In 1987, a 32-year-old Annie Safoian moved to Los Angeles from Armenia with her husband, Hovig, and their 9-year-old son, Tony.
Today and she and her family run an LA tech company called SADA Systems, a thriving Google and Microsoft reseller expected to do $65 million in revenue this year, she tells us.
And
she has been fending off a constant stream of offers to acquire the
company, for a healthy multiple over revenues. She wouldn't tell us how
much money she's been offered, but given the market, offers have likely
ranged from hundreds of millions of dollars to as high as half a
billion, we understand.
But
she likes her job and her company, worries a sale wouldn't be good for
employees, and simply doesn't care that much about the loot.
"We
have discussed selling within the family. Everybody wants to buy us. We
are in our 60’s, our son is 38 years old. He’s the CEO, my husband is
CTO. We've been all together here and working all these years," she
says. "If we sell this company and get more money in our bank account,
we would still have to do something. My son is very young. We are still
so passionate about this technology. It's never boring, but so exciting
every single day. Why would I sell?"
Back
in 1987, when the Safoians first moved to America, she couldn't have
predicted her success. Her English was mediocre, she had no technical
training and she wasn't exactly sure what she was going to do for a
living. But she knew she loved her new home country and became a citizen
right away.
She
took some accounting classes, got a job as a payroll coordinator, which
she disliked, yet might have toiled away at forever if the company
hadn't laid her off. So she jumped into graphic designed, something she
loved, and learned how to build web pages. Her husband found work as a
programmer.
Slowly,
her hard-work ethic had her customers asking her to do more and more
tech jobs. One of them asked her to modify their accounting software.
She enlisted her husband's help for that and they founded a tech
company, SADA Systems, which then went on to manage computers
and networks for small businesses, doing small custom apps for customers
along the way.
'Hello, this is Google calling'
And then, out of the blue, Google called.
(Thomson Reuters) "The
lucky year was 2007 when Google came to us and needed some help for
their Google Apps. We were one of their launch partners on Work," she
says, referring to Google's plan to sell Google Apps to more businesses.
Google
also wanted SADA to build a tool that would let its customers easily
transfer their email and documents into the Google Apps cloud, she says.
SADA agreed to work on that, for no compensation, in exchange for
becoming a major, early partner authorized to sell Apps.
"We
had never had done what they were asking us to do. But we told them we
could do it, and worked day and night and delivered it on
time," Safoian remembers.
To
this day, Safoian doesn't fully know how Google found SADA, except
through word-of-mouth referrals when it was looking for a company to
help it sell Apps for Work in LA.
Remember,
in 2007, Microsoft's Office ruled, businesses distrusted putting their
documents in the cloud, and Google had no experience selling its wares
to businesses. It needed to start with smaller but established
resellers that could help it get a foothold.
Enter Microsoft
Business
took off for SADA after it began working with Google Apps. Microsoft
took notice and convinced SADA to become a reseller for its cloud
product, Office 365, too, which Safoian agreed to do. Both
companies wanted SADA to help them steal customers away from each other,
but she absolutely refused, she says.
Culled from Business Insider
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