I got my first computer when I was 8. Nobody else in the house knew how to use it, so I just figured it out on my own. That's kind of been my approach ever since.
As a teenager, I hired a repair company to remove a virus. I was nervous, I didn't know what it would cost, and I was putting my trust in someone who was supposed to be the expert. They took my money, didn't really fix the problem, and couldn't have cared less. I still remember how that felt — and it's exactly the experience I've built my business to be the opposite of.
I started out as a one-person shop doing break/fix work across Owasso and North Tulsa. Someone's computer broke, I came and fixed it. Simple. And I was good at it.
But I kept noticing something: the same clients kept calling me back with problems that didn't have to happen. A backup that was never set up. Security that was out of date. A server held together with duct tape and good intentions. I'd fix the immediate crisis, but nothing was really being watched over.
So I grew the business. Today, Eddie the Computer Guy isn't just a repair service — we're a managed IT partner for small businesses in the Owasso area. We monitor your systems, handle your security, and take care of the stuff you shouldn't have to think about. When something goes wrong, we're already on it. Often before you even know there's a problem.
We're not a big corporate IT firm with a call center and a ticket queue. We're local. You'll talk to someone who knows your business, knows your setup, and actually picks up the phone.
If you're a small business tired of putting out fires and ready for IT that just works — let's talk.
As a Google Support Professional, I have been rigorously trained by Google in end-to-end troubleshooting, system administration, and data security. This certification reflects my commitment to industry-leading standards, ensuring your technology is handled with the same expertise used at the world's top tech companies.
The TestOut PC Pro certification is unique because it is entirely performance-based. Unlike many exams that are multiple-choice, this one proves that you can actually dot he work in a simulated environment.