Continuum Managed Services turns one year old today. But the company's DNA started to take shape several months before Continuum actually became a standalone company led by CEO Michael George (pictured). The key moment involved a June 2011 survey that gathered feedback from roughly 600 MSPs.

Joe Panettieri, Former Editorial Director

September 26, 2012

5 Min Read
Continuum 1st Birthday: How MSP Survey Shaped the Company

Continuum CEO Michael George

Continuum Managed Services turns one year old today. But the company’s DNA started to take shape several months before Continuum actually became a standalone company led by CEO Michael George (pictured). The key moment involved a June 2011 survey that gathered feedback from roughly 600 MSPs. The survey results gave Continuum key clues on how to march forward — fast — in the managed services market. Not that the march was easy. Here’s a look at the past, present and future of the MSP software, NOC (network operations center) and help desk provider.

Rewind to September 2011. Summit Partners acquired  Continuum (previously named Zenith RMM, the MSP and NOC software business) from Zenith Infotech. Continuum CEO Michael George spent the first week of the company’s history crisscrossing the globe — visiting offices across India and North America. He also had to work overtime to explain that Continuum was not involved in a Zenith Infotech bond default.

Continuum also was in listen mode. Director of Business and Corporate Development Steve Cardillo and other company managers interviewed more than 50 MSPs. Those interviews, coupled with a Continuum partner survey in June 2011 (which Zenith Infotech had distributed on Summit Partners’ behalf) helped Continuum to piece together a roadmap that included:

  1. more consistent software delivery upgrades;

  2. key NOC and help desk services; and

  3. and eventual partnerships with LogMeIn, MalwareBytesRapidFire Tools and other companies. The LogMeIn relationship, for one, is exclusive and gives MSPs key pricing advantages that other MSP software platforms can’t match, George asserts.

These days, Continuum (like many of its rivals) has a partner advisory council that participates in forums, chats and quarterly gatherings.

New Faces, Familiar Names

Today, Continuum has about 670 employees and quite a few of those executives have quickly developed respected relationships with MSPs. Key names include VP of Marketing Steve Ricketts and Marketing Director Don Eng.

The company’s strategy involves integrating RMM (remote monitoring and management), help desk and NOC (network operations center) services into a single, comprehensive solution for MSPs.

“We’ve grown quite a bit,” said George. “We have shed some [employees] and added expertise elsewhere, especially in the NOC operation. On a aggregate basis, we’ve added about 80 to 90 people over the past year but not all are net additions.”

In some cases, the hires have been like “putting the band back together,” said George. “Some of the hires are people I’ve had the pleasure and privilege to work with before. Others have worked together in other configurations. The company’s structure almost looks like DNA: there are lots of connections and interconnections where people have worked together before.”

George says he sees a few common threads across the employee and executive staff:

  • “They’ve all had very successful careers. There isn’t an individual executive who isn’t well recognized in the software and technology field. As a function of that they have choice in terms of where they want to work. And they chose to work here, which is very satisfying.”

  • “We are building an enterprise-class company with world-class services, and making those services available to what was initially a cottage industry in the SMB market.”

  • “There aren’t a lot of closed door offices. There are a handful of executive offices but doors are rarely closed. We’re probably 95 percent open cubes with round desks sprinkled in. You’ll find white board walls that drive  collaboration and meetings on the fly.”

Help Desk and More

Among Continuum’s achievements the past year, George speaks most frequently about the company’s expanded help desk services. He insists that MSPs of all sizes will find compelling financial reasons to leverage Continuum’s help desk, while redeploying MSP staff on higher-margin services.

That portion of the strategy and messaging is somewhat similar to Level Platforms (which now offers help desk services with its MSP software) and NetEnrich (which offers comprehensive NOC, cloud and on-premise monitoring services to larger MSPs).

Longer term, Continuum is starting to help MSPs to manage “any IP device that connects to a wireless network or plugs into the wall,” said George. That includes print servers, VoIP services and mobility. He believes MSPs — whether they have two, five or 50 employees — will remain focused on a few IT market segments. To grow revenues, George said, the MSPs will need to partner with Continuum to gain deeper expertise, transforming the MSP into a “complete advisor” to SMB customers.

Silver Linings

MSPmentor doesn’t have a feel for (A) Continuum’s overall revenue growth rate or profit margins. But George sounds upbeat. And the company apparently avoided fallout from the unrelated Zenith Infotech bond default, which made some MSPs nervous in late 2011.

“Ironically, in some ways we benefited from that discussion,” said Ricketts. “It forced us to accelerate our own brand identity and product roadmap in the market. Added Eng: “As a communications specialist, literally the first day on the job involved the challenge of putting together a plan” to make sure Continuum had clear messaging to existing and potential partners.

“We did it all at a hastened pace,” said George. “But it wasn’t a thoughtless one. We thought carefully about every decision.”

Next Moves?

So where does Continuum go from here? Integrated services — and potentially acquisitions — seem to be on the radar.

“We think the face of the MSP is changing,” said George. “There is a convergence; look at Konica buying All Covered. Voice, print and data services are all converging because everyting hangs off the network. It shows us the value of the NOC operation coupled with our products is becoming immensely more valuable.”

During a previous interview with MSPmentor, George hinted that parent Summit Partners may one day pursue an IPO strategy. I don’t know if Summit Partners has a potential year in mind for such a move, but I sense George and the Continuum management team are on a long-term journey together. In many ways, they are running a marathon — but at a sprinter’s pace.

I’ll be curious to see if they can maintain that pace in 2013.

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About the Author(s)

Joe Panettieri

Former Editorial Director, Nine Lives Media, a division of Penton Media

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