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Terry W. Anderson

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    www.basicsinmke.org/WhoWeAre.html - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/24/2009    Last Visited: 2/24/2009  

    Terry Anderson, Retired

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    About MPC: Press Releases - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/26/2003    Last Visited: 2/7/2009  

    "Our customers will be well served by Omni Tech's End User division becoming a part of MPC," said Terry Anderson, CEO of Omni Tech Corporation.

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    BASICS in Milwaukee - Who Are We? - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/27/2005    Last Visited: 9/7/2006  

    Terry Anderson, Omnitech

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    BASICS in Milwaukee, Inc. - Who Are We? - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 11/14/2008    Last Visited: 11/14/2008  

    Terry Anderson, Retired

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    Business Leaders Join MSOE Board of Regents - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/5/2001    Last Visited: 8/4/2001  

    Terry W. Anderson , president and CEO of Omni Tech Corp. of Pewaukee , Wis. , has joined the MSOE Board of Regents.Anderson founded the company which provides information technology products and services directly to large corporate , government and education organizations.

    Starting the business out of his home in 1978 , Anderson grew Omni Tech to a company with $95 million in sales in 1998.In 1995 he selected as Entrepreneur of the Year by Ernst & Young and Inc. magazine , and in 1996 he was named Wisconsin Small Business Person of the Year by the U.S. Small Business Administration.

    Anderson earned a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.He has been a member of the MSOE Corporation since 1998.

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    C-SPAN: Campaign 2000 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/22/2001    Last Visited: 10/10/2002  

    • 9:30pm ET: Justin Raimondo, Antiwar.com; Mark Forton, U.S. Senate Candidate from Michigan; Terry Anderson, Small Business Owner; Jennifer Giroux, Registered Nurse - Watch

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    CLE Seminars: Hot Topics in IT & E-Business - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/9/2000    Last Visited: 9/9/2000  

    Terry Anderson, President, OmniTech Corporation

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    Dedicated Computing Product Information - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 10/19/2001    Last Visited: 3/15/2006  

    Terry Anderson founded Omni Tech Corporation in 1978.

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    Economic Forecast - 2002 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/5/2001    Last Visited: 9/9/2002  

    Terry Anderson: Managing companies in trying times Karin Gale & Jim Page: Services
    ...
    Terry Anderson

    ...
    Terry Anderson is a man ahead of his time.Or perhaps he's clairvoyant.

    In either case, Anderson, the CEO and founder of Pewaukee-based Omni Tech, saw the crash that hit the PC market in September 2000 about three years before his other executives and started to formulate a strategy that would carry the PC manufacturer well beyond the years when PCs are no longer manufactured in the US.

    "I've been saying this for five years: This industry is very much like the calculator was," Anderson says of PCs."Years ago, I got my first calculator; it was a $1,700 Hewlett Packard -- a great big moose -- and it added, subtracted, multiplied and divided.Today you can buy a calculator for $8 that's solar-powered and it can do every math function you can imagine. ...I think, eventually, the computer industry will go that route for the computer itself."

    He emphasizes the hardware-aspect of that statement because he is attempting to reinvent his company into a total solution provider of information technology.

    ...
    The company has already distinguished itself with its customers in several ways, according to Anderson, who led a tour of his two Pewaukee facilities.The PCs are good machines judging by the staff of six people in the customer service department responsible for the nearly 300,000 active machines in the field.Omni Tech also distinguishes itself by its customer retention -- "customers for life," as Anderson says -- at an eye-popping 98% per year, and much of the turnover is due to the fact that the client wants to ship the PCs internationally.Because Omni Tech has such high standards of customer service, it won't ship overseas if it can't support those PCs.

    Part of its customer service includes making sure hardware updates are compatible with clients' software packages.Omni Tech also pre-loads software onto new machines for 90% of its clients.

    Another unique aspect of the company is having the clients maintain the units in the field, rather than have Omni Tech personnel making house calls.
    ...
    The PCs have become almost incidental in the transaction, according to Anderson, thus when Omni Tech can no longer compete with overseas manufacturers on price, the company will be in position to continue to thrive.

    "It used to be, in the 20th century, it was good enough to talk to your customers, find out what they needed and fulfill that need," Anderson says."In the 21st century, you really need to know where your customers are and you need to bring things to them that they never thought of before.So it's our responsibility to bring things to our customer, which we can do very easily in this business because the technology business is changing so rapidly, and many of our customers have a tough time keeping up with the technology.

    "What we do is we bring that technology and suggest it to our customers," Anderson says."'Well, you're here, and if you do this and this and this, you could be here.And here are some new software packages that do this and this so you can get to that point.' That's the onus that we have to play.That's the 21st century sale."

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    Entrepreneur - Baltimore Business Journal - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/11/2004    Last Visited: 3/11/2004  

    "From a technician's standpoint, Chris is a techie's techie," said Terry Anderson, founder and chief executive officer of OmniTech Corp., a Waukesha computer company.
    ...
    Anderson used Terra Nova to automate climate control, security, audio, video and lighting functions in his 12,000-square-foot home.

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