IT firm continues to grow with nine new hires and further recruitment underway
A Birmingham-based IT consultancy is celebrating a year of continued growth after welcoming nine new staff and opening recruitment for three further roles.
Electronic Business Systems (EBS), which has operated in the city for 46 years, has strengthened its 35-strong team with new appointments across technical support, software support, service delivery and sales.
The latest recruits include two technical support staff, two software support specialists, two technical apprentices, a service delivery administrator, a sales executive and a technical onsite engineer.
EBS currently services over 200 businesses throughout the West Midlands as well as further afield, and the new roles will support customer service, project delivery and client communications as the firm continues to expand its managed services and software support operations.
The business is now actively recruiting for three additional roles including a technical manager and two technical support positions, alongside continuing to invest in early career pathways such as ICT Support Technician Level 3 apprenticeships.
Sandy Gaggini, managing director at EBS, said: “Seeing the team grow this year has been wonderful; we’re delighted to be able to create new job opportunities in the local area, and to continue supporting the SMEs across the West Midlands that have grown alongside us.
“EBS has been part of Birmingham’s business community for more than four decades and that local foundation is a big part of who we are.
“As we head into next year, we’re excited to keep building on that success by strengthening our services and welcoming more customers seeking a trusted West Midlands partner for their IT needs.”
Founded in 1979, EBS has grown into a full-service IT support provider offering managed services, network infrastructure, Sage business management software, cloud solutions and cybersecurity support for businesses across the Midlands.
Pictured: New trainees Bailey Stokes, Libby Stokes and Isaac Hamid