MobileVelocity
MobileVelocity is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at MobileVelocity.
MobileVelocity is a company.
Key people at MobileVelocity.
Key people at MobileVelocity.
Velocity, A Managed Services Company (Velocity MSC)—formerly known as "Velocity, The Greatest Phone Company Ever"—is a telecommunications and IT managed services provider specializing in voice, data networking, connectivity, and custom solutions for multi-location enterprises.[1][2][3] Founded in 2005 and headquartered in Holland, Ohio, the company serves industries like retail, hospitality, and motion pictures with a single-source approach that includes network management, on-site repairs, field deployments, and telecom expense tools, backed by nine redundant data centers, over 5,500 certified technicians nationwide, 450 carrier agreements, and CLEC status in all 50 states.[1][2][3] With around 500-532 employees and $65 million in revenue, Velocity manages over 3 million devices and 42,000 network connections, enabling clients to focus on core operations while it handles seamless tech integration.[2][3]
Velocity traces its roots to 2005, starting as a reseller of local and long-distance phone services in the telecommunications sector.[1][2][3] Headquartered just outside Toledo in Holland, Ohio, it rapidly expanded beyond resale into comprehensive managed services, celebrating its 15th anniversary around 2020 with a major rebrand to "Velocity, A Managed Services Company" and the appointment of Mark Walker as COO to drive business integration and strategy.[1] Key evolution moments include building an in-house team of software engineers with hardware/software patents, establishing redundant data centers, and forging 450 carrier partnerships, transforming it into a national powerhouse for hospitality IT, retail connectivity, and cinema networks.[1][2] Today, with offices in Dallas, Charlotte, and Kansas City, it operates as a privately held entity under leadership including President/COO Mark Walker.[2]
Velocity stands out in the managed services space through its scale, customization, and end-to-end execution:
Velocity rides the wave of digital transformation in multi-location enterprises, where hospitality, retail, and entertainment demand invisible, flawless connectivity amid rising guest expectations for smart tech like seamless Wi-Fi and media streaming.[2] Its timing aligns with post-pandemic shifts toward hybrid operations and edge computing, where downtime costs millions; market forces like 5G rollout, IoT proliferation, and telecom consolidation favor its CLEC status and carrier network for agile, cost-effective scaling.[1][3] By powering 42,000+ connections and next-gen cinema networks, Velocity influences the ecosystem as a "custodian of digital ecosystems," enabling hotels/resorts to prioritize experiences over IT friction and bridging telco roots with modern IT for underserved sectors.[2][3]
Velocity's trajectory points toward deeper AI-driven hospitality and retail tech, leveraging its technician army and patents for predictive maintenance and zero-touch deployments amid 5G/edge trends.[2] Expanding partnerships in digital media and cinema could double its device management footprint, while Mark Walker's strategy focuses on corporate development in a consolidating telco market.[1][3] As multi-location digitization accelerates, Velocity's influence will grow as the reliable backbone for enterprises avoiding big-tech lock-in, solidifying its role from phone reseller to indispensable managed services orchestrator.[1][2]