Protecting the Eastern Panhandle's largest city — federal workers, growing businesses, and families in Berkeley County
Martinsburg is the Eastern Panhandle's biggest city — around 18,000 people and growing. It's home to IRS and US Customs & Border Protection offices, the Procter & Gamble plant, a revitalizing historic downtown, and thousands of federal employees who work remotely or commute to the DC metro. That federal workforce handles sensitive data every day, often from home networks that were never designed for it. Security matters here more than most places.
When a federal employee logs into government systems from a home office in Inwood or a kitchen table in Martinsburg, that home network becomes a potential entry point. Weak WiFi passwords, unpatched routers, shared family computers — these are not theoretical risks. They're the kind of gaps that get exploited. We help federal remote workers and their families lock down home networks so the things that matter stay protected.
Martinsburg isn't just a federal town. From the historic B&O Railroad Roundhouse district to the new businesses opening along the I-81 corridor, Berkeley County is becoming a legitimate suburb of the DC metro — with commercial growth to match. Whether you run a shop in historic downtown, a professional office near Inwood, or a growing company that just hired its fifth employee, you need IT that works and someone who answers when it doesn't.
Monthly plans that cover everything — monitoring, maintenance, backups, security, and support. One predictable cost.
Office WiFi, wired networks, guest access, VPN for remote staff. Built for how your business actually works.
Slow machines, crashes, virus removal, data recovery. Fixed right, explained clearly, priced fairly.
Skits says: "Martinsburg has IRS offices and a Procter & Gamble plant — but it also has families, small shops, and people who just want their email to work. We handle all of it. And yes, we cross state lines. Winchester to Martinsburg is 30 minutes on I-81. Your tech problems don't care about state borders, and neither do we."
All clients get free access to our technology microcourses — including lessons on online security, spotting phishing scams, and using tools like Zoom and Microsoft Teams. For a town full of remote workers, that kind of knowledge is not optional.