were here. And so the good thing about it was, there really wasn’t much else to do during that time but work. So we all just buckled down and worked. And all the people talking about being bored, we just didn’t have that problem.

Rick: Well, good for you. And I guess the million dollar question then is do you think that the target’s done moving at this point? Is there going to be more guidance coming out with respect…I guess I’m focused on the PPP with respect to that question. Do you think that we’ve settled down on…?

Warren: No. I think we’re close on what we have on the PPP loans, but Congress is now considering making some changes that hopefully are just good changes and helpful changes, like considering changing the length of time to spend it from 8 weeks to 16 weeks. Again, that’s only a consideration. It is not a fact yet, but I think there will be some more things happening and, you know, I wouldn’t be surprised if there were more loans. I think that would be very helpful to small business. I think it was a very good law, at least for PPP loans because the clients that I’ve been involved with, were able to keep people employed during a very difficult time. Medical practices, for instance, have really struggled because, okay, they could do video appointments and people were putting things off. And I think overall, most people really their revenue was down, and the PPP loans enabled them to pay the rent, pay their utilities and most importantly pay their employees. So I’m a big fan of what was done there.

Rick: Okay, great. Switching gears with you a little bit, you had mentioned about going paperless. And I’m not sure if you mentioned cloud or not. I would like to dive a little bit into that because the, you know…part of our focus on the show is to talk about how small businesses use technology to succeed. Can you talk about, say life before the cloud solution and then life now with the cloud solution? What that means to you and what it’s been able to facilitate for you, whether it’s, you know, working from home or whatever?

Warren: Oh, absolutely. Rick, I appreciate the question. I honestly admit that has meant and means so much more to us than being able to work from home. Obviously, that’s a big deal, but being a CPA firm, we’ve just been all about the paper. And to say that we’re 100% paperless today is not really true. We’re certainly still paperless-ish and we may never be 100% paperless. But it certainly…

Rick: I like that one.

Warren: Thank you.

Warren: It’s certainly been a big boon to our business. So we’ve had a huge file room that’s actually a double office, but the room, the wall between was taken out and that the huge file were in here, and it has just been absolutely full, and we can keep about four years’ worth of information. And we had also offsite storage, dramatic offsite storage, some of it going back 25 years. And so ultimately, we were able to scan all of that into the cloud and appropriately shred, dispose of it. And now we get rid of the offsite storage. And we get rid of the file room, although we’re still scanning a little bit in there, but it’s going away, freeing up two more office spaces in our office, which is nice. But the movement of information, the being able to wake up on Saturday morning and say, “You know what, I’d really like to work and I don’t wanna drive into the office,” I can go in there, you can pull up everything, being able to work on a client site. We go to a lot of corporate clients, and we have to take a big box of physical files and sit there to be able to open up everything. I go in now, with my laptop, get on the cloud, and I’ve got everything, I’ve got my desk there. So I can look at everything and work with the client. It’s so much easier to have this tiny, little laptop that I take everywhere and I can just go and get what I want. I do not have to worry about somebody packing my bag, and, “Oh, they forgot this tax return or they forgot to pack this for me.” If it’s all there, I can just go and get it.

I think the step up here has made us much more efficient. Obviously there have been inefficiencies through the years of getting there, but now that we’re there, our automation is so much better. And I think that we’re exploring the possibility of going to even further automation where when somebody brings us a 1099, there’s software and sometimes 1099s are 50 pages because they have brokerage statements, and so to be able to automate that and actually pull the information off the 1099 and put it directly to the tax return. And we were exploring that. And obviously, even when that’s done automatically, all that we will take out of it is the data process, the professional effort will still be there, but they won’t be spending their time [inaudible 00:21:25] 50 pages worth of data into a tax return. And so the efficiencies that we’re gaining allow us to be so much more consultative and less data crunches for people. And so we can help get the returns prepared and help our clients understand it and have the information to make good decisions.

Rick: More strategic and less tactical, I guess.

Warren: Exactly.

Rick: That’s great. Warren, thanks for that. That was a deep dive. That was just really a great answer to an interesting question. I have a couple more questions for you. We’ve got a little bit of a time limit, but we’ve got plenty of time if you’re willing to go into a couple more questions here. One that I always like to ask…

Warren: Absolutely, Rick, thank you.

Rick: Okay, thank you. Thank you. One that I always like to ask on every show is a special question is, what is an aspect about your business that people don’t tend to think about, that you wish people would ask you about?

Warren: Rick, what I’d really like people to ask me is how can I better understand my business or my personal situation? How can I…? What do I need to know, Warren, about the tax aspects, the accounting aspects that allow me to have better discernment and make better decisions? So for instance, when I got started maybe 25 years ago, I left a very large firm and started this firm. And so I started working with companies at that point. QuickBooks was brand new. And it was a new program and I embraced it very quickly and started helping clients get set up. And those days, most everybody had a computer, at least on a desk in their office, and they would use it to create invoices and do mailings. And I’m like, “Let’s upgrade this. If we’re gonna use QuickBooks, let’s have it at your site and have good real-time information,” because the environment that I come out of, which was Fortune 500, Fortune 100 companies I was working with in those days had real time information. So the idea was to help them get up-to-date data. And what was happening with a lot of them, they kept a check book with invoices, send it off to some bookkeeping practice who would send them back financial statements, they didn’t understand, they didn’t know how to read. They meant nothing to them, but they were done because they had to have them. And so it’s like, “Wait, let’s use this as a tool.” So I started working with several people and helping them to automate their accounting in house with support from me and from my staff. Then I started working with the owners and helping them to understand what they had, to be able to read the financial statements, and to be discerning about them, and to make management decisions out of that. So that’s really what I really like to do and what my staff likes to do is help our clients to understand the information. And many of those people that I work with so many years ago are still clients, and have been highly successful. And I would like to think and I think many of them would say that my firm contributed to that by helping them have a good foundation and helping them get the accounting system started right and helping the owners to understand and to be able to use the accounting information that they had.

Rick: You know, one thing that we say in our business at TeamLogic is that you can’t manage something unless you can measure it. And I know we didn’t come up with that. That’s probably something that one of your CPA predecessors or something back in time came up with. That’s the essence of what you’re talking about, right?

Warren: Right. Exactly.

Rick: You’ve got to be able to measure it to manage it. Great, great answer. Thank you. One more question, then we’re gonna give you a chance to talk a little bit about how folks can find you. But before we do that, it’s my favorite question of all time. And that is that, you know, 25 years in business as a founder and a small business owner, what do you like best about being a small business owner?

Warren: I really like and I’m most turned on about making a difference for people. I truly think that… And it’s a surprise. I set out to start a business and I didn’t really anticipate that. But now with so many clients, so many people through the years, I’ve been able to see and told of the impact that we make. And that is probably the biggest thing. And especially going back to even the booster clubs, the parents, being able to see people comfortably being able to do that. The school systems, understanding and having comfort that their parents have the information that they need. The small businesses, helping them to make good decisions, helping them to have a good base. And the individuals that we serve, with their accounting and financial planning, helping them to do that and to have good information and make good decisions and feel like that their accounting is a good base for them. So I think that’s the biggest thing. And again, it was not something I anticipated but it truly turns me on to help people and make a difference.

Rick: That’s great, Warren. I just really, really love asking that question and that may be the best answer that I’ve ever gotten from anybody on that. Thank you for that. Thank you for…

Warren: Thank you for that.

Rick: So, we’re gonna go ahead and wrap up but before we do, tell the audience how to find you. How do we get in touch with you? How do we find McClellan & Associates CPA?

Warren: Well, probably the easiest way, the first thing is the website. And the website is fairly easy, and that it’s just mcclellancpa.com. But there are about 100 different ways to spell McClellan. So if you’ll let me do that I’ll put that out there so that you can find me and it is, mcclellancpa.com. That’s certainly the first place is to go to the website. If you’ll allow me I’ll also add our main telephone number as well. And we do our best to still answer the telephone. I can’t say that 100% of the time and during COVID we may have struggled with that but we try to answer it. Rather than dial 387 for this person, we try to get you a person at least on business days between 9:00 and 5:00. And that main phone number and it is for both offices is 770-497-9525. Again, 770-497-9525.

Rick: Thank you, Warren. Thank you for your appearance and time with us today. Folks, that’s a wrap. “IT Help Atlanta” is brought to you by TeamLogic IT, your managed services technology advisor, specializing in cybersecurity, cloud, and business continuity solutions. TeamLogic leverages cutting-edge technology to solve all types of business problems. Go to ithelpatlanta.com for audio archives of this radio show and to learn more about our sponsor, TeamLogic IT. Go to mcclellancpa.com, mcclellancpa.com to learn more about Warren’s wonderful company, McClellan & Associates CPA. For my guest, Warren McClellan, I’m Rick Higgins and join us next time on “IT Help Atlanta.”

Tagged With: Accounting, cloud computing, CPA firm, cpa's, enrolled agent, IT Help Atlanta, McClellan & Associates CPAs, Rick Higgins, TeamLogic IT, Warren McClellan

Rick Higgins, Owner of TeamLogic IT and Host of “IT Help Atlanta”

March 23, 2020 by John Ray

IT Help Atlanta
IT Help Atlanta
Rick Higgins, Owner of TeamLogic IT and Host of "IT Help Atlanta"
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IT Help Atlanta
Rick Higgins, Owner of TeamLogic IT of Dunwoody and Host of “It Help Atlanta”

“North Fulton Business Radio,” Episode 204:  Rick Higgins, Owner of TeamLogic IT and Host of “IT Help Atlanta”

Rick Higgins, TeamLogic IT of Dunwoody, discusses why, during chaotic economic times, small businesses are particularly ripe targets for hackers and ransomware attacks. Rick also discusses his new Business RadioX® show, “IT Help Atlanta,” set to debut in late March 2020. The host of “North Fulton Business Radio” is John Ray and the show is broadcast from the North Fulton Business RadioX® studio based in Alpharetta.

Rick Higgins, Owner of TeamLogic IT and Host of “IT Help Atlanta”

IT Help Atlanta
Rick Higgins, Owner of TeamLogic IT and Host of “IT Help Atlanta”

Rick Higgins is Owner and President of TeamLogic IT of Dunwoody, GA. Rick’s firm is part of a national network of locally-owned service businesses, providing comprehensive IT services to the small-medium sized business market.

They offer managed service for networking, cyber security, data and email, as well as hardware and software support in addition to a variety of consultation and preventative maintenance services.

Rick’s personal and corporate philosophy is simple: Stand up, be bold, and tell the truth.

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • Cyber Security
  • Cloud Computing
  • IT and IT Services
  • Ransomware

Connect with Rick on LinkedIn and Twitter, and follow TeamLogic IT on Facebook. You can also call Rick at 770-847-9611.

 

North Fulton Business Radio” is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®, located inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link.

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Tagged With: cloud computing, cyber attacks, cyber hacking, cyber security, hardware support, IT, it services, ransomware, Rick Higgins, software support, TeamLogic IT

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