Security, at Warp Speed
- By Ralph C. Jensen
- May 01, 2014
There is no telling what an appetite for success and a passion for
technology will produce. One thing for certain, the desire to give
the customer the best security solution possible will likely bear a
long-term, winning combination.
Jessica Clark, age 36, has that passion, and her recipe for success should be
patented, if it isn’t already. Years ago, Clark was an art student in New York,
who completed her studies but had a rough time finding employment. To
make ends meet, and because she is a person who works smart, she took temporary
employment as a receptionist.
Call it providence, but Clark took advantage of the time while working at
an IT company by reading and studying potential job plans. First she studied,
and then Clark began to make grammar and style corrections on a $75 million
proposal the contracts department was working on. Once she had the
concepts in place, she began to offer suggestions that seemed to make a job
easier, more efficient and profitable, and by the time the company won the
contract only she and a consultant were left working on it.
Her diligence in asking what the company was doing and if she could join
in the planning meant the temporary job didn’t last long. She was soon hired
full-time as a valued member of the professional staff. Her desire to learn
brought her in touch with Bobby Khullar, who was the executive vice president
at the IT firm.
A great professional relationship was soon hatched.
Blossoming into Security
In 2000, Khullar founded Sigma ITPD. This company supported thousands of
desktops and mostly attended to the needs of the government, in particular,
the Navy; but by 2005, the market was getting a little too tough, and profit
margins were getting slimmer by the month and Sigma Surveillance was born.
Khullar wanted to move in a different direction and felt that the security
industry was a natural progression. Sigma Surveillance began building and
marketing a series of DVRs, affectionately called “Dali DVR”—named after
the famed surrealist artist Salvador Dali. This product is still being built and
sold, but by 2008, the business needed to move in yet another direction. Sigma
soon became STS360, currently based in Plano, Texas.
As the security market was feeling the pinch by a stalling economy in the
early 2000s, STS360 was just getting off the ground. Probably not the best year
to launch a new business, but for this small integrator, business was taking off.
And, being a Texas-based company probably helped as the economy in the
Lone Star State was still riding the crest of a higher wave of prosperity.
“Once we decided to go fully into the security market, Jessica was very aggressive
to advance the company and stand out from the competition as an IP video
surveillance integrator,” Khullar said. “Jessica also established a solid relationship
with OnSSI as a platinum partner with their video management system.”
STS360 started with four employees and had very modest revenue:
$500,000. Growth was projected, but it would take a couple years to realize
substantial margins; however, Khullar and Clark were in it for the long haul,
and both knew security was the right place to be.
“The first year, I started out as the business development director, sales person
and writing proposals,” Clark said. “Once we were awarded the Texas Department
of Information Resources contracts, we quickly became a recognized
state vender, and the work really started to take off. We primarily work in the public sector, and being DIR-recognized
makes a huge difference for us.”
A short time later, revenue more
than doubled, and by 2009, contracts
and work nearly doubled again. In
2010, the company began to hit its
projected stride.
Hardcore Security
STS360 was awarded a security contract
by the state of Texas’ Department
of Criminal Justice (TDCJ)
for the Polunsky Unit in Livingston,
Texas. This was no ordinary contract,
for any company, and not for
the faint of heart. Texas houses its
death row inmates and has a maximum
capacity of 2,900 inmates. This
unit, located about 60 miles east of
Huntsville, along the Big Thicket,
also houses Texas’ supermax units.
Working at the Polunsky Unit
takes nerve and expertise.
“I’ve always been sort of a tomboy,
so working at a prison site didn’t bother
me at all,” Clark said. “Some people
get to the front gates of a prison and
have second thoughts about going on
in to work. I really took it in stride and
was excited about every day of work
inside the prison.”
Being the chief operation officer
of STS360 didn’t offer Clark a pass
of not getting involved, rather it was
sort of an invitation to put hands on
a work project and really be a part of
company business. Certainly, Clark
spends time behind a desk with the
mandatory paperwork and executive
issues, but she also like mixing it
up with the work crews in the field,
which is yet another talent of her
management style.
Clark said that the executive staff
at the company leans toward hiring
staff that is IT savvy, construction
centric and that has industry talent.
It seems to offer them a team that
is trained from the start, which also
minimizes the learning curve. This
also means that the integration staff
is up-to-speed on the latest designs
and IP video surveillance solutions.
“When we walked into the prison,
we devoted our time to comprehensive
IP solutions,” Clark said. “The
prison had an older system in place
that needed to be completely overhauled
and expanded greatly. We
walked in with a completely networked
system that offered the latest
information to the administration,
along with high-resolution images.”
STS360 took advantage of their
new-found success at the prison by
laying in thousands of feet of conduit,
building new network closets
where previously there was no connectivity
at all throughout the hundreds
of acres, and installing new
servers, power supplies and emergency
response power abilities, as
well as visitation phone monitoring,
detection control systems and video
intercom.
Work completed at the Polunsky
Unit has led to other TDCJ work at
the Stiles Unit near Beaumont, Texas,
and the Darrington Unit, south
of Houston, in Rosharon, Texas.
STS360 also has ongoing work at 12
Texas prisons.
“It’s not that Texas is building
more prisons; they are simply upgrading
the security systems at the
facilities statewide,” Clark said. “We
are pleased to be able to protect those
workers and staff at the prison sites,
and seeing the return on investment
the very moment these systems start
rolling out is unparalleled and rewarding.
It has literally changed the
culture of the way the wardens can
manage their units and the department
can train its staff.”
Finding Success
in the Industry
This kind of hard work and a successful
2013 keeps the wheels in motion
for Clark and her staff. She said
that last year was a banner year for
this company, and revenues showed
healthy increases and the ability to
meet, and even surpass, their financial
goals. This company is able to bid
on any security install that it wants,
thanks to the ability to present a $5
million bond on any project.
Some may call this luck, but Clark
freely admits it is the willingness to
take advantage of luck, or prosperity,
when you come face-to-face with an
opportunity to grow a business.
“When it is time to step up and
grow a business, that is where my
strength lies,” Clark said. “I’m loyal
to a fault, but I also believe in what
we are doing as an executive team
and as a company team. What I really
enjoy as a business executive is helping
people succeed. No matter what a
person does on the job, they want to
be good at it, and we want the same
experience for them.”
Historical Roots and
Into the Future
Khullar and Clark’s story goes back
17 years, and it seems to detail how
two people can take a start-up security
company during lean economic
times and make a successful run.
“Jessica understands my business
management style, and she
stays one step ahead of me,” Khuller
said. “She is always thinking several
years ahead, and that’s our success
story. We never delved into the analog
market because we saw IP video
surveillance as the future. Because
we understand the digital world and
embrace it, we thrive.”
Their booming business strategy
is all organic growth. STS360 is determined
to stay debt free and retain
the ability to work anywhere, at any
time. For a company that started
with four employees and one small
office in Plano, Texas, growth is always
on their mind.
Because they depend upon organic
growth, they develop resources
as they go along and have hired a tremendous
staff of system engineers.
Their four-employee model has now
grown to more than 20 workers;
the company has a satellite office in
Houston, Texas with four employees;
and they have recently opened an office
in Austin, Texas.
“Our business plan marries a
technical project manager with a
sales person, one-to-one, which allows
us to build a strong customer
support team,” Clark said. “Our
staff knows what they are talking
about when it comes to bidding a
job, and they work well together to
keep the customer at ease and involved
in the project.”
Clark keeps the ball rolling. She
said that she was taught as a girl to
have confidence in all that she does,
even in the man’s world of security
integration. She said that she has
the DNA to look critically at a potential
job and make decisions that
most people can’t or won’t make. The
small business environment suites
her professional needs, and personally,
she sees a very bright future for
the security industry for many years
to come.
This article originally appeared in the May 2014 issue of Security Today.