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Wired up: House Gadget is more than just a technology installation company.


ANYONE contemplating the upgrade to a flat-screen television faces the inevitable dilemma of where to put the speakers.

With a 50-inch screen, you've got to go with surround-sound, fight? Then you'll want the stereo on the same system. The next step is speakers all over the house. And shouldn't the lights be on the same remote control?

It's a home technology domino See Lotus Notes.  effect.

"Don't forget the ipod," said George Borghi, founder of House Gadget Inc., a Culver City Culver City, city (1990 pop. 38,793), Los Angeles co., S Calif., a residential suburb of Los Angeles; inc. 1917. It is a center of the U.S. motion-picture industry, whose roots in the city date to c.1915. Its chief manufactures are rubber products and computers.  consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
consulting company

business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a
 that installs home entertainment systems. "People will be holding their Apple laptop with all their music on it, they have audio (speakers) throughout their house, and they want to know: 'Why can't I just make this my audio system?'"

Borghi represents the new breed of contractor. Part tech guru guru (g`r, gr` , part carpenter, part designer, part troubleshooter, he wants customers to think of his company as their "tech guide."

"We're finding that you can't just work on audio-video systems anymore," said Barry Snyder, another principal at House Gadget. "You need a wireless connection, and phone lines, too. And the first question they always ask is if they can hook Can´ hook`

1. A device consisting of a short rope with flat hooks at each end, for hoisting casks or barrels by the ends of the staves.
 it up to see who's at the front door."

Founded in 2004, House Gadget set out to combine technology expertise with home design and installation. They do more than hide wires and hang screens. They research products based on a customer's budget and TV-watching habits. House Gadget then comes back to the customer with a few options, makes the purchases and installs the system.

Home theaters An audio/video entertainment center that has a large-screen TV and hi-fi system with three speakers in the front (left, right and center) and left and right speakers in the rear. Starting in the early 1990s, video inputs were added to stereo receivers and preamplifiers.  

Staff designers mesh the technology with a homes' design. They work with architects on new construction or renovation jobs and have worked with custom cabinet-makers to fit equipment specs (SPECificationS) The details of the components built into a device. See specification. . Just don't call them installers.

"We love the installation process - and we're awesome at it--but that's not the only service we want to provide," Snyder said. "We want you to call us whenever you need information. We want to be a part of every 'tech spend' that you make."

The average project is in the $30,000 range, and about 65 percent of the company's projects have been installing home theaters: flat screen TVs, surround-sound and "distributed audio"--speakers throughout the house. But the company also takes on projects in the $500-$1,000-range. It's good business, Snyder explained, because it often leads to other jobs.

For business customers, there's Office Gadget, which handles about 35 percent of the projects, such as video conference setups. The company has also done specialty projects including museums, retail locations and is currently working on a temple's audio system.

Of the company's 25 current projects under way, almost a third are repeat customers.

"They're unique," said Jeremy Dicker dick·er  
intr.v. dick·ered, dick·er·ing, dick·ers
To bargain; barter.

n.
The act or process of bargaining.
, a 29-year old financial planner Financial Planner

A qualified investment professional who assists individuals and corporations meet their long-term financial objectives by analyzing the client's status and setting a program to achieve these goals.
. "You want to keep them around." Dicker hired House Gadget to install a home theater in his new house, which included three flat-screen TVs and surround sound An audio recording and playback system that uses five or more channels plus a subwoofer channel. See 5.1 channel and 3D audio.  in every room. Then he realized he needed wireless access to his computers.

"While they were doing my computer work, I asked them to figure out how to wire sound into my master bedroom," he said. "I call them up whenever I have a question." Multiple CD players, DVD players A stand-alone device that plays DVDs. It contains a DVD drive and the electronics to decode the digital video. The device may play only manufactured DVDs, or it may be able to play DVD-R, DVD-RW and DVD+RW discs. DVD players are cabled to a TV or home theater system for display. , lighting and security are all integrated. The best part'? He has only one remote control for everything.

"Life with one remote can be just phenomenal," Dicker said.

Showbiz background

A former post-production executive, 48-year old Borghi started the business in his kitchen, telling just a few friends what he was up to. Snyder, who had worked at Warner Bros BROS Brothers
BROS Benefits and Retirement Operations Section (King County, Washington)
BROS Barnes and Richmond Operatic Society (London, UK) 
. and Sony Studios, and formerly headed Post Logic Studios, joined the business six months later.

Borghi and Snyder leaned on their entertainment industry contacts. A few "personal favor" jobs later, they started getting real customers.

In its first year, House Gadget had 6 employees and billed about $500,000 in business. But in the entertainment industry, word spreads fast. Last year, the company swelled to 13 employees, and about $1 million in revenues. Most of the company's 600 customers are word-of-mouth referrals.

House Gadget is brand agnostic ag·nos·tic  
n.
1.
a. One who believes that it is impossible to know whether there is a God.

b. One who is skeptical about the existence of God but does not profess true atheism.

2.
, and will purchase based on the customer's preference once they've talked over the options.

"They speak in English," said Julie Moody, an interior designer who uses House Gadget for the technology component of her projects. "They bridge the gap between the techno-nerds of us who are less tech-oriented."

Moody said she's had trouble in the past with "tech guys" who were unable to simplify the equipment for the everyday user. "You'd be surprised how many people don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 how to use the remote control," she added.

House Gadget employees scour scour, scours

1. the chemical and physical cleaning of fleece wool.

2. diarrhea.


dietetic scour
see dietary diarrhea.

peat scour
see secondary nutritional copper deficiency.
 the Web and consumer technology magazines to keep up with the newest products and trends. They boast of "future-proofing" houses - installing extra power access, for example, in anticipation of upgrades. "As a designer, that's key," Moody added. "With technology changing so rapidly, there's no way I can keep up with it."

The company's design staff includes Trevor Bryant, who designed theme parks for Walt Disney Noun 1. Walt Disney - United States film maker who pioneered animated cartoons and created such characters as Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck; founded Disneyland (1901-1966)
Disney, Walter Elias Disney
 Imagineering. Later, as a senior executive at Sony Corp., he designed the Sony Metreon Theater in San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden .

Borghi's entertainment industry back ground comes through in the company's eagerness to fulfill customer needs. "When a director asks you for something, you always have to have an answer," he said. Regardless of the tech request, Borghi's standard line is," Give us a day, and we'll research that for you."

The company is launching a monthly subscription service, called Gadget Partners. For $99 per month, House Gadget will be on call to answer any tech question or need.

The House Gadget guys admit their services are not for everyone. A customer who knows exactly what he needs--and doesn't need--probably wouldn't benefit from House Gadget's services. Customers who want a contractor to come in, do a job, and disappear aren't a good fit either.

"We want to be in their lives on a daily basis," Snyder said. "The person really has to want us to be there. It's a partnership."

House Gadget Inc.

Year Founded: 2004

Core Business: Consultants who design, wire and install most technology for home and office

2005 Revenues: $1 million

2006 Revenues: $2.4 million (projected)

2005 Employees: 15

2006 Employees: 17

Goal: To have one 100,000 clients ask, 'What did I do before House Gadget?'

Driving Force: Homeowners confused about complicated electronics
COPYRIGHT 2006 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:House Gadget innovates and develops home theater equipment
Author:Potkewitz, Hilary
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Mar 13, 2006
Words:1054
Previous Article:Mediawatch.(movies, television programs, sound recordings, and video recordings rankings and sales)(Table)
Next Article:Tech transfer expert taking the leap from Boston to Los Angeles.(University of Southern California's Mark and Mary Stevens Institute for Technology...
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