Bob's profile was created using:
Sort By:

1-10 of 29 online sources for Bob Williamson

  • View Online Source
    www.beanscafe.org/beansjeans2008.php - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/26/2008    Last Visited: 10/20/2008  

    There will be a special keynote address by Bob Williamson, chairman and CEO of Horizon Software International. You can read more about Mr. Williamson's inspirational story at the Inc magazine web site.

  • View Online Source
    www.mmdnewswire.com/finalists-for-ernst-young-entrepren - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/7/2008    Last Visited: 5/25/2008  

    , Robert Williamson, Chairman, CEO & Founder, Horizon Software International, LLC

  • View Online Source
    www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/content/may2008/sb2008051 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/12/2008    Last Visited: 5/12/2008  

    Accidental entrepreneur Bob Williamson's personal turnaround led to the creation of his 180-employee, $26 million company
    ...
    Accidental entrepreneur Bob Williamson, 61, is projecting his company, Horizon Software International, will hit $32 million in revenue this year.

    View Slide Show

    Bob Williamson fled a broken home in Mississippi at age 17 to hitchhike around the country.He landed in Atlanta in 1970 at 24, homeless, broke, and addicted to heroin and methamphetamine.When he got a job there cleaning bricks for $15 a week, no one would have guessed that he would start a $26 million software company someday.

    Successful businesses often spring from a combination of hard work and dumb luck, and Williamson credits both.Not long after arriving in Atlanta, he was injured in a car wreck and spent months recovering in the hospital.While there, he read the Bible, converted to Christianity, and decided to straighten up his life.It wasn't easy: He had a criminal record, no college degree, and few job prospects.

    "I was either going to commit suicide, which several of my friends had done, or I was going turn my life around," says Williamson, now chairman and chief executive officer of Horizon Software International, a 180-employee maker of software for food service systems used in schools, hospitals, and other institutions.

    Promoted Eight Times in Two Years

    Williamson eventually landed a job putting labels on paint cans in the basement of the Glidden paint company in Atlanta.He cleaned up the labeling department and helped Glidden move to the company's first computer system.His work ethic, he says, was: "First one there, last to leave."Glidden promoted Williamson eight times in two years.

    He went on to work at two other paint companies.By then a paint expert, Williamson started working in his basement to develop a better formula for his hobby: airbrush art."I borrowed $1,000 on my Visa (V) card and bought a bunch of chemicals and made a bunch of paint," he says.At a trade show, artists flocked to his booth to buy the paint he developed, called Polytranspar.He quit his job and started his own paint company, Master Paint Systems, in 1977.

    He spun that into several other businesses: a magazine for artists, how-to books, an art supply manufacturer, and a mail-order business, teaching himself as he went along.As the business grew, so did his need for organizational tools.It was the early 1980s, and he realized he needed systems for his warehouse, inventory control, and supply-chain management."Back then you couldn't buy software, so I hired a couple of programmers, and we wrote software for all these different companies," Williamson says.

    Recovering From Bankruptcy

    By 1986, when he was selling 6,000 different art-related items, Williamson prepared to take the company public.But during the audit for his IPO, he discovered an accountant had been embezzling money from the company."We fought our way through it, and my accountant and my lawyer and everybody told me to just take bankruptcy and forget about it," Williamson says.

    But he was convinced he could recover.Williamson urged his creditors not to file lawsuits that would force a liquidation."Every week I would send them a letter and tell them what was happening, and we rebuilt it up beyond its former stage," he says.

    Focused on School Cafeterias

    After recovering, he sold off his previous ventures, and in 1992, founded Horizon.The company was built on the back-office software Williamson spent years developing for his own businesses."We wrote a system for our mail-order business, we wrote software for our manufacturing company, a point-of-sale system for retail," he says."We weren't selling that to anybody.We had just written in-house for our own use."

    The company focused on systems for school cafeterias when Williamson found no one had written back-office software for that market.He was soon selling into other institutions like hospitals, nursing homes, colleges, and military bases.
    ...
    Williamson, now 61, presides over Horizon's 44,000-square-foot headquarters in Atlanta.The company had $26 million in revenue in 2007, and he's projecting $32 million this year.Still, Williamson says, "I'm the first one there and the last one to leave."And he ascribes his business success to his conversion."I have always tried to run my business according to the way that God would want me to,I've always tried to be honest and straightforward, and not lie and not cheat, and not try to take an easy way out."

    Hard work was certainly part of Williamson's improbable personal turnaround: He recalls years of working 20-hour days and says he still only sleeps four or five hours a night.But chance guided his entrepreneurial success as well: a car accident that jolted him out of a destructive life, a paint recipe that became a hit, and early exposure to the burgeoning software industry.

    And in some ways, Williamson's arrival in Atlanta at the nadir of his life set the foundation for his rise."I'd been through so much in my life, I don't get discouraged," he says.

  • View Online Source
    sunshinedeb.wordpress.com/2008/05/page/2/ - [Cached Version]
    Last Visited: 7/6/2008  

    Accidental entrepreneur Bob Williamson's personal turnaround led to the creation of his 180-employee, $26 million company

    Accidental entrepreneur Bob Williamson, 61, is projecting his company, Horizon Software International, will hit $32 million in revenue this year.

    BobWilliamson.jpg

    Bob Williamson fled a broken home in Mississippi at age 17 to hitchhike around the country.He landed in Atlanta in 1970 at 24, homeless, broke, and addicted to heroin and methamphetamine.When he got a job there cleaning bricks for $15 a week, no one would have guessed that he would start a $26 million software company someday.

    Successful businesses often spring from a combination of hard work and dumb luck, and Williamson credits both.Not long after arriving in Atlanta, he was injured in a car wreck and spent months recovering in the hospital.While there, he read the Bible, converted to Christianity, and decided to straighten up his life.It wasn't easy: He had a criminal record, no college degree, and few job prospects.

    "I was either going to commit suicide, which several of my friends had done, or I was going turn my life around," says Williamson, now chairman and chief executive officer of Horizon Software International, a 180-employee maker of software for food service systems used in schools, hospitals, and other institutions.

    Promoted Eight Times in Two Years

    Williamson eventually landed a job putting labels on paint cans in the basement of the Glidden paint company in Atlanta.He cleaned up the labeling department and helped Glidden move to the company's first computer system.His work ethic, he says, was: "First one there, last to leave."Glidden promoted Williamson eight times in two years.

    He went on to work at two other paint companies.By then a paint expert, Williamson started working in his basement to develop a better formula for his hobby: airbrush art."I borrowed $1,000 on my Visa card and bought a bunch of chemicals and made a bunch of paint," he says.At a trade show, artists flocked to his booth to buy the paint he developed, called Polytranspar.He quit his job and started his own paint company, Master Paint Systems, in 1977.

    He spun that into several other businesses: a magazine for artists, how-to books, an art supply manufacturer, and a mail-order business, teaching himself as he went along.As the business grew, so did his need for organizational tools.It was the early 1980s, and he realized he needed systems for his warehouse, inventory control, and supply-chain management."Back then you couldn't buy software, so I hired a couple of programmers, and we wrote software for all these different companies," Williamson says.

    Recovering From Bankruptcy

    By 1986, when he was selling 6,000 different art-related items, Williamson prepared to take the company public.But during the audit for his IPO, he discovered an accountant had been embezzling money from the company."We fought our way through it, and my accountant and my lawyer and everybody told me to just take bankruptcy and forget about it," Williamson says.

    But he was convinced he could recover.Williamson urged his creditors not to file lawsuits that would force a liquidation."Every week I would send them a letter and tell them what was happening, and we rebuilt it up beyond its former stage," he says.

    Focused on School Cafeterias

    After recovering, he sold off his previous ventures, and in 1992, founded Horizon.The company was built on the back-office software Williamson spent years developing for his own businesses."We wrote a system for our mail-order business, we wrote software for our manufacturing company, a point-of-sale system for retail," he says."We weren't selling that to anybody.We had just written in-house for our own use."

    The company focused on systems for school cafeterias when Williamson found no one had written back-office software for that market.He was soon selling into other institutions like hospitals, nursing homes, colleges, and military bases.
    ...
    Williamson, now 61, presides over Horizon's 44,000-square-foot headquarters in Atlanta.The company had $26 million in revenue in 2007, and he's projecting $32 million this year.Still, Williamson says, "I'm the first one there and the last one to leave."And he ascribes his business success to his conversion."I have always tried to run my business according to the way that God would want me to…I've always tried to be honest and straightforward, and not lie and not cheat, and not try to take an easy way out."

    Hard work was certainly part of Williamson's improbable personal turnaround: He recalls years of working 20-hour days and says he still only sleeps four or five hours a night.But chance guided his entrepreneurial success as well: a car accident that jolted him out of a destructive life, a paint recipe that became a hit, and early exposure to the burgeoning software industry.

    And in some ways, Williamson's arrival in Atlanta at the nadir of his life set the foundation for his rise."I'd been through so much in my life, I don't get discouraged," he says.

  • View Online Source
    www.blastmedia.com/blogs/clientcoverage/2008/05/see_hor - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2008    Last Visited: 8/30/2008  

    Bob Williamson, CEO of Horizon Software, was featured in the "How i Did It" section of Inc.Magazine this month.

  • View Online Source
    www.blastmedia.com/blogs/clientcoverage/2008/05/horizon - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2008    Last Visited: 8/30/2008  

    Horizon Software CEO, Bob Williamson, is featured as an Unlikely Millionaire on Yahoo! Finance.

  • View Online Source
    www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStoryts.cfm?ArticleID=7080 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/16/2007    Last Visited: 5/16/2007  

    "Junk food from school vending machines is one of the primary reasons for extra weight in children," said Bob Williamson, chairman and CEO of Horizon Software International.

  • View Online Source
    atlanta.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2007/03/19/dail - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 3/21/2007    Last Visited: 3/22/2007  

    Horizon Software International LLC, Morrison Management Specialists Inc., Bob Williamson,
    ...
    "We have an excellent company in Horizon with great potential, tremendous technology and loads of young, energetic and talented employees," said Bob Williamson, Horizon founder and chairman.

  • View Online Source
    www.blastmedia.com/blogs/clientcoverage/2008/05/horizon - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/1/2008    Last Visited: 8/30/2008  

    Horizon's Bob Williamson and DriveSavers' Scott Gaidano BOTH featured in BusinessWeek

    BusinessWeek.gifAccidental Entrepreneurs: Bob Williamson of Horizon Software and Scott Gaidano of DriveSavers are both featured in BusinessWeek.

  • View Online Source
    www.blastmedia.com/blogs/clientcoverage/2008/05/ - [Cached Version]
    Last Visited: 8/30/2008  

    Horizon Software CEO, Bob Williamson, is featured as an Unlikely Millionaire on Yahoo! Finance.
    ...
    Horizon's Bob Williamson and DriveSavers' Scott Gaidano BOTH featured in BusinessWeek

    BusinessWeek.gifAccidental Entrepreneurs: Bob Williamson of Horizon Software and Scott Gaidano of DriveSavers are both featured in BusinessWeek.
    ...
    Bob Williamson, CEO of Horizon Software, was featured in the "How i Did It" section of Inc.Magazine this month.

Page:  1 2 3 Next

Wrong Person?

Try these instead
More...
For Recruiters For Sales Pros

Copyright © 2008 Zoom Information Inc. All rights reserved.

BBeachHead-Oct08_RC001_P020.1 OM12