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Keeping cool at Vette Corp.
Pease firm is becoming a global leader in thermal management

George P. Dannecker, president and CEO of Vette Corp., at his Pease Tradeport office in Manchester Square. Rich Beauchesne/rbeauchesne@seacoastonline.com
PORTSMOUTH
— Based at Pease International Tradeport, the international hi-tech
company Vette Corp. offers a glimpse into the future of manufacturing
in the country.
Founded by George Dannecker
in February 2004, the thermal management solutions company — which
specializes in keeping electronics components and data center systems
cool — has grown from his home to an emerging international industry
leader with more than 1,500 employees, large manufacturing sites in
Asia and Rochester, N.Y., a growing client list and a major product
development partnership with IBM.
Not coincidentally, it also has attracted sustained involvement from some of the top venture capital firms in the country.
And
as Dannecker said, the Portsmouth world headquarters is staffed by
eight employees, a template for the lean, decentralized and
tech-connected global corporation. "It's not quite virtual," Dannecker
said about his company, which has operations and sales offices across
the globe.
The key to it all is a matter of
keeping cool. As anyone with a personal computer, laptop or consumer
electronics product will tell you, keeping components cool and energy
efficient is crucial to sustainability and effectiveness.
"The
inability to cool properly is the number one reason for electronic
failures," said Dannecker, who serves as the company's president and
CEO. "It's a vital part of the industry. If you do it efficiently it
increases the life expectancy" of the component for larger data center
systems.
This ability to expand its market
into systems small and large has been the key to Vette's growth and
potential long-term strength, he said.
Dannecker,
a resident of Stratham who has lived in New Hampshire for more than
three decades, has become accustomed to guiding successful companies
from the start-up stage. Prior to founding Vette Corp., he was CEO and
president of TeraConnect Inc., a venture funded spin-out from Lockheed
Martin that focused on telecommunications and data communications
products. He was also president and COO of Aavid Thermalloy, where he
globalized manufacturing and expanded operations into England,
Singapore, Taiwan and China. Aavid Thermalloy grew to a 2,500-employee
manufacturing business with 13 global sales and manufacturing
facilities and revenues of more than $300 million.
Dannecker,
whose expertise is sales and marketing, said that Vette has been able
to grow and capture international market share because of two factors —
highly experienced management and engineering teams and that it
designs, develops and manufactures its own products. This has allowed
it to cut a wider niche from components for OEM producers to much
larger data center system operations through a development project with
IBM.
The fundamentals of the industry, he
said, are steady growth because of the continued spread of
telecommunications and electronics segments in the consumer and
business sectors and "component and data center thermals will always be
a challenge" as the world becomes ever more digitized and speed and
capacity continue to rise dramatically.
"The
environmental aspects are becoming more compelling," Dannecker said.
"Long-term thermal solutions are still at the early industry stage." He
said more customers are becoming aware of the potential energy and
space savings.
"We tell customers we can save
them 50 percent of their data center energy," he said. "If you design
your data center with our system, it grows to 80 percent (energy
savings)."
Vette's component level customer
base includes GE Medical, MKS (an international business that designs
systems for processor manufacturing), Harris Systems and Rockwell
International. At the data center level, Vette's clients include Purdue
University, NASA, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
This year Dannecker added some new members to his board of directors.
According
to a press release from Bob Nephew, managing partner at David Brooke
Associates, which places executives in leadership positions, Kevin
Melia, Philip Koen and William Zeitler will serve on the board.
Melia
was CEO of MSL Inc., which he grew to a $1.2 billion publicly listed
enterprise. Koen is the CEO and a director of SAVVIS, an $800 million
global leader in outsourced IT infrastructure for business applications.
And
Zeitler was most recently senior vice president and group executive of
IBM Systems Group where he held responsibility for IBM's total
hardware, server and storage businesses, which generated revenues in
excess of $27 billion annually.
Dannecker
said the recession has slowed down growth on the component sector of
the business but it has remained steady on the data center side. He
said one of Vette's top priorities during the downturn is to grow its
market share so it can emerge even stronger when the economy picks up.
Dannecker's
track record, strong management picks and innovative products have
drawn sustained interest from the venture capital community. The
company has raised more than $45 million from in private funding from
four leading investment firms — AllianceBernstein, General Catalyst
Partners, Kodiak Venture Partners and 3i. Dannecker said the company is
reinvesting its profits back into the company to expand its sales,
engineering and operations.
The independent
life cycle of companies like Vette are not long given the needs of
major investors seeking the exit stage of return on investment either
through sale to a larger company or an initial public offering.
For more information, visit www.vettecorp.com.
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