| Published
February 17, 2009 |
Volume
17, Number 2
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CrestPoint Solutions
Keeps Data Flowing

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CrestPoint’s
founder and CEO, Fabomi Ojuola, is expanding his company into new
markets.
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By Nicole Zaro Stahl
NETWORK Editor
Hacienda’s CrestPoint Solutions starts the new year having earned a
significant distinction and ready to expand into new target markets. In
August 2008, Inc. magazine’s online site, Inc.com, included CrestPoint
Solutions in its annual list of the 5000 fastest-growing private
companies in the country. With $15.3 million in 2007 revenue and a 277
percent growth rate, CrestPoint was ranked a very creditable 1373 out
of the 5000, and number 38 in the top 100 telecommunications companies.
According to the Inc. website, “the list is the most
comprehensive look at the most important segment of the
economy–America’s independent-minded entrepreneurs.” The entrepreneur
behind CrestPoint is Fabomi Ojuola, a Nigeria-born engineer and
information systems specialist who founded the company in 2000 to
provide network engineering and other services to the
telecommunications industry.
It takes a sophisticated skill set
to operate in the closely regulated telecom space, where companies and
their vendors are subject to rigorous best practices and exacting,
“always-on” performance standards, Ojuola points out. CrestPoint’s
knowledge of this structured environment is partly the product of
Ojuola’s engineering and information systems degrees and experience
working for Pacific Bell during the dot-com boom, along with the
cumulative total of 200-plus years of facility design and management
expertise of his colleagues. “Our telecom clients have developed some
very stringent guidelines relating to issues like seismic protection,
redundant electrical power, or service levels. We help them meet those
requirements,” he explains.
CrestPoint’s proficiency is also
directly transferable to mission-critical functions in unregulated
business sectors, such as the corporate data center. “With our
knowledge and experience servicing data centers run by very large
corporations with recognizable names, now we are able to branch out to
serve similar needs in other markets—whether medical facilities,
financial institutions, or collocation enterprises,” Ojuola says. “When
we make a new business call, we bring a lot of additional value to the
table.”
One of the biggest issues in the data center arena
right now is tracking and managing energy use. “This is actually one of
our biggest areas of expertise,” Ojuola continues, noting that
CrestPoint has been working toward being able to manage its clients’
entire infrastructure for several years. “We are on the cusp of
acquiring the capability to do direct remote monitoring and complete
building automation,” ultimately making it possible to monitor a
facility in Seattle from a desktop in New York. “You won’t really have
a need to examine the facility on site. You can see inside to interact
with every piece of equipment remotely. When all systems are
integrated, we will have completed the A to Z management of the entire
infrastructure.”
Despite the company’s significant expertise
in designing, building, and maintaining network infrastructure, Ojuola
has a broader view of what he and his 100 employees do: “We don’t see
ourselves as a telecommunications engineering or installation company
or a data service. We are a solutions company,” he insists. “If we can
help businesses make better decisions about facilitating the flow of
information, putting it at their fingertips, we will have done our
job.”
For more information, visit www.crestpt.com.
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