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Private-equity firm Veritas Capital to acquire Anaren for about $381M
DeWITT — Veritas Capital, an affiliate of the New York City–based Veritas Capital Fund IV, L.P., is acquiring Anaren, Inc. (NASDAQ: ANEN) of DeWitt in
ACR Health says health-insurance sign-ups are ‘operating smoothly’
SYRACUSE — ACR Health, a nonprofit whose website describes it as a “legacy of AIDS Community Resources,” today contended that the state’s health-insurance exchange is
Pathfinder Bancorp Q3 profit slips on higher labor costs
OSWEGO — Pathfinder Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ: PBHC), parent of Pathfinder Bank, reported that its third-quarter profit fell 21 percent, driven by increased labor costs. Pathfinder reported
Lockheed Martin: operations in Salina will continue ‘for at least the next year’
SALINA — Lockheed Martin Corp. (NYSE: LMT) says it “will not consider” any plans that would impact the future of its site in Salina “for
Crouse Hospital names current CFO Boynton as its next CEO
SYRACUSE — The board of directors of Crouse Hospital in Syracuse on Wednesday announced that CFO Kimberly Boynton will replace Dr. Paul Kronenberg as CEO
Visions Federal Credit Union announces merger with Pa. credit union
ENDWELL — Visions Federal Credit Union today announced that CTCE Federal Credit Union (CTCE) of Reading, Pa. will “merge with, and into” Visions. The
Solvay Bank profit remains ‘consistent’
SOLVAY — Solvay Bank Corp., the holding company for Solvay Bank, on Wednesday announced it earned $1.6 million during third quarter. The profit figure
ESD announces new vice president of business services
Empire State Development (ESD), New York’s chief economic-development agency, on Wednesday announced a new vice president of business services. Chelsea Rao will serve as a liaison to the digital and technology industries to help attract and grow technology firms across New York, ESD said in a news release. New York is proving to be “fertile
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Empire State Development (ESD), New York’s chief economic-development agency, on Wednesday announced a new vice president of business services.
Chelsea Rao will serve as a liaison to the digital and technology industries to help attract and grow technology firms across New York, ESD said in a news release.
New York is proving to be “fertile ground” for technology companies to “grow and prosper,” Kenneth Adams, president and CEO of ESD, said in the news release.
“I am pleased to welcome Chelsea Rao to the team, and look forward to her help in continuing to attract the world’s greatest technology firms and start-ups to New York,” Adams said.
As vice president of business services, Rao is expected to connect new media and digital-technology companies to existing initiatives across New York, ESD said.
She will also look at opportunities to further engage the technology sector, and develop programs and policies to attract more companies and talent from the industry to New York, the agency added.
Rao will also work with the post-production sector to promote and build on the post-production tax credit that Gov. Andrew Cuomo believes has “significantly” increased the amount of post-production work happening in the state, according to ESD.
The digital sector has grown into a “significant” part of the state’s economy, Rao said in the release.
“I’m excited to promote the governor’s groundbreaking initiatives and work with the private sector to make sure New York is the number one choice for technology companies,” she said.
Prior to joining ESD, Rao served as assistant director of the Center for Economic Transformation, which is part of the New York City Economic Development Corporation, the economic-development agency said.
In that role, she oversaw media and technology-sector programs, developed programs to expand the availability and transparency of broadband infrastructure, and launched initiatives to grow the health-care technology sector, according to ESD.
Besides its role as New York’s primary economic-development agency, ESD is also the primary administrative agency overseeing Gov. Cuomo’s Regional Economic Development Councils and the marketing of “I Love NY,” the state’s tourism brand, the agency said.
Contact The Business Journal at news@cnybj.com
Hayner Hoyt joins “Top Contractor” list
SYRACUSE — Last year’s revenues of $145.6 million vaulted the Hayner Hoyt Corporation into the top ranks of USA construction companies as measured by revenue, according to Engineering News Record, a McGraw–Hill publication. “In 2013, we’re projecting $186 million in revenue,” says Gary Thurston, the company’s chairman and CEO. Thurston’s son Jeremy C., who is
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SYRACUSE — Last year’s revenues of $145.6 million vaulted the Hayner Hoyt Corporation into the top ranks of USA construction companies as measured by revenue, according to Engineering News Record, a McGraw–Hill publication. “In 2013, we’re projecting $186 million in revenue,” says Gary Thurston, the company’s chairman and CEO. Thurston’s son Jeremy C., who is the president of Hayner Hoyt, points out that the company “… has grown 400 percent in just the last decade.”
Richard Hoyt launched the company in 1966, when he shifted from building custom homes to light commercial work. Today, Hayner Hoyt employs 190 in general contracting, construction management, conventional design/build, renovation, and development. In addition to the construction company headquartered at 625 Erie Blvd. W., the enterprise includes Doyner Co., a masonry sub-contractor, and LeMoyne Interiors, Inc., a metal framing, dry-wall, and acoustical-ceiling contractor.
The principals and stockholders of the three, sub-S, operating companies are the Thurstons, father and son, who also own two real-estate companies: Thurston Properties and 6715 Joy Road Associates, LP. The two real-estate firms own the 35,000 square feet of building space which houses the operating companies.
Health-care construction is a major source of the company’s rapid growth, including an eight-level addition currently under way at St. Joseph’s Hospital Health Center in Syracuse. “The LEED project … [comprises] 260,000 square feet, which includes 72 hospital beds, 36 ICU beds,17 operating rooms in a 73,000-square-foot surgical suite, an expanded post-anesthesia unit, and 12,000 square feet dedicated to a central sterile unit,” says Jeremy Thurston. “The $100 million addition is the largest job we’ve ever … [undertaken]. Ninety percent of the work is new construction and the … [remainder] is renovation.”
“In addition to our work in the health-care field, Hayner Hoyt has enjoyed steady growth in construction for the higher-education community,” says the company’s president. “These two areas complement our other clients in financial services, hospitality, industrial and commercial, retail, historic renovations, churches, housing, and office space.”
Both Thurstons attribute the company’s success to its adherence to the original philosophy of Richard Hoyt and Don Hayner. “We have a full book of business, because we’re customer-oriented,” notes the company chairman. “Nearly 100 percent of our business comes from either our existing customers or from referrals by these customers. We don’t pursue hard-bid work, preferring to rely on the continuity of our relationships … The company has never been revenue driven; we’re opportunity driven. That’s why we weathered the recession with only a modest dip in revenues. On the whole, we have grown our revenues, profit, and the number of employees since the recession began in 2007.”
“There is one change,” says Jeremy Thurston. “Historically, we have sought most of our work within a 60-mile radius of Syracuse. The only time we have done work out of the area is when we follow a customer to a new site. Considering our current size, the company needs to reach out farther [geographically] to find enough opportunities to continue our growth. We are also moving ahead to find a sales-and-marketing manager to identify construction opportunities, especially in the private sector.”
Hayner Hoyt’s chairman, who is celebrating 40-plus years in the construction industry, has witnessed a number of technological changes that have impacted his business. “When I started out, my first firm was actually computerized, [albeit] with a punch-card system. We had basic software that performed functions such as estimating and payroll.
Today, everyone has a computer, and we [even] have laptops/tablets in the field. Everyone has an iPhone and an email account. Project engineers can take pictures with their smart phones while on a project and share a visual of a problem. We also use BiM (building-information-modeling in 3-D) to identify potential problems before we get to the construction phase, and we store all of this information electronically. Communication with the staff and with the customers is obviously much easier, especially with web conferencing,” says Gary Thurston.
“But there is a downside to all of this technology,” says Jeremy Thurston, the company president. “Relying too much on technology detracts from personal relationships. Conflict resolution via email is not very effective. It’s also too easy to pull design detail from a previous project rather than think through a [particular] problem. We spend $150,000 a year on technology, and I know it’s necessary to run the business. Still, I think we need to spend more time thinking and less time rushing to communicate.”
Hayner Hoyt’s rapid growth has put pressure on the company to find talented employees. “It’s hard to find experienced people,” says Gary Thurston. “Fortunately, we don’t get a lot of turnover, and some of our staff has more than 40 years [of longevity] with the company. Our recruiting is mostly local, hiring from area colleges and universities. We have to grow our own talent. Hayner Hoyt pays competitive salaries … [supplemented] by bonuses. We pay 100 percent of the employees’ health care and have a 401(k) with over $8 million in assets. The plan vests every new hire from day-one. I think we have created a family environment.” Thurston’s comments are supported by Hayner Hoyt’s recognition — six years in a row — as one of the “Best Places to Work” in New York State.
When talking about employee talent, both Thurstons also point to the management team that guides the company. In addition to the two principals, Maureen Barry is the company CFO, Michael George is vice president of operations, Marty Rainbow and Gus Hernandez are project executives, Terry Anderson is the human-resources director, and Steve Benedict is the director of field operations.
Gary Thurston, 67, is a native of the Mohawk Valley. He graduated from Utica College in 1968 with a degree in construction management. Thurston joined Hayner Hoyt in 1978, starting as a field superintendent on a project in Buffalo, and moving up to project manager and head of operations. He was appointed president in 1985 and moved into the position of board chair in 2008. Thurston is the father of five sons; he and his wife, Mary, reside in on Onondaga Hill during the winter months and Sylvan Beach in the summer.
Jeremy Thurston, 36, grew up in Marcellus and also attended Utica College, graduating in 2000 with a degree in construction management. He joined Hayner Hoyt in 1998 while still enrolled in college. Jeremy Thurston’s path began as a project engineer, rose to project manager, and then head of operations, before becoming president in 2008. He resides in Camillus with his wife Carrie and their two children.
“I always knew that I wanted to own my own business,” says Jeremy Thurston, “but at first my father wouldn’t give me a job. He wanted me to earn my stripes.” The elder Thurston concurs with that assessment. “Jeremy worked his ass off,” says Gary Thurston, not putting too fine a point on the description of the process. “Once he proved himself not just to me but to the employees, he became president.” Jeremy Thurston became a stockholder in 2010.
Hayner Hoyt also attributes its success to long-term relationships with area professionals. “We have been with KeyBank for decades, even back in the days when it was First Deposit [& Trust]. We also rely on M&T for our insurance. The folks at Firley Moran [Freer & Eassa] have … [overseen] our accounting for as long as I remember, and Jack Stinziano (now retired) has handled our legal work.
Hayner Hoyt’s rise to the top ranks of American contractors has not been without setbacks. In 2007, the company began rehabilitating the Hotel Syracuse Tower to convert it into a 75-unit apartment complex. The owner/developer, GML Tower, LLC, and a subsequent owner, Ameris, went bankrupt in 2008. Hayner Hoyt stopped work on the project and filed a mechanics lien for $3.2 million. Altshuler Shaham Provident Funds, which held a $10 million mortgage on the property, challenged the lien contending that its mortgage outranked the lien. Two New York State courts sided with the Thurstons, who in June 2012, purchased the building, now renamed Symphony Tower. A year later, the New York Court of Appeals overturned the lower courts’ rulings.
“We own the Tower,” says Gary Thurston, who has paid all of the sub-contractors in full for their work. “After five years of legal haggling, it’s sad to see the project stalled like this, a project which could help to revitalize downtown Syracuse.”
Hayner Hoyt has entered the ranks of America’s top contractors in less than half a century. The only question now is how far up the rankings will they move.
Contact Poltenson at npoltenson@cnybj.com
Envisage envisions continued rapid growth trajectory
LANSING — For the third year in a row, Envisage Information Systems was included in Inc. Magazine’s Inc. 5000 list, which honors the fastest growing private companies in America. The software-development company, which has additional offices in Syracuse and Endicott, ranked number 883 on the list with three-year revenue growth of 504 percent. Revenue jumped
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LANSING — For the third year in a row, Envisage Information Systems was included in Inc. Magazine’s Inc. 5000 list, which honors the fastest growing private companies in America.
The software-development company, which has additional offices in Syracuse and Endicott, ranked number 883 on the list with three-year revenue growth of 504 percent. Revenue jumped from $2.8 million in 2009 to $17 million in 2012.
Over the past five years, employment at the firm has grown from 30 people to 260 employees, says Steff McGonagle, principal and co-founder of Envisage.
In 2012, the company ranked number 382 on the Inc. 5000 list and placed 808th on the list in 2011.
“We’ve been very blessed,” McGonagle says of the company’s inclusion on the Inc. rankings.
Founded in 1990, Envisage specializes in software that provides web access, data connection, and workflow automation products to the retirement industry. With an increasing number of people participating in retirement plans as well as the complex nature of the industry and its regulations, Envisage has seen success by offering products that help make solving complex problems easy for the companies that manage those retirement plans, says Daren Free, Envisage’s COO. “That capability is rare in our industry,” he says. “That’s a big piece of what’s driving that demand and that growth.”
McGonagle says he expects that growth to continue as Envisage continues to gain market share. “We’re looking to double in size again over the next 18 months,” and then double again after that, he says. He expects the company will have added a total of 100 employees in 2013. Annual revenue is now above $20 million and growing.
Surprisingly, Envisage does not have a sales force and gains the majority of its new clients through word-of-mouth marketing and recommendations from current clients, he says.
Inclusion on the Inc. 5000 list certainly helps win new clients over, McGonagle says. Being on the list has also become a valuable recruiting tool as the company looks for new employees, Free adds.
“We are constantly looking to hire developers, business analysts, people who really understand this retirement space,” he says. The company looks frequently to new college graduates to fill those roles, he notes, but in the past it wasn’t always easy to convince them to come to Ithaca. “People are starting to understand who we are and seek us out,” he says since the company has made the Inc. 5000 list three times. Now, Free says, when he encounters soon-to-be college graduates, not only have they heard of Envisage, but the often know someone who is working there and may already have plans to apply for a job themselves.
The Inc. 5000 list has also benefited the company in another way, McGonagle says, and that is boosting current employee morale. “It feeds the culture of people having autonomy and self-direction and pride of accomplishment,” he says.
Envisage prides itself on its laid-back and family-like work atmosphere, says James Mandle, head of marketing and communications, for the company. “It’s not the typical corporate America,” he says. With a “fun room” where employees can take breaks, a family atmosphere where everyone goes by their first name instead of a title, and heavy emphasis on teamwork, Envisage’s work environment is more of a Google-type workplace, he says. Google is known for its employee perks that include things like game rooms, massages, and the like.
This past spring, Envisage was named one of the top 10 companies in the Central New York’s Best Places to Work awards for employers with 51 or more employees. More than 1,100 employees participated in the surveys conducted by Research and Marketing Strategies Inc. (RMS), which determined the top ranked companies. CNY’s Best Places to Work is a BizEventz and Central New York Business Journal event.
Headquartered at 31 Dutch Mill Rd. in the town of Lansing, Envisage (www.envisagesystems.com) also has offices at 306 E. Main St. in Endicott and in the Jefferson Towers at 50 Presidential Plaza in Syracuse. The company employs just over 20 people in each of those offices.
On its website, Envisage describes itself as the largest independent software development company providing web, common remitter, and workflow solutions for the retirement industry. Since 1995, it has been exclusively serving mid- to large-scale record keepers and financial companies.
Contact The Business Journal at news@cnybj.com
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.