While Montezuma County’s governments and numerous private companies look for a solution to the county’s broadband problem, two Dolores residents hope to make their mark on the local internet scene.
Erich and Erica Hennig’s company, Zumacom, provided wireless internet to its first customer in February. They’ve slowly expanded their coverage area ever since, using existing fiber optic lines and cellphone towers to reach customers. The company started offering wireless internet to Dolores residents on Sept. 1, and its owners hope to expand to the Lewis area by mid-October.
The couple moved to Dolores from La Plata County about three years ago with the goal of eventually starting their own business. Since Erich Hennig has about 20 years of experience in wireless networking, he said he and Erica decided to use that expertise to fill a need for reliable internet in the area.
“We moved over here, and we thought, ‘Oh, well, the phone company serves our house. It’s going to be fantastic,’” Erich said. “And it wasn’t. So we started the planning then.”
Erich uses wireless extensions to connect Zumacom’s customers to existing fiber optic cables and cellphone towers throughout the county. Zumacom can offer up to 25 megabits of data per second this way, he said. But each building that connects to the wireless network has to have a line of sight to a fiber optic access point, so tall trees and multistory buildings sometimes interrupt the signal. That’s why most of Zumacom’s strongest coverage is in the unincorporated county, where there aren’t as many obstacles, Erica said.
The company offers three internet speeds for different prices: up to 5 megabits per second for about $50 per month, up to 10 Mbps for $70, and up to 25 Mbps for $130.
Erica runs the business and marketing side of the company. She said that so far, most people who have signed up for the service have heard about Zumacom through word of mouth or door-to-door advertising. She said she hopes to add many more customers as the company grows its infrastructure and more people become aware of it.
“We want to continue toward Mancos and beyond,” she said. “We want to be the rural choice.”
Right now, the Hennigs work out of their home office, and they don’t employ any other workers, but they have big ambitions.
Erich said their ultimate goal is to build enough infrastructure to serve the “majority” of Montezuma County by next year. Once they’ve started serving customers in the Lewis area, they hope to move on to the Mancos Valley.
Zumacom was also the youngest of six companies that responded to the Connect 4 Broadband Initiative’s request for proposal earlier this year, offering to act as private partners in the group’s plan to bring affordable internet to county residents. The county initially chose to partner with Data Safe Services and FastTrack Communications instead, but a July Connect 4 meeting opened up the possibility the group might work with some of the other companies that submitted proposals as well. The Hennigs said they would still be willing to participate a Connect 4 plan in the future, but they don’t yet know what that would look like.
For now, the couple just hopes to expand their own wireless infrastructure, and possibly hire more employees. One of the Hennigs’ biggest challenges has been the amount of time it takes to install a wireless extension, they said. Without any other workers, they can’t establish connections to existing customers and market themselves to new ones at the same time. But they’re optimistic about their chances for growth in the near future.
“We’re trying to build a carrier grade service, one that is really robust and withstands all the things that could disrupt (it),” Erich said.