I'm Tony Myers — a Philadelphia-based independent IT contractor. You have 150+ tenants who expect their internet, WiFi, and door access to just work. I want to be the person who makes sure it does, on-site, week after week.
Your listing describes real work — not a body in a chair. Here's each requirement from the ad, mapped to how I'd actually run it in your building.
The fastest way to judge a contractor is to look at how they'd start. Here's mine.
Walk the building: every switch, AP, camera, door controller, panel, and cable path. Produce a network map and hardware inventory — probably the first one the building has ever had.
Every building this size has known irritants: dead WiFi zones, the camera that's been offline for months, the tenant with mystery slowdowns. Knock out the highest-pain items early so tenants feel the difference in week one.
Tenants get one simple way to report IT issues, and you get visibility into every request, response time, and fix. No more problems living in someone's voicemail.
Remote monitoring on the network and cameras, a documented VLAN and firewall scheme, and a prioritized upgrade roadmap with honest costs — so you decide what's worth doing, with real information.
You said this position is ideal for someone growing their own IT business. That's exactly who I am — and it's why the incentives line up.
I'm building an independent IT services business in Philadelphia. A long-term building contract is precisely what I'm structured for — which means your building gets genuine priority, not whatever attention is left over.
My recent work is high-volume logistics — 150–200+ time-critical deliveries a shift, DOT-compliance inspections, 99%+ accuracy targets. I show up, follow through, and treat deadlines as real. That's the trait that actually predicts whether your cameras get fixed.
I write my own internal tooling and run my systems the way I'd run yours: documented, monitored, and boring in the best way. Systems migration, deployment, ticketing, and hardware/software support are the core of my technical background.
An on-site office means I'm physically in the building my clients work in. Your tenants become my neighbors — and there's no better accountability than that.
I'd welcome a walkthrough of the building — no obligation. Thirty minutes on-site and I can tell you exactly what I'd tackle first.