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Tech grads find Blacksburg fertile
ground for e-mail firm
by Deborah Nason
For Virginia Business
September 2005
Webmail.us has proved that you can
go home again. The fast-growing Blacksburg-based company
provides hosting services that allow companies to outsource
their e-mail functions. The company was started by two
Virginia Tech undergraduates who moved the company to
Vienna in Northern Virginia after graduation in 2002.
Moving a startup from a small town
to a large metro area is commonplace, but moving back
is not. That’s what CEO Pat Matthews did last
year.
After two years in Vienna, the firm found it a challenge
to recruit highly skilled workers because it was a
small
fish in a big pond. “The best talent we could
find was located in Southwest Virginia,” says
Matthews. Several key employees hired by the company
insisted on working from the Blacksburg area.
Finally, he says, “we got to
the growth stage in 2004, where we decided to centralize.”
The company returned to Blacksburg that August, settling
into Virginia Tech’s Corporate Research Center.
The move has been profitable. In
the past year, the firm grew from eight to 28 employees,
more than doubled its customer base and tripled its
office space. It is signing up nearly 400 new business
customers per month. Webmail.us currently provides e-mail
hosting to more than 7,000 businesses worldwide.
Location is playing a key role. “By
being next to Virginia Tech,” Matthews explains,
“we’ve been able to recruit a lot of great
people — part-timers still in school, part-timers
that became full-timers upon graduation, etc. —
something we could not do in Northern Virginia.”
He recently revived a dormant social
networking group for Blacksburg professionals, renamed
the New River Network. “I started it with one
purpose,” he says, “to bring people together.
You can’t just think about 9-to-5. Unless things
like this take off around here, it’s going to
be hard for local companies to attract and retain talented
people.”
Matthews is a strong booster for
the region. “I really want to help put this place
on the map, technology-wise,” he says. “I
feel my company can have something to do with that.” |